lesson 2 teacher’s guide a voice for equality · lesson 2 teacher’s guide a voice for equality...
TRANSCRIPT
Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
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Number of Words: 1,263
Characteristics of the Text Genre • Biography
Text Structure • Second-person introduction followed by six-chapter third-person chronological narrativeContent • Life, education, and legal career of Thurgood Marshall
• Segregation and other challenges facing African Americans in the twentieth century • The NAACP; Brown v. Board of Education; U.S. Supreme Court
Themes and Ideas • Racial segregation is unjust.• The court system is an instrument for correcting inequalities and injustices under the law.• The Constitution guarantees equal rights and the due process of law to all Americans.
Language and Literary Features
• Inspirational narrative• Some fi gurative language: fueled his dreams; the case that changed history
Sentence Complexity • Questions, exclamations, dashes• Frequent use of explanatory appositional phrases
Vocabulary • Terms from history or civics, such as Constitution, Supreme Court• Terms related to law and rights: segregation, injustice, prejudice
Words • Multisyllable words, such as powerful, graduated, segregation Illustrations • Historic photographs with captions
Book and Print Features • Table of Contents and chapter divisions; timeline• Photographs on most pages
© 2006. Fountas, I.C. & Pinnell, G.S. Teaching for Comprehending and Fluency, Heinemann, Portsmouth, N.H.
L E S S O N 2 T E A C H E R ’ S G U I D E
A Voice for Equality by Darleen Ramos
Fountas-Pinnell Level SBiographySelection SummaryThis biography covers the life and career of Thurgood Marshall, the fi rst African American Supreme Court justice, from his boyhood to his retirement in 1991. In his 24 years on the Court, Justice Marshall was the voice for workers, for people of different races, and for women.
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captured – caught while trying to get away, grasped, p. 8
dream – something you want to happen very much, p. 3
encounters – meetings with people, p. 5
example – something that shows how to do something, p. 8
injustice – something that is unfair, p. 4
nourishing – giving people what they need to live, p. 4
numerous – many of something, p. 11
preferred – liked something better than something else, p. 6
recall – to remember something, p. 14
segregation – a system that kept African Americans and white Americans apart, p. 7
Target Vocabulary
A Voice for Equality by Darleen Ramos
Build BackgroundHelp students use their knowledge about civil rights and government to visualize the selection. Build interest by asking a question such as the following: What is the job of a Supreme Court Justice? How do you think the job might protect people’s rights? Read the title and author and discuss the photograph on the cover. Tell students that the book is a biography of Thurgood Marshall, the fi rst African American Supreme Court justice. Ask students what kinds of features they might fi nd in a biography.
Introduce the TextGuide students through the text, noting important ideas and helping with unfamiliar language and vocabulary. Here are some suggestions:
Page 2 Ask students to read the chapter headings and tell what clues they give about the book’s organization.
Pages 4-5: The text says Thurgood Marshall’s father enjoyed watching the legal encounters at the local courthouse, and Marshall would tag along. Ask: What kind of encounters do you think you would you see at a courthouse? Explain that at the time of Thurgood Marshall’s youth, it was an injustice that blacks had to attend all-black schools.
Pages 8–9: Call attention to the heading and photographs. Marshall went to Howard University to study law. Here he met a teacher, Charles Houston, who captured Marshall’s attention and set a strong example by opposing segregation. Ask: How did Charles Houston capture Thurgood Marshall’s attention?
Pages 10–11: Check to make sure students know how to read the timeline.Ask: What important event happened in 1967? How many years are there between the dark bars on the timeline?
Now turn back to the beginning and read to fi nd out how Thurgood Marshall became the fi rst African American Supreme Court justice and a voice for equality.
2© Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Lesson 2: A Voice for EqualityGrade 4
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ReadHave students read silently while you listen to individual students read aloud. Support their understanding of the text as needed.
Remind students to use the Monitor/Clarify Strategy and to think of questions as they read.
Discuss and Revisit the TextPersonal ResponseInvite students to share their personal responses to the selection.Suggested language: What do you think it would be like to have Thurgood Marshall as a teacher or co-worker? Which qualities of his do you most admire?
Ways of ThinkingAs you discuss the text, help students understand these points:
Thinking Within the Text Thinking Beyond the Text Thinking About the Text
• Marshall won cases for the NAACP.
• The Brown versus Board of Education case ended legal segregation.
• Marshall was the fi rst African American Supreme Court justice.
• Unjust laws can be ended.
• Injustices need to be fought.
• One person can make a difference in the lives of many people.
• The photographs help bring history to life.
• A timeline shows events in order.
• Examples from Marshall’s life support the book’s title.
© 2006. Fountas, I.C. & Pinnell, G.S. Teaching for Comprehending and Fluency, Heinemann, Portsmouth, N.H.
Choices for Further Support• Fluency Invite students to participate in choral reading. Remind students to pay
attention to punctuation as guides on when to pause and what to emphasize, or stress
• Comprehension Based on your observations of the students’ reading and discussion, revisit parts of the text to clarify or extend comprehension. Remind students to go back to the text to support their ideas.
• Phonics/Word Work Remind students that prefi xes and suffi xes, such as in-, un-, re-, -ion, and -ment are added to root words to change their meaning or part of speech. Examples from the text include: injustice, segregation, advancement, unequal, and recall.
3© Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Lesson 2: A Voice for EqualityGrade 4
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Writing about ReadingCritical ThinkingHave students complete the Critical Thinking questions on BLM 2.8.
RespondingHave students complete the activities at the back of the book, using their Reader’s Notebook. Use the instruction below as needed to reinforce or extend understanding of the comprehension skill.
Target Comprehension SkillAuthor’s Purpose
Target Comprehension Skill Remind students that the author had a purpose in mind
in choosing to write this biography. Model how to add to the Graphic Organizer using a “Think Aloud” like the one below:
Think Aloud
During his college years, Thurgood Marshall insisted in sitting in the all-white section of the movie theater. He became the fi rst African American judge on the Supreme Court. These details help support the author’s purpose to show that Thurgood Marshall made a difference for many Americans.
Practice the SkillEncourage students to share their examples of another book in which the author’s purpose is to bring an inspiring message to readers.
Writing Prompt: Thinking Beyond the TextHave students write a response to the prompt on page 6. Remind them that when they think beyond the text, they use their personal knowledge to reach new understandings.
Assessment Prompts• On page 14, what is the meaning of recall?
• One idea present in this selection is that ____________________________________.
• The author organizes the selection by ______________________________________.
4© Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Lesson 2: A Voice for EqualityGrade 4
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Critical ThinkingRead and answer the questions.
1. Think within the text How did Thurgood Marshall fi rst learn
about equal rights?
2. Think within the text How did Thurgood Marshall stand up
for equal rights while he was still a college student?
3. Think beyond the text The author says that Brown versus
Board of Education was a huge victory for African Americans.
Do you agree? Explain your answer.
4. Think about the text What purpose do the headers serve in
this nonfi ction selection?
Making Connections Thurgood Marshall fought for the equal rights of all people. Think of other people you have read about who have also fought for equality. How have their successes made your life better?
Write your answer in your Reader’s Notebook.
A Voice For EqualityCritical Thinking
Critical Thinking© Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Grade 4, Unit 1: Reaching Out10
Lesson 2B L A C K L I N E M A S T E R 2 . 8
Name Date
Marshall’s teacher punished him by making him learn parts of the Constitution.
Marshall sat in an all-white section of a movie theater and refused to move.
Yes, the end of the injustice of school segregation in the United States made it
possible for African Americans to achieve greater equality.
They help organize the events in the text in the proper sequence. They also tell
the main idea of each section.
Possible responses shown.
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First Pass
English Language DevelopmentReading Support Give English learners a “preview” of the text by holding a brief small-group discussion with them before reading the text with the entire group. Remind students that Thurgood Marshall devoted his life to fi ghting for equal rights.
Idioms This selection contains idioms that might be unfamiliar. Explain the meanings of the idiomatic expressions tag along (page 5), take a stand (page 7), and speak his mind (page 7).
Oral Language DevelopmentCheck student comprehension, using a dialogue that best matches your students’ English profi ciency level. Speaker 1 is the teacher, Speaker 2 is the student.
Beginning/Early Intermediate Intermediate Early Advanced/Advanced
Speaker 1: What is the most powerful court in the United States?
Speaker 2: the Supreme Court
Speaker 1: What are Supreme Court judges called?
Speaker 2: Justices
Speaker 1: What work did Marshall do for the NAACP?
Speaker 2: worked as their lawyer
Speaker 1: How did young Marshall learn about “equal rights” and “due process of law”?
Speaker 2: His teacher made him learn parts of the Constitution.
Speaker 1: How did the Brown versus the Board of Education case change history?
Speaker 2: The case ended school segregation in the United States.
Speaker 1: What was unique about President Lyndon B. Johnson’s nomination of Thurgood Marshall as Supreme Court justice?
Speaker 2: President Lyndon B. Johnson’s nomination of Thurgood Marshall as Supreme Court justice was unique because Marshall was the fi rst African American to be nominated for that position.
5© Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Lesson 2: A Voice for EqualityGrade 4
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Name Date
A Voice for EqualityThinking Beyond the Text
Think about the questions below. Then write your answer in two paragraphs.
Remember that when you think beyond the text, you use your personal knowledge to reach new understandings.
The text describes Thurgood Marshall working for equal rights and the law. How can one person become an important voice for equality? How can one voice turn into many voices fighting injustice? Support your response with examples from the text.
6© Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Lesson 2: A Voice for EqualityGrade 4
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A Voice For EqualityCritical Thinking
7
Lesson 2B L A C K L I N E M A S T E R 2 . 8
Name Date
Grade 4
Critical ThinkingRead and answer the questions.
1. Think within the text How did Thurgood Marshall fi rst learn
about equal rights?
2. Think within the text How did Thurgood Marshall stand up
for equal rights while he was still a college student?
3. Think beyond the text The author says that Brown versus
Board of Education was a huge victory for African Americans.
Do you agree? Explain your answer.
4. Think about the text What purpose do the headers serve in
this nonfi ction selection?
Making Connections Thurgood Marshall fought for the equal rights of all people. Think of other people you have read about who have also fought for equality. How have their successes made your life better?
Write your answer in your Reader’s Notebook.
© Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Lesson 2: A Voice for Equality
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1414
056
Student Date
8
Lesson 2B L A C K L I N E M A S T E R 2 . 1 2
A Voice for EqualityRunning Record Form
A Voice for Equality • LEVEL S
Behavior Code Error
Read word correctly ✓cat 0
Repeated word, sentence, or phrase
®cat
0
Omission —cat 1
Behavior Code Error
Substitution cutcat 1
Self-corrects cut sccat 0
Insertion the
ˆcat 1
Word told Tcat 1
page Selection Text Errors Self-Corrections
13 Linda Brown was a third-grader in Topeka, Kansas. She had to
walk a mile to attend an all-black school. Monroe Elementary
School was much closer to her house, but Linda could not
attend school there because she was an African American.
Linda Brown’s parents called the NAACP for help.
The Supreme Court combined Brown’s case with several
similar cases from other states. Marshall used his knowledge
of the Constitution to argue this case. He claimed that separate
schools for blacks and whites were unequal and that
segregated schools went against the Constitution. In 1954, the
Supreme Court agreed.
Comments: Accuracy Rate (# words read correctly/100 ×
100)
%
Total Self- Corrections
Grade 4© Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Lesson 2: A Voice for Equality
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