Build Background Knowledge (10 minutes)
Before reading the article, view our video “What You Need to Know About Solar Eclipses.” The video provides general information about eclipses that will make the concepts in the article more accessible.
Preview Text Features (15 minutes)
Guide students to locate the article in their magazines or at Action Online. Then preview the text features by asking the following questions:
- Read the article’s title and subtitle (the text beneath the title). Do you know what a solar eclipse is? If not, what can you guess based on the title and the main image? Answers to the first question may vary. In response to the second question, students will likely say that an eclipse is probably something that causes the sky to go dark.
- Find the Build Knowledge sidebar. How many types of eclipse does it describe? What are they? The sidebar describes three types of eclipse: partial, annular, and total.
Preview Vocabulary (10 minutes)
- Point out the vocabulary box. Read the words (destinations, rural, astronomer, spiritual, phenomenon) 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 by explaining to students that the article will tell them how our understanding of eclipses has changed over time and how people are preparing for the eclipse on April 8.
- 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 article and tell students they will complete it after reading. Encourage them to briefly scan the questions and to keep them in mind as they read.