A Literature Unit on Patricia Polacco s The Junkyard Wonders

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A Literature Unit on Patricia Polacco s The Junkyard Wonders Created by April Walker Ideabackpack.blogspot.com

Graphics from: www.scrappindoodles.com www.printcandee.com http://melonheadzillustrating.blogspot.com/ Fonts from: www.kevinandamanda.com/fonts Thank you for purchasing this product. These activities were created to go with Patricia Polacco s book The Junkyard Wonders. The activities were also created with the 4 th and 5 th grade Common Core Literature Standards in mind. Please email me at ideabackpack@gmail.com with questions. Please visit my blog at ideabackpack.blogspot.com.

Name Junkyard Wonders Quotes For each of the quotes below, write what you think it means in your own words. Then, write what you can you can infer about the characters who stated the quote. Quote 1: My heart sang as I walked to school with all of the kids on my gramma s block on the first day of school. ~Trisha My Own Words Inference Quote 2: Oh, [a junkyard] is a place full of wondrous possibilities! What some see as bent and broken throwaways are actually amazing things waiting to be made into something new. Something unexpected. Something surprising. ~ Mrs. Peterson My Own Words Inference

Name Analyzing Characters: Trisha Choose 2 character traits to describe Trisha. Then provide details from the story on how she shows those character traits. Character s Thoughts: Character Trait: Character s Feelings: Character s Actions: Character s Thoughts: Character Trait: Character s Feelings: Character s Actions:

Name Analyzing Characters: Mrs. Peterson Choose 2 character traits to describe Mrs. Peterson. Then provide details from the story on how she shows those character traits. Character s Thoughts: Character Trait: Character s Feelings: Character s Actions: Character s Thoughts: Character Trait: Character s Feelings: Character s Actions:

Name Analyzing Characters: Choose 2 character traits to describe a character in the book. Then provide details from the story on how he/she shows those character traits. Character s Thoughts: Character Trait: Character s Feelings: Character s Actions: Character s Thoughts: Character Trait: Character s Feelings: Character s Actions:

Name Theme in Junkyard Wonders Use the graphic organizer below to help you think through what the theme in the book might be. Write an explanation of the theme below the organizer. Mood: Characters Response to Problem: Lessons Characters Have Learned: Problem in the Story: Theme of the Story: Characters Thoughts & Feelings: Explain the theme of the story using details from the text:

Setting in Junkyard Wonders In the chart below, list settings in the story. Provide descriptions of the setting based on details in the text. Then explain why the setting is important to the story. Setting Description Why the setting is important

Sequence of Events in Junkyard Wonders List events in the story. Explain which were most important and why. My Conclusion on which events were most important and why:

Definition of Genius On the first day of school, Mrs. Peterson recites a definition of genius. What do you think she wanted them to learn from this definition? What do you think this definition of genius means? Genius is neither learned nor acquired. It is knowing without experience. It is risking without fear of failure. It is perception without touch. It is understanding without research. It is certainty without proof. It is ability without practice. It is invention without limitations. It is imagination without boundaries. It is creativity without constraints. It is extraordinary intelligence. ~Junkyard Wonders

Definition of Genius On the first day of school, Mrs. Peterson recites a definition of genius. Think about how each of the parts of the definition relate to the idea of genius. Genius is neither learned nor acquired. It is knowing without experience. It is risking without fear of failure. It is perception without touch. It is understanding without research. It is certainty without proof. It is ability without practice. It is invention without limitations. It is imagination without boundaries. It is creativity without constraints. It is extraordinary intelligence. Definition of Genius ~Junkyard Wonders Meaning in My Own Words Knowing without experience Risking without fear of failure Perception without touch Understanding without research Certainty without proof Ability without practice Invention with limitations Imagination without boundaries Creativity without constraints Extraordinary intelligence

Writing about Junkyard Wonders Write about why you think Mrs. Peterson refers to her class as the Junkyard Wonders. How does the term make them feel? What do they learn from being labeled a junkyard wonder? ~Junkyard Wonders

Writing about Junkyard Wonders Mrs. Peterson calls her classroom the Junkyard. How is her classroom unique? How does she create a learning environment that inspires her students? What do you think it would be like to be in her class? ~Junkyard Wonders

From the Point of View of the Junkyard Wonder Write from the point of view of the airplane they name The Junkyard Wonder. Summarize the major events in the story and consider how the airplane would have viewed the events.

Junkyard Inspired Poetry Write a poem inspired by an image, mood, or theme from The Junkyard Wonders.

Questions about Junkyard Wonders 1. Why does Trisha ask to live with her dad? 2. How does the first day of school turn out for Trisha? 3. Why is being put into tribes important in Mrs. Peterson s class? 4. How does Mrs. Peterson show the class what it means to be a junkyard wonder? 5. What does the vanilla tribe create? 6. What major event impacts the entire class and saddens them profoundly? 7. How does the story end? 8. What can the reader learn from the story?

Questions about Junkyard Wonders ANSWER KEY 1. Why does Trisha ask to live with her dad? She felt dumb at her old school and wants a new start. 2. How does the first day of school turn out for Trisha? Her friend Kay ignores her, and she discovers she is in a class everyone thinks is weird. 3. Why is being put into tribes important in Mrs. Peterson s class? Students are put into tribes to find others like them and to work in groups. 4. How does Mrs. Peterson show the class what it means to be a junkyard wonder? She takes them to the junkyard, and they get to build something new out of old parts. 5. What does the vanilla tribe create? They rebuild a model airplane. 6. What major event impacts the entire class and saddens them profoundly? Jody Beach passes away from his disease. 7. How does the story end? They get to fly the Junkyard Wonder and she flies straight to the moon. 8. What can the reader learn from the story? Accept reasonable answers.

Visualizing in Junkyard Wonders Draw what you visualize when you read this book. Write a description of what you visualize.

Creating a Junkyard Wonder Imagine you had the opportunity to build your own Junkyard Wonder out of old materials you could find around school or at your home. What would you build? What would it look like? What would be its purpose and how would it work? The Title of my Wonder: Materials Needed How to Build My Junkyard Wonder My Wonder s Purpose

My Junkyard Wonder Draw a picture and write a description of your Junkyard Wonder.