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          Third Grade Genre Study and Purposeful Writing in Response to
                Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (by: Ronald Dahl)


Day 1: Meeting the Characters: Charlie, Mr. Wonka, and the Golden Tickets (Chapter 1-6)

General Information:

Name: Autumn Schaffer
Grade Level: Third Grade
Subject Areas: Language Arts with Technology integration
Date Taught: Day 1 of 5 lesson plans
Total Duration of Lesson: 65 minutes

Title of Lesson:
Meeting the Characters: Charlie, Mr. Wonka, and the Golden Tickets (Ch.1-6)

Primary Learning Outcomes:
   1. The student will read aloud third grade text with age-appropriate pronunciation and
      fluency.
   2. The student will discuss the subject matter of each chapter as well as the holistic
      comprehension of the read-aloud chapters.
   3. The student will use a basic internet search to locate non-fiction material based
      upon the history of chocolate and the process in which chocolate is made.
   4. After completing an online tutorial, the student will sequence the events of making
      chocolate in sequential order.
   5. The student will use basic elements of poetry (rhyme and rhythm) as well as
      descriptive words to write for a purpose. The purpose of the poem will be to invite
      young children to Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory.
   6. After being presented with the information (chapter 6 of Charlie and the Chocolate
      Factory) the student will write a short persuasive essay expressing their position.

Related Georgia Performance Standards: (Third Grade Reading)
Fluency:
ELA3R1 The student demonstrates the ability to read orally with speed, accuracy,
and expression. The student
a. Applies letter-sound knowledge to decode unknown words quickly and accurately.
d. Uses self-correction when subsequent reading indicates an earlier misreading
within grade-level texts.

Comprehension:
ELA3R3 The student uses a variety of strategies to gain meaning from grade-level
text. The student
g. Summarizes text content.
i. Makes connections between texts and/or personal experiences.
n. Identifies the basic elements of a variety of genres (fiction, non-fiction,
drama, and poetry).
2

q. Formulates and defends an opinion about a text.

Writing:
ELA3W1 The student demonstrates competency in the writing process. The
student
a. Captures a reader’s interest by setting a purpose and developing a point of view.
b. Begins to select a focus and an organizational pattern based on purpose, genre,
expectations, audience, and length.
d. Uses organizational patterns for conveying information (e.g., chronological
order, cause and effect, similarity and difference, questions and answers).
f. Begins to use specific sensory details (e.g., strong verbs, adjectives) to enhance
descriptive effect.
i. Begins to include relevant examples, facts, anecdotes, and details appropriate
to the audience.
j. Uses a variety of resources to research and share information on a topic.
k. Writes a response to literature that demonstrates understanding of the text,
formulates an opinion, and supports a judgment.
l. Writes a persuasive piece that states a clear position.

Materials and Equipment:
Instruction/ Whole Group
        1. Class set of Ronald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
ISBN: 0142410314
(Dahl, Ronald. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. New York: Puffin Books, 1973.)
        2. Activeboard Presentation
(focused on taking formative notes about each chapter, review the genre of nonfiction,
complete a sequencing activity of how chocolate is made, and review the genre of poetry
as well as the characteristics of poetry)
        3. Computer with internet accessibility
        4. Sequencing worksheet- for each student (see attachment)

Independent Projects/Assignments
       1. Spiral Bound Writing Notebook
       2. Construction paper, markers, paint, crayons, colored pencils

Technology Connections:
        1. All About Chocolate
http://www.fieldmuseum.org/Chocolate/about.html
(Internet Website about the history of chocolate and how chocolate is made)

          2. Making Chocolate (for kids)
http://www.fieldmuseum.org/Chocolate/manufacture_interactive/manufacture.html
(This interactive website allows the students to sequence through the events of making
chocolate. It begins with growing a cacao tree, which is where chocolate comes from. The
process ends with the students packaging their very on candy bar!)

Procedures:
3

Step One: Introduction (Estimated Time: 10 minutes)
       1. The teacher will introduce the book Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by
           Ronald Dahl. She will discuss other books by Ronald Dahl, such as Matilda,
           James and the Giant Peach, The BFG, and The Witches. She may also choose
           to put images of the book covers as well as images of Ronald Dahl on her
           activeboard presentation.
       2. The teacher will then focus on introducing the book Charlie and the Chocolate
           Factory. She may choose to summarize major events in the story by saying that
           this will be a book about a poor boy that lucks upon a wonderful opportunity.
           He gets to visit a chocolate factory owned by the mysterious Willy Wonka. His
           inventive chocolates are like none other and all the children in town would love
           to see the factory. When Charlie arrives he is able to not only able to see the
           unique factory rooms and taste the various types of chocolate, he also receives a
           special prize.
       3. Finally, after introducing the book and arousing the students’ attention the
           teacher should then pass out the class set of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
           The teacher may choose to read aloud the chapter and have the students follow
           along in their copy. She also may have the students take turn reading aloud. In
           some cases the students may work in groups to read to one another. It is
           probably best, however, if the readings are completed in a unified setting.

Step Two: Teaching the Primary Learning Outcomes (Estimated Time: 45 minutes)
      1. The teacher will read-aloud, or allow the students to read aloud, chapters 1-6.
          The plot of these chapters focus on introducing the main characters, Charlie
          Bucket and his family as well as the mysterious Willa Wonka. The students
          learn that Charlie is a poor boy, yet he is pure and loyal to his family. He is also
          very humble and honest. The students also learn about the intriguing yet
          secretive chocolate factory. To everyone’s surprise, however, Willie Wonka has
          allowed five golden tickets to be placed in some of his chocolate bars. The five
          children who receive the tickets will have the honor of touring Wonka’s
          factory! This day’s reading ends as two children, Augustus Gloop and Veruca
          Salt, find two of the golden tickets. Unlike Charlie, however, these two children
          have personality flaws and are not nearly as pure as the main character.
      Activity 1:
      2. Immediately after reading the text, the teacher will instruct a whole group mini-
          lesson based upon the nonfiction, real life history of chocolate. The teacher may
          need to explain that while Willy Wonka’s factory is fictitious, there are real
          chocolate factories that make the chocolate that we eat. They begin with the
          flowers from the cacao tree and end with the completely packaged candy bar.
          To aid in teaching this process, the teacher may choose to utilize the website:
          All about Chocolate http://www.fieldmuseum.org/Chocolate/about.html
      3. After the students have learned about the history of making chocolate as well as
          the process in which chocolate is made, the students, either using a computer
          lab or using the activeboard, will complete a child-friendly process of making
          chocolate. This reviews the learned material as well as allows the students to
          interact with the process. This interactive website can be located at:
4

      http://www.fieldmuseum.org/Chocolate/manufacture_interactive/manufacture.html
       4. Shortly after, the teacher should use whole group instruction to complete a
            sequencing activity based upon what the students learned about the process of
            making chocolate. (See attachment for an appropriate graphic organizer.) The
            teacher can complete a similar exercise on the activeboard and have the student
            mimic the process on their own graphic organizer.
       Activity 2
       5. The teacher should then shift focus from the nonfiction process of making
            chocolate back to the content within Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. The
            teacher should discuss the significance of the golden tickets and how they were
            invitations for certain children to visit the unique factory. After discussing and
            reviewing the characteristic of poetry, which include rhyme and rhythm, allow
            the students to write their own poem that could serve as a golden ticket. Remind
            the students that while it should be creative and inventive, much like Willy
            Wonka’s speech and demeanor, these inviting poems should also contains
            specific elements. The students will need to include the date and time of the
            tour as well as what the children should bring with them. It would also be nice
            to include snippets of information that the children might see in the factory. The
            teacher should remind the students that this is not a mere poem; it is also an
            informational and descriptive piece of writing. (See attachment for example.)
            Afterwards, the teacher may allow the students to decorate their poem to look
            more like a golden ticket.

Step Three: Closure (Estimated Time: 10 minutes)
       1. As the students complete their invitations, the teacher may choose to allow
           them to present to the class. The teacher may also choose to allow the other
           students to assess their classmates, judging if they have included all vital pieces
           of information. The teacher may also choose to review the content of the
           chapter read today and predict what will happen in the next chapters. The
           teacher may also choose to preview, summarize, and hint at the next day’s
           readings.

Assessing the Primary Learning Outcomes:
         Each student’s ability to read age-appropriate text (Charlie and the Chocolate
Factory) with fluency and correct pronunciation will be assessed by the teacher during
whole group instruction. While this assessment will be informal, it will also be natural,
allowing the teacher to see what each student is capable of without prior study of the text.
This also proves the importance of why the students should read in a whole group setting.
If the students read aloud in small groups or if the teacher simply reads the book herself,
this specific assessment cannot take place.
         After the students have been presented with the process of making chocolate, using
the online tutorial, they will be given the opportunity to practice recalling the steps using
an accompanying interactive website. Afterwards the student’s knowledge of the process
will be assessed by using a graphic organizer. While the actual steps are not necessarily the
primary learning outcome, the process of learning to organize information in sequential
5

order is. For this reason the teacher may choose to prompt and review the actual answers to
the process after the students have attempted to sequence them on their own.
        The students will also be assessed on their ability to write a poem using rhyme and
rhythm. Their abilities to include descriptive and informational context within their poem
will also be assessed. The teacher will be able to evaluate each poem as the creator
presents it to the class. The other students will also be given the opportunity to evaluate
each other, making sure each poem relays the vital information with clarity as well as with
appropriate poetic devices.

Plan for Early Finishers: (see attachment for persuasive writing process planner)
As the students complete their poetic invitations, they may begin the final assignment
which is actually designated for homework. During the reading of Charlie and the
Chocolate Factory the students will keep a personal writing journal in which they response
and connect to certain situations within the text. While the students may choose to include
other additional responses, the teacher will provide at least one prompt per day. The
student will then respond to this prompt using evidence from the reading as well as their
own opinion. The writing prompt for the first day asks the students to interpret a certain
situation from two points of view. Afterwards, the students are to take a stand and write a
short persuasive paper defending their opinion about the situation. The situation is:

“Augustus Gloop found a golden ticket by eating a lot of chocolate. His mother was proud,
but Charlie’s grandmother said it was disgusting. Whose opinion do you support? Because
 he ate so much chocolate, his probability of getting a gold ticket went up, but his health
   was endangered. What would be a solution? (buy low fat chocolate, share his bought
                                   chocolate, exercise)”

Accommodation:
         Many of the students within the class may be unable to read with appropriate
fluency or pronunciation. For this reason, the teacher may nonchalantly ask that these
students read shorter passages as well as passages that are not as vital to the chapter’s
comprehension. (Many students are not able to read aloud and comprehend the text
simultaneously.) It is also important that the teacher ask questions that review or
summarize the chapters as well as address misconceptions as soon as they become evident.
This accommodation can easily occur during the reading process.
         Other students may not be able to recall the specific process of making chocolate,
even after watching a tutorial and completing an interactive activity. For this reason, the
teacher may choose to include the answers on a sequencing activity on the active board. It
would then, of course, be the student’s objective to simply order the facts in sequential
order. This may help students who are not able to recall the specific process. Even with this
accommodation the students should be able to practice using a graphic organizer to
sequence an activity. This, unlike the process of making chocolate, is the actual learning
outcome.
         To aid the student in writing an informational and descriptive poem, the teacher
may first provide an example of a finished product. She may also choose to make a list of
vital information that should be included in a whole group instruction format. This way the
students will only have to aid their own creativity to the assignment.
6



Extension:
As an extension to any of these lesson plans the students could simply complete other
responses to literature within their writing notebook. The teacher may provide other
prompts focused towards the read chapters. She may, however, allow the students to
respond naturally, perhaps even in diary format. The teacher may also have the students
choose a main character (Charlie, Grandpa Joe, Willy Wonka, or the other children who
visit the factory) to embody in writing format. As each chapter is read aloud the students
could respond, in writing, their feelings about the events within the story. They would, of
course, do so in the mindset and point of view of their chosen character.

Remediation
For students with sever difficulties in reading and comprehending such a text, the teacher
may choose to limit the chapters as well as spend more time discussing the information
that occurs within each. The teacher may also choose to use the activeboard to take notes
about the main events that occur within each chapter. Due to this extra time spent in
interpreting the text, the teacher may choose to limit the activities involved with each
reading session. For example, the teacher may choose to only provide certain pieces of
chocolate’s history as well as modify what information is used when interpreting its
process. Finally, the teacher may allow the students to work in groups to create their
informational poem. She may also choose to display the piece of information to be
included within the project (as discussed in the “accommodation” section.)

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Day 1 lesson plan

  • 1. 1 Third Grade Genre Study and Purposeful Writing in Response to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (by: Ronald Dahl) Day 1: Meeting the Characters: Charlie, Mr. Wonka, and the Golden Tickets (Chapter 1-6) General Information: Name: Autumn Schaffer Grade Level: Third Grade Subject Areas: Language Arts with Technology integration Date Taught: Day 1 of 5 lesson plans Total Duration of Lesson: 65 minutes Title of Lesson: Meeting the Characters: Charlie, Mr. Wonka, and the Golden Tickets (Ch.1-6) Primary Learning Outcomes: 1. The student will read aloud third grade text with age-appropriate pronunciation and fluency. 2. The student will discuss the subject matter of each chapter as well as the holistic comprehension of the read-aloud chapters. 3. The student will use a basic internet search to locate non-fiction material based upon the history of chocolate and the process in which chocolate is made. 4. After completing an online tutorial, the student will sequence the events of making chocolate in sequential order. 5. The student will use basic elements of poetry (rhyme and rhythm) as well as descriptive words to write for a purpose. The purpose of the poem will be to invite young children to Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory. 6. After being presented with the information (chapter 6 of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) the student will write a short persuasive essay expressing their position. Related Georgia Performance Standards: (Third Grade Reading) Fluency: ELA3R1 The student demonstrates the ability to read orally with speed, accuracy, and expression. The student a. Applies letter-sound knowledge to decode unknown words quickly and accurately. d. Uses self-correction when subsequent reading indicates an earlier misreading within grade-level texts. Comprehension: ELA3R3 The student uses a variety of strategies to gain meaning from grade-level text. The student g. Summarizes text content. i. Makes connections between texts and/or personal experiences. n. Identifies the basic elements of a variety of genres (fiction, non-fiction, drama, and poetry).
  • 2. 2 q. Formulates and defends an opinion about a text. Writing: ELA3W1 The student demonstrates competency in the writing process. The student a. Captures a reader’s interest by setting a purpose and developing a point of view. b. Begins to select a focus and an organizational pattern based on purpose, genre, expectations, audience, and length. d. Uses organizational patterns for conveying information (e.g., chronological order, cause and effect, similarity and difference, questions and answers). f. Begins to use specific sensory details (e.g., strong verbs, adjectives) to enhance descriptive effect. i. Begins to include relevant examples, facts, anecdotes, and details appropriate to the audience. j. Uses a variety of resources to research and share information on a topic. k. Writes a response to literature that demonstrates understanding of the text, formulates an opinion, and supports a judgment. l. Writes a persuasive piece that states a clear position. Materials and Equipment: Instruction/ Whole Group 1. Class set of Ronald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory ISBN: 0142410314 (Dahl, Ronald. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. New York: Puffin Books, 1973.) 2. Activeboard Presentation (focused on taking formative notes about each chapter, review the genre of nonfiction, complete a sequencing activity of how chocolate is made, and review the genre of poetry as well as the characteristics of poetry) 3. Computer with internet accessibility 4. Sequencing worksheet- for each student (see attachment) Independent Projects/Assignments 1. Spiral Bound Writing Notebook 2. Construction paper, markers, paint, crayons, colored pencils Technology Connections: 1. All About Chocolate http://www.fieldmuseum.org/Chocolate/about.html (Internet Website about the history of chocolate and how chocolate is made) 2. Making Chocolate (for kids) http://www.fieldmuseum.org/Chocolate/manufacture_interactive/manufacture.html (This interactive website allows the students to sequence through the events of making chocolate. It begins with growing a cacao tree, which is where chocolate comes from. The process ends with the students packaging their very on candy bar!) Procedures:
  • 3. 3 Step One: Introduction (Estimated Time: 10 minutes) 1. The teacher will introduce the book Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Ronald Dahl. She will discuss other books by Ronald Dahl, such as Matilda, James and the Giant Peach, The BFG, and The Witches. She may also choose to put images of the book covers as well as images of Ronald Dahl on her activeboard presentation. 2. The teacher will then focus on introducing the book Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. She may choose to summarize major events in the story by saying that this will be a book about a poor boy that lucks upon a wonderful opportunity. He gets to visit a chocolate factory owned by the mysterious Willy Wonka. His inventive chocolates are like none other and all the children in town would love to see the factory. When Charlie arrives he is able to not only able to see the unique factory rooms and taste the various types of chocolate, he also receives a special prize. 3. Finally, after introducing the book and arousing the students’ attention the teacher should then pass out the class set of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. The teacher may choose to read aloud the chapter and have the students follow along in their copy. She also may have the students take turn reading aloud. In some cases the students may work in groups to read to one another. It is probably best, however, if the readings are completed in a unified setting. Step Two: Teaching the Primary Learning Outcomes (Estimated Time: 45 minutes) 1. The teacher will read-aloud, or allow the students to read aloud, chapters 1-6. The plot of these chapters focus on introducing the main characters, Charlie Bucket and his family as well as the mysterious Willa Wonka. The students learn that Charlie is a poor boy, yet he is pure and loyal to his family. He is also very humble and honest. The students also learn about the intriguing yet secretive chocolate factory. To everyone’s surprise, however, Willie Wonka has allowed five golden tickets to be placed in some of his chocolate bars. The five children who receive the tickets will have the honor of touring Wonka’s factory! This day’s reading ends as two children, Augustus Gloop and Veruca Salt, find two of the golden tickets. Unlike Charlie, however, these two children have personality flaws and are not nearly as pure as the main character. Activity 1: 2. Immediately after reading the text, the teacher will instruct a whole group mini- lesson based upon the nonfiction, real life history of chocolate. The teacher may need to explain that while Willy Wonka’s factory is fictitious, there are real chocolate factories that make the chocolate that we eat. They begin with the flowers from the cacao tree and end with the completely packaged candy bar. To aid in teaching this process, the teacher may choose to utilize the website: All about Chocolate http://www.fieldmuseum.org/Chocolate/about.html 3. After the students have learned about the history of making chocolate as well as the process in which chocolate is made, the students, either using a computer lab or using the activeboard, will complete a child-friendly process of making chocolate. This reviews the learned material as well as allows the students to interact with the process. This interactive website can be located at:
  • 4. 4 http://www.fieldmuseum.org/Chocolate/manufacture_interactive/manufacture.html 4. Shortly after, the teacher should use whole group instruction to complete a sequencing activity based upon what the students learned about the process of making chocolate. (See attachment for an appropriate graphic organizer.) The teacher can complete a similar exercise on the activeboard and have the student mimic the process on their own graphic organizer. Activity 2 5. The teacher should then shift focus from the nonfiction process of making chocolate back to the content within Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. The teacher should discuss the significance of the golden tickets and how they were invitations for certain children to visit the unique factory. After discussing and reviewing the characteristic of poetry, which include rhyme and rhythm, allow the students to write their own poem that could serve as a golden ticket. Remind the students that while it should be creative and inventive, much like Willy Wonka’s speech and demeanor, these inviting poems should also contains specific elements. The students will need to include the date and time of the tour as well as what the children should bring with them. It would also be nice to include snippets of information that the children might see in the factory. The teacher should remind the students that this is not a mere poem; it is also an informational and descriptive piece of writing. (See attachment for example.) Afterwards, the teacher may allow the students to decorate their poem to look more like a golden ticket. Step Three: Closure (Estimated Time: 10 minutes) 1. As the students complete their invitations, the teacher may choose to allow them to present to the class. The teacher may also choose to allow the other students to assess their classmates, judging if they have included all vital pieces of information. The teacher may also choose to review the content of the chapter read today and predict what will happen in the next chapters. The teacher may also choose to preview, summarize, and hint at the next day’s readings. Assessing the Primary Learning Outcomes: Each student’s ability to read age-appropriate text (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) with fluency and correct pronunciation will be assessed by the teacher during whole group instruction. While this assessment will be informal, it will also be natural, allowing the teacher to see what each student is capable of without prior study of the text. This also proves the importance of why the students should read in a whole group setting. If the students read aloud in small groups or if the teacher simply reads the book herself, this specific assessment cannot take place. After the students have been presented with the process of making chocolate, using the online tutorial, they will be given the opportunity to practice recalling the steps using an accompanying interactive website. Afterwards the student’s knowledge of the process will be assessed by using a graphic organizer. While the actual steps are not necessarily the primary learning outcome, the process of learning to organize information in sequential
  • 5. 5 order is. For this reason the teacher may choose to prompt and review the actual answers to the process after the students have attempted to sequence them on their own. The students will also be assessed on their ability to write a poem using rhyme and rhythm. Their abilities to include descriptive and informational context within their poem will also be assessed. The teacher will be able to evaluate each poem as the creator presents it to the class. The other students will also be given the opportunity to evaluate each other, making sure each poem relays the vital information with clarity as well as with appropriate poetic devices. Plan for Early Finishers: (see attachment for persuasive writing process planner) As the students complete their poetic invitations, they may begin the final assignment which is actually designated for homework. During the reading of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory the students will keep a personal writing journal in which they response and connect to certain situations within the text. While the students may choose to include other additional responses, the teacher will provide at least one prompt per day. The student will then respond to this prompt using evidence from the reading as well as their own opinion. The writing prompt for the first day asks the students to interpret a certain situation from two points of view. Afterwards, the students are to take a stand and write a short persuasive paper defending their opinion about the situation. The situation is: “Augustus Gloop found a golden ticket by eating a lot of chocolate. His mother was proud, but Charlie’s grandmother said it was disgusting. Whose opinion do you support? Because he ate so much chocolate, his probability of getting a gold ticket went up, but his health was endangered. What would be a solution? (buy low fat chocolate, share his bought chocolate, exercise)” Accommodation: Many of the students within the class may be unable to read with appropriate fluency or pronunciation. For this reason, the teacher may nonchalantly ask that these students read shorter passages as well as passages that are not as vital to the chapter’s comprehension. (Many students are not able to read aloud and comprehend the text simultaneously.) It is also important that the teacher ask questions that review or summarize the chapters as well as address misconceptions as soon as they become evident. This accommodation can easily occur during the reading process. Other students may not be able to recall the specific process of making chocolate, even after watching a tutorial and completing an interactive activity. For this reason, the teacher may choose to include the answers on a sequencing activity on the active board. It would then, of course, be the student’s objective to simply order the facts in sequential order. This may help students who are not able to recall the specific process. Even with this accommodation the students should be able to practice using a graphic organizer to sequence an activity. This, unlike the process of making chocolate, is the actual learning outcome. To aid the student in writing an informational and descriptive poem, the teacher may first provide an example of a finished product. She may also choose to make a list of vital information that should be included in a whole group instruction format. This way the students will only have to aid their own creativity to the assignment.
  • 6. 6 Extension: As an extension to any of these lesson plans the students could simply complete other responses to literature within their writing notebook. The teacher may provide other prompts focused towards the read chapters. She may, however, allow the students to respond naturally, perhaps even in diary format. The teacher may also have the students choose a main character (Charlie, Grandpa Joe, Willy Wonka, or the other children who visit the factory) to embody in writing format. As each chapter is read aloud the students could respond, in writing, their feelings about the events within the story. They would, of course, do so in the mindset and point of view of their chosen character. Remediation For students with sever difficulties in reading and comprehending such a text, the teacher may choose to limit the chapters as well as spend more time discussing the information that occurs within each. The teacher may also choose to use the activeboard to take notes about the main events that occur within each chapter. Due to this extra time spent in interpreting the text, the teacher may choose to limit the activities involved with each reading session. For example, the teacher may choose to only provide certain pieces of chocolate’s history as well as modify what information is used when interpreting its process. Finally, the teacher may allow the students to work in groups to create their informational poem. She may also choose to display the piece of information to be included within the project (as discussed in the “accommodation” section.)