Fox. by Margaret Wild, Illustrated by Ron Brooks

Similar documents
Ernie Dances to the Didgeridoo

Toccata and Fugue in D minor by Johann Sebastian Bach

Creating a picture book Year level: 3 4

Ride of the Valkyries by Richard Wagner

WASD PA Core Music Curriculum

Two fables. The Enemies. Three raindrops BLM 48

ENGLISH LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT 6-8 READING: Literary Response and Analysis

In Flanders Fields. By Norman Jorgenson, Illustrated by Brian Harrison-Lever

Storm Interlude by Benjamin Britten

In the Hall of the Mountain King by Edvard Grieg

The Second Sky TEACHERS NOTES

XSEED Summative Assessment Test 1. Duration: 90 Minutes Maximum Marks: 60. English, Test 1. XSEED Education English Grade 3 1

Mrs. Hofsiss 5 th Grade Summer Book Report Projects

All assignments will be due on the first day of school. The ELA book reports will count as two test grades.

WASD PA Core Music Curriculum

SUGGESTED LEARNING EXPERIENCES BASED ON VISUAL ARTS, THEATRE ARTS, AND LANGUAGE ARTS STRANDS FROM THE SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS AND INCORPORATING

First Day of Partridge School

AESOP S FABLES. About the Show. Who was Aesop?

Jefferson School District Literature Standards Kindergarten

Year 8 Drama. Unit One: Think Quick Unit Two: Let s Act TEACHER BOOKLET

Performing Arts in ART

Symphony No 5 by Ludwig van Beethoven

Central Valley School District Music 1 st Grade August September Standards August September Standards

Night on a Bare Mountain by Modest Mussorgsky

Years 3 and 4 standard elaborations Australian Curriculum: Music

Instrumental Performance Band 7. Fine Arts Curriculum Framework

antlers _G3U3W2_ indd 1 2/19/10 4:33 PM

The Potato People. Pamela Allen

Music Learning Expectations

Integrating the Curriculum: Creative Exchange EDF3303 Assignment Task 1: Research Project

A Storyteller s Approach to Teaching Literature and History A Jim Weiss Workshop

C reating a picture book with an environmental theme Year level: 3 4

Music. Curriculum Glance Cards

Description. Direct Instruction. Teacher Tips. Preparation/Materials. GRADE 4 Comprehension Compare/Contrast Stories (Supplemental)

Recommended Reads. Keats, Ezra Jack (1974). Dreams. New York: Macmillan. Recommended by Annett Kaminski

Tortoise, Hare. Puppet Show / Musical Comedy WORKPACK

Psycho- Notes. Opening Sequence- Hotel Room Sequence

WINTER FABLES. About the Show

Harlan County Schools Curriculum Guide

College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards K-12 Montana Common Core Reading Standards (CCRA.R)

What is Literature? Comparing Genres

Content Map For Fine Arts - Music

Lesson Objectives. Core Content Objectives. Language Arts Objectives

Notes for teachers D2 / 31

Creative Arts Memo June Exam 2017 (50 marks) Question 1: Colour Wheel 1.1 Wheel must be correctly labelled and coloured in for 1 mark.

Looking at and Talking about Art with Kids

September Book Project

Short Ride in a Fast Machine by John Adams

Creative Arts. Shuters PLANNING & TRACKING PHOTOCOPIABLE. Grade. Also available for download from OS

Kindergarten students dance, sing, act, and paint, exploring their world

Town Mouse & Country Mouse

Theme 1. THEME 1: Look At Us!

Literary Genre Poster Set

Peace Lesson M1.16 TOLERANCE, FORGIVENESS, UNDERSTANDING

0:50. Use 2B or HB pencil only. Time available for students to complete test: 50 minutes

The First Hundred Instant Sight Words. Words 1-25 Words Words Words

A Teaching Guide for Daniel Kirk s Library Mouse Books

Teachers Notes. The Pocket Dogs and the Lost Kitten. Written by Margaret Wild Illustrated by Stephen Michael King. Contents OMNIBUS BOOKS

Babar the Little Elephant

TEATRO LUDÉ. Directed by Gonzalo Berón Muñóz. Music by Marcelo Andino

Teaching Resources for The Story Smashup Webcast

Bite-Sized Music Lessons

ACARA CURRICULUM CORRELATIONS TEACHING WITH AUNTY: YEAR 1

Third Trimester RL Assessment. Finn MacCool and Oonagh

Final Projects. For ANY Novel. Unique & engaging projects with rubrics!

Task 3: The Star-crossed Lovers

Enigma Variations Theme (Enigma), Variations 11 (G. R. S.), 6 (Ysobel) & 7 (Troyte)

Aesop s Fable: The Boy Who Cried Wolf

SSEHV: Schemes of Work for Ages 6-8 Years 7

VISUAL LITERACY. Choosing the right book for our children! PARENTS SYMPOSIUM 28 JULY 2018

2nd Grade Music Music

Symphony No 10, Mvt 2 by Dmitri Shostakovich

FOR THE. DOUG 2008 Inclusive ANC0025 VOLUME: 2 linear feet ACCESS:

HINSDALE MUSIC CURRICULUM

Habanera and Toreador Song from Carmen by Georges Bizet

Bismarck, North Dakota is known for several things. First of all, you probably already know that Bismarck is the state capitol. You might even know

Essentials Skills for Music 1 st Quarter

Katie Adams Make Believe Theater Presents:

HARRY POTTER AND THE PHILOSOPHER S STONE

To hear once more water trickle, to stand in a stretch of silence the divining pen twisting in the hand: sign of depths alluvial.

Chapter 9 Study Guide

Level 29 Book a. Level 29 Word Count 940 Text Type Narrative (Adventure) High-Frequency our, run Word/s Introduced.

Leicester-Shire Schools Music Service Unit 3 Rhythm Year 3

A series of music lessons for implementation in the classroom F-10.

First 100 High Frequency Words

Term Prep Performing Arts Program

Oiseaux Exotiques Oliver Messiaen

These people rock! Check out their sites: Graphics From: Owl Inspire You Creations Fonts From: Rowdy in Room

3rd Grade Music Music

All written in easy accessible English. Perfect for teaching EAL

They started to feature self-consciously Australian characters Colour printing had become relatively cheap and this made By the mid 1980s, half of

Reflection on Final Project

Abdelazer - Rondeau PRIMARY CLASSROOM LESSON PLAN. Written by Rachel Leach

Capstone Project Lesson Materials Submitted by Kate L Knaack Fall 2016

F2 English: Language Arts Uniform Test

Lesson Objectives. Core Content Objectives. Language Arts Objectives

Mars by Gustav Holst

City Mouse & Country Mouse Study Guide

PAPA BEAR S PAGE FRIGHT

Standard 1 PERFORMING MUSIC: Singing alone and with others

Transcription:

Fox by Margaret Wild, Illustrated by Ron Brooks Magpie gets caught in a Bushfire and her wings are burned so she cannot fly. Dog, who is blind in one eye, rescues her and becomes her friend. Together they explore the world, Magpie becoming Dog s missing eye, and Dog becoming Magpie s wings. Then Fox arrives on the scene. Will he break up the friendship between Dog and Magpie? Or will trust and loyalty win the day? Literacy The activities have been written so that the whole class can participate, or the children can work independently or in a small group. 1. Before Reading the Book Read a variety of fables to the children. Aesop s Fables are probably the most famous. Gottlieb (1975) credits the origin of the fable, in Western culture, to a Greek slave on the island of Samos, named Aesop, who lived in the sixth century B.C. Aesop was known for telling clever stories about animals. The tradition of Aesop was oral. The storieswereeventuallywrittendowningreekproseintheseventhcenturyb.c.,by Demetrius of Phalerum. In the sixteenth century Aesop s fables included the fables of many others, so it became impossible to say which of the fables were Aesop s and which were not. Fables are found worldwide. Contemporary editions of fables The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse and TheTortoiseandtheHare,adaptedand illustrated by Janet Stevens Uncle Remus: His Songs and Sayings by Joel Chandler Harris Fables (1980) by Arnold Lobel The Singing Tortoise and Other Animal Folk Tales (1993) by John Yeoman Aesop s Fables illustratedbyrodneymcrae What are fables? Record the characteristics on the board, overhead or large display paper: They are fiction in the sense that they didn t really happen; They are dramatic, meant to entertain; They are poetic, with a double meaning; D.Russell-Bowie and J.Thistleton-Martin, 2001 1

They make abstract ideas about good and evil comprehensible to children; They are moral tales, usually with animal characters who have human characteristics; They are usually short with no more than two or three characters; The characters perform simple, straightforward actions that result in one, central conflict; They also contain human lessons expressed through the weaknesses of personified animals; The moral or lesson is often included as a proverb One good turn deserves another. Why do they have a moral or lesson? List the message of a selection of fables. 2. Introducing the Book Show the cover by opening out the book so that the entire illustration of the fox can be seen. What do you think the story is going to be about? Record responses under the heading predictions. Foxes appear in many children s stories. What are the characteristics of a fox? List them. Show the front endpapers. Do they tell us anything about the story? Where do you think the story is set? How do you know? Why do you think the illustrator has used red and orange? Look at the back endpapers. How are they different? Why? Show the frontispiece. Why is the dog carrying the bird in his mouth? Will the dog harm the bird? How do you know? What type of bird is it? What type of dog? Does it matter? Where do you think the dog and bird are going? What do you think the story will be about? Record responses under the predictions heading. What do you notice about the illustration? What are the characteristics of a dog? A bird? List them. Showthedoublepagespreadofthetitlepage. Has the setting changed? Why have the colours changed from the endpapers? What do you notice about the illustration? Showthedoublepagespreadofthededicationpage. What is the fox doing? The dog and bird? Do they know that the fox is there? How do you know? What do you now think the story will be about? Record responses under the predictions heading. D.Russell-Bowie and J.Thistleton-Martin, 2001 2

What do you notice about the layout of this page? How is it different from most other picture books you know? Why has the illustrator arranged the page this way? 3. Getting into the Book Read the first double page spread. What has happened to Magpie? How do you think Magpie feels? What will Dog do next? Why? Show the children the illustrations. What do you notice about the layout of this page? How is the writing different to most other picture books you know? Why has the illustrator written the text this way? Would the text have been better typed? Why or why not? Read to the end of the double page spread beginning with But Dog says, Welcome. We can offer you food and shelter. How would you describe the character of Dog? Fox? Magpie? Add them to your list of characteristics. Is Magpie worried? How do you know? What do you think will happen next? Record responses under the predictions heading. Turntothenextdoublepagespread,but don t read the text. Show the children the illustrations. What is happening on this page? Whose eyes can you see? How do Fox s eyes make you feel? Why has the illustrator just drawn Fox s eyes? What is the illustration on the opposite page about? How does it make you feel? Why has the illustrator drawn these pictures side by side? What do you think will happen next? Why? Record responses under the predictions heading. Read the text on the page described above. Are Dog and Magpie friends? How do you know? Why is Fox watching Magpie? What do rage and envy mean? Why is Fox angry? Envious? Lonely? What do you think will happen next? Record responses under the predictions heading. Read to And when at dawn Fox whispers to her for the third time, she whispers back. I am ready. Why has Magpie changed her mind? How do you think Dog will feel when he discovers Magpie and Fox have gone? How would you now describe the character of Dog? Fox? Magpie? Add them to your list of characteristics. What do you think will happen next? Record responses under the predictions heading. D.Russell-Bowie and J.Thistleton-Martin, 2001 3

Read to the double page spread beginning He stops, scarcely panting. Why does Fox leave Magpie? Who screams? How do you know? Is the behaviour of Fox surprising? Why or why not? Add any other characteristics to your list. What do you think will happen next? Record responses under the predictions heading. Read to the end. Why does Magpie decide to go back to Dog? Did the book end the way you predicted? What is the book Fox about? How does the illustrator s use of colour help to tell the story? Music Tone Colour / Dynamics / Duration (Tempo) / Pitch Read through the story, then categorise the sounds that could be used to represent the movements and personalities of each of the three main characters in relation to: High and low Loud and soft Fast and slow Regular and irregular Choose instruments to represent each animal and, as the story is narrated, play the instruments at the appropriate time when each character is mentioned. Structure / Tone Colour Create a story map of the text and use this as a graphic score. Use instruments to represent the different characters and events and tell the story without any words, just using the instruments. D.Russell-Bowie and J.Thistleton-Martin, 2001 4

Drama Hot Seating Brainstorm words to describe each of the three main characters. Explore the way each character might move and talk. Interview three children, chosen to be Dog, Magpie and Fox, and have them tell the story from their perspective. Have them give reasons for each of their actions. Let each child choose one of the characters and write the story from their point of view. Mime Use the story map from the above music activity as a visual cue to assist the children in miming the action in the story. Use contrasting dynamics, levels, timing, etc to show the personalities and movements of each of the characters. Improvisation: Words and sounds may be added to create an improvised dramatic version of the story. Readers Theatre Alternatively, turn the text into a Readers Theatre presentation. Expand this by adding mime and instruments as well as narration to tell the story. Visual Arts Collage Examine the mixed media illustrations in the book. Discuss how they have been created, eg. paint on board with details scratched in with sticks or thin black ink lines. Look at how the artist has showed the differences between the bush, day time, night time, paddocks and the desert. Have children choose one of these scenes and, using similar techniques, create their own version. Encourage them to use appropriate colours, lines, textures, etc to depict their particular scene. D.Russell-Bowie and J.Thistleton-Martin, 2001 5

Extension: Use cardboard and other found objects to scratch through thick paint to create their picture. Add bush materials to create a collage to complement this artwork. Write a sentence about either the techniques used to create the finished artwork, or aboutthecontentoftheartwork. Display these together on the classroom wall. Perspective Explore different pictures of Australian landscapes including those shown in the story. Discuss how they would look from a bird s perspective, and from a dog or fox s perspective. What would be different, what would be the same? Have each child select one Australian landscape to draw or paint. Have them create it first from the human perspective, then from a flying bird s perspective and thirdly, from a dog or fox s perspective. Write a couple of sentences telling the viewer about the differences and similarities in the three pictures. Share these with the rest of the class and display them around the room. Literacy 4. Coming Back to the Book Read the book again without stopping. Go through the characteristics of a fable. Is Fox a fable? Whole class or group discussion. Is there a moral or lesson in Fox? If yes, what is it? Write it as a proverb, for example, Trust is earned not given. D.Russell-Bowie and J.Thistleton-Martin, 2001 6

The teacher and the children jointly construct a simple fable (which can be typed directly on to the computer if working with a small group). The language needs to be chosen so that everyone in the class will be able to eventually read it. Visual Arts Illustrating Text The finished text is word processed in a large font size or written in large print and divided into sections. The students illustrate a section of the narrative, which is displayed around the room. Alternatively, the children write and illustrate their own fable. Create another list of characteristics, from information books, about dingoes, foxes and magpies. Compare the factual list with the list of characteristics about Dog, Fox and Magpie. Are they different? Similar? Why? What does anthropomorphic mean? Is Fox anthropomorphic? Write the story of Fox, but create human characters for Dog, Fox and Magpie. Is the story as interesting? Literacy 5. Going Beyond the Book Investigate other books written by Margaret Wild or books illustrated by Ron Brooks. Read other books about fictional foxes and compare them to Fox. For example, Hattie and the Fox by Mem Fox, Fantastic Mr Fox by Roald Dahl, and Foxspell by Gillian Rubinstein. D.Russell-Bowie and J.Thistleton-Martin, 2001 7