ALEX Learning Activity

  

Determining What the Author's Purpose REALLY Is [During]

A Learning Activity is a strategy a teacher chooses to actively engage students in learning a concept or skill using a digital tool/resource.

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  This learning activity provided by:  
Author: Brooke Davis
Organization:0
  General Activity Information  
Activity ID: 3014
Title:
Determining What the Author's Purpose REALLY Is [During]
Digital Tool/Resource:
Be An Inventor
Web Address – URL:
Overview:

"Be an Inventor" is an interactive slideshow that students will use to read and determine the author's purpose for writing in various informational texts. Students will use text features, such as timelines and highlighting, to cite evidence to explain the author's perspective toward the topic. This learning activity was created as as result of teh ALEX-Alabama Virtual Library (AVL) Resource Development Summit. 

  Associated Standards and Objectives  
Content Standard(s):
English Language Arts
ELA2021 (2021)
Grade: 4
22. Analyze events, procedures, ideas, or concepts in informational texts, including what happened and why, based on specific information in the text.

a. Cite evidence to explain the author's perspective toward a topic in an informational text.
Unpacked Content
Teacher Vocabulary:
22.
  • Analyze
  • Events
  • Procedures
  • Ideas
  • Concepts
  • Informational texts
22a.
  • Cite
  • Evidence
  • Author's perspective
  • Topic
  • Informational text
Knowledge:
22. Students know:
  • Informational text often describes events, procedures, ideas, or concepts.
22a.
  • Authors of informational text have personal perspectives or viewpoints that are reflected in their writing.
Skills:
22. Students are able to:
  • Use specific information in informational text to describe events, procedures, ideas, or concepts.
  • Explain the causes and effects of the events described in text.
22a.
  • Identify and explain an author's perspective toward a topic in informational text.
  • Provide textual evidence to support their explanation of the author's perspective.
Understanding:
22. Students understand that:
  • They can use information from the text to examine and interpret events, procedures, ideas, or concepts from informational texts.
  • Some informational text will explain the causes and effects of certain events.
22a.
  • Authors of informational text have views and opinions about the topics they write about, and their perspectives will be reflected within the text.
Learning Objectives:

The students will analyze various informational texts, determine the author's purpose for writing, and cite evidence to support their answer. 

 

  Strategies, Preparations and Variations  
Phase:
During/Explore/Explain
Activity:

1. The teacher will provide the students with the URL to the "Be an Inventor" slides via the chosen learning platform (Schoology, Google Classroom, etc).

2. The students will access the URL and click on "Launch." The teacher will access the "Be an Inventor" presentation and show it on a screen or interactive TV. 

3. Once everyone has accessed the URL and pulled up the presentation, the teacher will read the overview aloud and have students read along. 

4. The teacher and the students will follow along with the slides on the "Be an Inventor" presentation.

a) The teacher will show the video provided on the 3rd slide. Do not have the students click on this link. Show the video on a projector or interactive TV. 

b) On slide 4, have students choose their Lexile/reading level. This should have been provided to students before the lesson. Students will click on the owl to choose their correct level. Clicking on the levels does not work. 

c) On slide 5, the students will spend time reading their passage about Thomas Edison. The students will click "continue" at the top of the slide when they are done reading the passage. 

d) Have the students signal when they are done reading and have clicked continue. 

e) Explain to students that they will go back and read the passage a second time, and this time, they will highlight words and phrases that they think help them determine why the author wrote the passage. Remind students that the author's purpose is the reason he/she wrote something. 

f) The students will read their passage (by clicking on the owl) and use the highlight feature to highlight words and phrases and sentences that help them figure out why the author wrote the passage about Thomas Edison. The students will click on "Highlight It" and then use the mouse to highlight words. They will then click on the yellow highlighter button at the top of the passage to begin highlighting. Make sure students know they can click the "undo" button if they highlight the wrong thing. The teacher will give the students time to complete this activity. 

g) When the student is done highlighting, he or she will click "Submit" on the right side of the slide. The teacher will give the students time to complete this activity. 

h) The student will then use the box at the bottom of the slide, and type an answer in the box to tell why they think the author wrote the passage about Thomas Edison. The teacher will give the students time to complete this activity. 

i) The teacher and students will proceed through the slideshow. 

j) Give students a few minutes to explore slides 9 and 10. Students will look at the wall of inventors and see if they can guess what items they invented. 

k) On slide 11, have students study the timeline. Have students pick their favorite invention and tell a partner why it's their favorite. 

l) Guide students in answering the questions on slide 12 and have them write their answers on a piece of paper or sticky note. Have them check their answers on slide 13.

m) On slide 14, have students try to answer the question. They can then click on the answer to see if they got it correct. 

n) Read slide 15 together and then point out inventions on the timeline below the passage. On slide 16, read each question aloud and have students try to answer them. Remind students they can refer back to slide 15 for help.  

o) Show students the video on slide 17. They do not need to watch this video on their computers.

p) On slide 19, test students' memories and see if they can remember what each person invented. Answers can be checked on slide 20.

q) Students will complete the activity on slide 21 by clicking "Visualize It" and creating a picture of themselves and naming something they would like to invent. 

r) Allow students time to watch the videos on the remaining slides (22-28) to learn more about these inventors. 
Assessment Strategies:

1. The teacher will have students click on "My Work" so that the teacher can see the results of the work the students have submitted for slide 8 on the slideshow. The results will be indicative of whether or not students can determine why the author wrote the passage about Thomas Edison - to inform readers about his many inventions. 

2) The teacher will informally assess by having students hold up 1 (a), 2 (b), or 3 (c) fingers to indicate their answers determining the author's purpose on passages on slides 16 and 18 of the slideshow. 


Advanced Preparation:

*This activity should take approximately 30-40 minutes. 

-The teacher will need to post the URL on a learning platform for students to access. 

- The teacher will need to have the presentation pulled up for students' viewing (on a projector screen or interactive TV).

- The teacher will need to know which Lexile and/or reading level each student will need to choose on slide 4. (Blue - 500-575/2.7-3.2; orange - 600-650/3.3-3.7; Pink - 655-775/3.8-4.7) 

- The teacher will need to provide students with their Lexile level prior to beginning the lesson. This could be done by writing each student's level on a sticky note and placing it on his/her desk or by placing a colored sticky note or sticker dot on the student's desk/computer. 

- Have the Author's Purpose Checklist and the Author's Purpose Scavenger Hunt Activity pages printed for intervention and acceleration purposes. 

- The teacher will need a stack of books for the accelerated activity, preferably several nonfiction books that either inform, explain, or describe. Some ideas include the History Smashers Series, Crying Is Like the Rain, A Tree Is a Plant, From Seed to Plant, How to Babysit Grandpa, How to Build a House, How to Read a Book, In November, Owl Moon, Come On, Rain. 

- The students should have basic computer navigation skills in order to engage in the interactive slideshow. The students should be familiar with informational texts and how to locate the author's purpose. 

Variation Tips (optional):

- Students could click on "print" on their submission for slide 8 and could save their answers as a PDF on their computers. This could be emailed to the teacher or printed for a more concrete, hard copy of their answers. 

Intervention Ideas: Provide students with an author's purpose checklist as they work through the activity. This will provide them with clues/hints about what to look for. 

Acceleration Ideas: Provide students with a stack of nonfiction books with a variation of the author's purpose. Provide students with an Author's Purpose Scavenger Hunt activity page. Students will choose a book to read and then complete one column of the activity sheet. If students have more time, they can choose multiple books and complete multiple columns.  

Notes or Recommendations (optional):

This lesson can be used in conjunction with Determining What the Author's Purpose REALLY Is [Before] (before activity) and Determining What the Author's Purpose REALLY Is [After] (after activity).

  Keywords and Search Tags  
Keywords and Search Tags: authors purpose, informational text, timelines