Build Background Knowledge (10 minutes)
Have students view our Background Builder Slideshow, which will provide context for Matthew Henson’s story and help readers understand the obstacles he faced.
Preview Text Features (15 minutes)
Guide students to locate the article. Preview the text features by asking the following questions:
- Read the title and the subtitle, and look at the image at the beginning of the story. Who was Matthew Henson? What does the author suggest about him in the subtitle? (Hint: Notice how she uses the word discover twice.) Matthew Henson was someone who helped discover the North Pole. The author seems to suggest that people didn’t learn about his accomplishment until much later.
- Look at the sidebar “If You’d Been an Arctic Explorer . . .” Based on the title and the images, what do you think the purpose of the sidebar is? It seems like the purpose of the sidebar is to tell readers about the lives of Arctic explorers: what they ate and drank, where they slept, how they got around, what they wore, and how their fingers froze.
- Look at the map near the end of the article and read its caption. Where did the Henson and Peary expedition of 1908-1909 begin? Where did it end? How did the explorers travel? The expedition began in New York and ended at the North Pole. The explorers sailed through the Atlantic Ocean, passed Greenland, and then used sleds to trek across the North Pole.
Preview Vocabulary (10 minutes)
- Point out the vocabulary box. Read the words (wilderness, frigid, expedition, determined, accomplishments) aloud and discuss the definitions.
- Play the Vocabulary Slideshow.
Make a Plan for Reading
Before students start to read, walk them through a reading plan:
- Set a purpose for reading by explaining to students that they will find text evidence in “Frozen Dreams” that supports an important idea about Matthew Henson.
- Point out the Pause and Think boxes. Tell students they can check their understanding of what they’ve read by answering these questions.
- Point out the activity at the end of the story, and tell students they will complete it after reading. Tell them to keep the Think About It! question in mind as they read.
- Tell students that as they finish each section, they should think about how the text features on the page (e.g. photos, captions, and section headings) relate to what they’ve just read.
- Guide students to read the article. Once they understand it well, discuss the following close-reading and critical-thinking questions.