Build Background Knowledge (5 minutes)
Have students take our fun, interactive prereading quiz “Test Your Election Knowledge.” The quiz will prepare students to read the article by activating their prior knowledge about elections and providing information about political campaigns.
Preview Text Features (10 minutes)
Guide students to locate the article. Then preview the text features by asking the following questions:
- Read the article’s title and subtitle (the text beneath the title). What does it mean to “run for office”? What is unusual about running for office at age 18? To run for office means to try to get elected into a public position. Running for office at age 18 is unusual because it’s a very young age. Usually, people who run for office are older and have more experience.
- Look at the photos of Sam that are included in the article and read their captions. What do they tell you about him? The photos and captions tell you that Sam ran for state office in Ohio. They also tell you that he went door-to-door to meet voters while campaigning.
Preview Vocabulary (10 minutes)
- Point out the vocabulary box. Read the words (primary election, general election, campaign, legislator, candidate, politics) aloud and discuss their 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: Tell students that after reading, they’ll analyze cause-and-effect relationships in the story. Point out the activity at the end of the story.
- Encourage students to pause at the end of each section so they can monitor their comprehension. Prompt them to take note of sentences they think tell them important ideas in each section, as well as any words or sentences they don’t understand.