Essential Questions
- What does it mean to belong to a culture?
- Why are family traditions important?
Literature Connection
- Novel: Darrius the Great Is Not Okay by Adib Khorram
- Novel: Red, White, and Whole by Rajani LaRocca
Standards Correlations
R.1, R.3, R.4, R.6, R.7, W.2, SL.1, L.4, L.6
Learning Objective
Students will identify cause-and-effect relationships in a text about a teen who is Mexican American.
Key Skills
cause and effect, text features, vocabulary, sequence of events, interpreting text, author’s craft, compare and contrast, drawing conclusions, informational writing
Complexity Factors
Purpose: The text describes a Mexican American teen’s life in the U.S.
Structure: The story is mainly chronological and is told from the first-person perspective.
Language: The language is conversational.
Knowledge Demands: No prior knowledge is needed.
Levels
Lexile: 600L-700L
Guided Reading Level: S
DRA Level: 40
SEL Connection
This article and lesson promote self-awareness and social awareness skills.
Essential Questions
Literature Connection
1. Preparing to Read
Preview Text Features (10 minutes)
Guide students to locate the article. Then 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 Question (15 minutes)
Critical-Thinking Questions (5 minutes)
3. Skill Building and Writing
Learn Anywhere Activity
An enrichment activity to extend the learning journey at home or in the classroom
Share a Recipe
For many people, special memories and traditions are connected to food. Sharing a favorite food is a great way to spread joy!
Think of a homemade food you like to make or eat at home. (If possible, pick one that isn’t very hard to make.) If you know exactly how to make it, you’re ready. If you don’t, get help from someone who does.
Once you have your recipe just right, bring it to school. Your teacher can help you and your classmates copy all the recipes and put them online so you’ll have a class collection!
Language-Acquisition Springboard
Make personal connections to boost comprehension.
After reading the article, ask students to think about how their lives are similar to Betiana’s. Many multilingual learners can probably relate to some of the experiences that Betiana describes: having to remember which language to speak, feeling that her home life is different from the lives of her classmates, and wondering how well her parents can understand the life of an American teen.
Ask students to rewrite the article’s title and its section headings, leaving some space beneath each one, in the language they speak at home. Then, in whatever language they choose, have them write a brief (one or two sentences) answer to each question below.
If your students speak a variety of languages, give them a chance to teach each other different words for life, family, world, and words. Have fun!
Looking for more ELL support? Download our full lesson plan and scroll to p. 5 to find questions that will help your ELLs respond to the text at the level that’s right for them.
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