Essential Questions
- How can we stay calm during stressful situations?
- Who should take charge in an emergency?
Literature Connection
- Nonfiction: Respiratory System (A True Book: Your Amazing Body) by Cody Crane
Standards Correlations
R.1, R.2, R.3, R.4, R.6, R.7, W.1, SL.1, L.4, L.6
Learning Objective
Students will identify cause-and-effect relationships in a text about a teen who saved her cousin’s life by performing CPR.
Key Skills
cause and effect, text features, vocabulary, central idea and details, key details, critical thinking, making a personal connection, argument writing
Complexity Factors
Purpose: The article chronicles Madison’s experience saving her cousin from drowning in the pool.
Structure: The article, written from the first-person point of view, includes narrative and chronological passages.
Language: The language is conversational.
Knowledge Demands: No prior knowledge is needed.
Levels
Lexile: 700L-800L
Guided Reading Level: T
DRA Level: 50
SEL Connection
This article and lesson promote social-awareness and self-awareness skills.
Lesson Plan: “I Saved a Life”
Essential Questions
Literature Connection
1. Preparing to Read
Preview Text Features (10 minutes)
Guide students to locate the article in their magazines or at Action Online. 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
Read the article. (Higher- and lower-Lexile versions are available on the Story page at Action Online. Click Presentation View to access an audio read-aloud.) Then discuss the following close-reading and critical-thinking questions.
Close-Reading Questions (15 minutes)
Critical-Thinking Questions (10 minutes)
3. Skill Building and Writing
Learn-Anywhere Activity
An enrichment activity to extend the learning journey at home or in the classroom
Project the task below on your whiteboard or share it with students in your LMS.
Create a Written Self-Portrait
Watch our video “Two Minutes With . . . Madison Atkinson.” In the video, Madison tells you how her best friends would describe her. She also gives a number of details about what she enjoys and how she spends her time. From just these few words, you can tell a lot about Madison.
Now it’s your turn to describe yourself using just a few words. Start by writing your name in the middle of a page. Then, on different parts of the page, briefly answer each of these questions:
Language-Acquisition Springboard
Review initialisms and acronyms to boost fluency.
After reading the article, write the term cardiopulmonary resuscitation on the board and invite students to try saying it out loud. They’ll likely struggle to pronounce the two long words; let them know that’s totally fine. Then tell them this term is what CPR stands for. Ask, “Why do you think people call it CPR?” Students will likely answer that CPR is quicker and easier to say.
Tell students that many words and phrases in English have shortened forms to speed up communication. The shortened form of a term using its initials (the first letter of each word) is called an initialism. Some examples are FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation), mph (miles per hour), and BFF (best friend forever). Ask students to name another initialism found in the article “I Saved a Life” (the answer: EMTs, which stands for emergency medical technicians).
An acronym is an initialism that can be pronounced as a word. Examples include FOMO (fear of missing out), BOGO (buy one, get one), and PIN (personal identification number).
Ask students to think of some more examples of initialisms and acronyms. If they need help, remind them that these are very common in texting! (Examples include BRB, BTW, IRL, NASA, NBA, PTA, and SMH.)
Tell students that when they come across an acronym or an initialism and aren’t sure how to pronounce it (as individual letters or as a word), they can ask themselves, “Can I easily pronounce it as a word?” If they can, they probably should!
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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