Essential Questions
- How can we learn and grow from difficult experiences?
- What role do sports play in our lives?
Literature Connection
- Novel: Final Season by Tim Green
- Novel: Before the Ever After by Jacqueline Woodson
Standards Correlations
R.1, R.2, R.3, R.4, R.7, W.2, SL.1, L.4, L.6
Learning Objective
Students will read about concussions in youth sports and identify text evidence to support conclusions drawn from the text.
Key Skills
text evidence, text features, vocabulary, central idea and details, inference, interpreting text, key details, critical thinking, informational writing
Complexity Factors
Purpose: With a focus on one young athlete’s serious concussion, the text describes the dangers of concussions and ways to avoid one.
Structure: The article is mainly chronological.
Language: The language is conversational.
Knowledge Demands: Some familiarity with football will aid comprehension.
Levels
Lexile: 600L-700L
Guided Reading Level: S
DRA Level: 40
SEL Connection
This story and lesson plan promote responsible decision making.
Essential Questions
Literature Connection
1. Preparing to Read
Preview Text Features (15 minutes)
Guide students to locate the article. Preview the text features by asking the following questions:
Preview Vocabulary (10 minutes)
Make a Plan for Reading
Before students start to read, walk them through a reading plan:
2. Reading and Unpacking the Text
Guide students to read the article. Once they understand it well, discuss the following close-reading and critical-thinking questions.
Close-Reading Questions (15 minutes)
Critical-Thinking Question (10 minutes)
3. Skill Building and Writing
Learn-Anywhere Activity
An enrichment activity to extend the learning journey at home or in the classroom
Take a Survey
In the article, you learn that 10 percent of middle school boys who play football get concussions during games and that as many as 1.9 million kids get concussions while playing sports each year. In order to report these numbers, researchers collected plenty of information. You can too!
In this activity, you’ll take a survey to see what percentage of the people you know have had concussions and how they got them. First, make a list of 25 people who you can count on to answer a few questions. (Your list can be on paper, in a spreadsheet, or in any other format that works for you.) Next, ask each person these questions:
Multiply the number of people who answered “yes” to the first question by four. That’s the percentage of people in your survey who have had a concussion. (So, if five people say they’ve had a concussion, that’s 20 percent.) Then list the causes of concussions.
Share your results with your class. If different students got very different results, talk about why. Did some students include more athletes in their surveys?
Language-Acquisition Springboard
Preview section headings to increase readers’ interest.
Before reading, let students know that the article is about a teen who was badly injured during a football game. Then have students find the section headings and predict what the focus of each section will be. Assure them that there are no wrong answers; making predictions based on brief section headings is just a useful strategy for skimming a text.
Help students by asking these questions about the section headings:
Print This Lesson Plan