Why make time for Readers Theater?

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Why make time for Readers Theater? Because Readers Theater makes reading come alive for students, helps build oral fl uency and strengthens reading and language arts skills, promotes teamwork, strengthening your classroom community, helps develop confi dence in students, offers performance possibilities for in-class or schoolwide presentations, and provides all the enrichment of traditional theater productions, without the logistical headaches. EMC 3307 Author: Ginny Hall Editor: Sarita Chávez Silverman Copy Editor: Heather Brashear Illustrator: Don Robison Designer: Cheryl Puckett Desktop: Debbie Lambert Cover: Wendy Crockett Congratulations on your purchase of some of the finest teaching materials in the world. For information about other Evan-Moor products, call 1-800-777-4362 or FAX 1-800-777-4332. Visit our Web site www.evan-moor.com for additional product information. Entire contents EVAN-MOOR CORP. 18 Lower Ragsdale Drive, Monterey, CA 93940-5746. Permission is hereby granted to the individual purchaser to reproduce student materials in this book for noncommercial individual or single classroom use only. Permission is not granted for schoolwide, or systemwide, reproduction of materials. Printed in USA.

Table of Contents Introduction...2 Assessment Pre-performance Checklist...5 Performance Review Template...6 Assessing Oral Presentations...7 Scripts & Activities John Chapman...8 (Biography, Language Arts, Science) Crow s Potlatch...17 (Character Education, Language Arts, Native American Traditions) Earth s Seven Continents...26 (Language Arts, Science) Febold Feboldson Saves Nebraska from Drought...35 (American Traditions, Language Arts) The Statue of Liberty...44 (Language Arts, Social Studies) The Foolish Little Hare: A Fable...53 (Language Arts) Don t Forget Zero...62 (Language Arts, Mathematics) How Anansi Brought Stories to Earth...71 (African Traditions, Language Arts, Social Studies) The Little Pollinators...80 (Language Arts, Science) George Washington Carver...89 (Biography, Notable African American, Language Arts) The Giant Squash and the Erie Canal...98 (Language Arts, Math, Social Studies) Lion Dancer...107 (Asian American Traditions, Character Education, Language Arts) How Beetle Got Her Jeweled Coat...116 (Language Arts, Social Studies) The Lost Kitten...125 (Character Education, Language Arts) Our Solar System...134 (Language Arts, Science) Answer Key...143 2003 by Evan-Moor Corp. 1 Readers Theater, Grade 2 EMC 3307

Now Presenting... John Chapman John Chapman was an unusual person. Popularly known as Johnny Appleseed, he changed our world by planting apple trees throughout the Midwest. Setting the Stage Background Make sure students know that legends often grow out of stories about people who really lived. This is the case with John Chapman, who was born in 1774 and later came to be known as Johnny Appleseed. He traveled throughout six states, planting apple seeds and seedlings as he went in an effort to fulfi ll his dream of spreading apple orchards throughout the land. Because of his strange dress, vegetarian eating habits, and his unusual dream, people began telling stories about the events in his life. This script is an imaginary episode in the life of an extraordinary man who believed that all people and animals were his friends. Staging Have the person reading John Chapman s part wear a pan on his head. Vocabulary Review with students the meaning of these terms related to apple farming: blossom: the fl ower or bloom of a fruit-bearing plant or tree nursery: a place where young trees or plants are raised seedling: a plant grown from a seed Use a map of the United States to point out the states where John Chapman planted apple trees. Help students learn to read and pronounce these state names: Illinois Indiana Kentucky Massachusetts Ohio Pennsylvania 2003 by Evan-Moor Corp. 8 Readers Theater, Grade 2 EMC 3307

Now Presenting... John Chapman This is the story of an unusual man who touched the lives of many pioneers in the Midwest. Characters Narrator... Nathan (a pioneer boy)... Elizabeth (a pioneer girl)... John Chapman... Pioneer Mother... 2003 by Evan-Moor Corp. 9 Readers Theater, Grade 2 EMC 3307

John Chapman Narrator Nathan Elizabeth Characters John Chapman Pioneer Mother Narrator: John Chapman was born in Leominster, Massachusetts, in the year 1774. He grew up to become a very special man. His dream was to plant apple trees all over the Midwest. He wanted pioneers to have apple trees for food when they settled the new lands. Let us take up our story in the year 1802. John Chapman, now 28 years old, is busy planting apple seedlings in the state of Ohio. Elizabeth: (excitedly; out of breath) Nathan! Nathan! Come with me! I just saw the strangest thing! Nathan: What is it? Elizabeth: It s a man with a pan on his head! He s down by the river. Narrator: The children run down to the river to fi nd the man. Elizabeth: Look! There he is! Nathan: Hello, sir. I am Nathan Smith. My family is moving west to Illinois. Our wagons are right over that hill. 2003 by Evan-Moor Corp. 10 Readers Theater, Grade 2 EMC 3307

John: Hello, Nathan. My name is John Chapman, but most people call me Johnny Appleseed. Nathan: Why do they call you that? John: Because I spend so much time planting apple trees. Elizabeth: Do you live here? John: No, I m just here planting apple trees. I want people to have apples for food when they build their homes here. As soon as I plant these last trees, I will be on my way. Elizabeth: (giggling) Why are you wearing a pan on your head? John: This is my cooking pan, and it fi ts just right. Elizabeth: Did you lose your shoes in the river? John: I don t much like shoes. Mostly, I like to go barefoot. Nathan: May we help you plant these seedlings? John: That would be wonderful. Let me show you how. Elizabeth: Mama says we ll have to plant our own apple trees when we reach Illinois. It will be good to learn now how to do it. We will have to plant 50 trees on our new farm. That s what the law says. 2003 by Evan-Moor Corp. 11 Readers Theater, Grade 2 EMC 3307