Here are my lesson plans for the last 4 weeks. This takes you through the reading & responding to the text from start to finish… everything leading up to the first Literary Analysis assignment, which I’ll deal with in my next post.
Lesson Plan Ideas – CUBING September 22, 2007
Okay foxes, I’m not ashamed to say it – I buy into the gimmicky stuff. Mix a little Bloom’s Taxonomy, some paper and glue… maybe a few poker chips, blend, bake and serve up as a lesson plan.

During one of my grad school classes, we had to create a lesson using a strategy called CUBING, which allows students to complete activities related to the reading based on learning styles and reading levels. It worked really well when I taught Bodega Dreams, and I think I’m going to use it with Buried Onions next week. I’ll attach the lesson plan & handout/instructions as soon as they’re ready. Anybody willing to try it with me?
Afrofox
LBB Week One – ingredients for great lessons! September 14, 2007
We had a great week in Little BIG Books… Our lessons were really varied and engaging - I’ve never seen a roomful of students work so diligently and so passionately over found poems – especially during WEEK ONE! (that was so inspired, foxy!) Superfox did a great lesson with images drawn from page one of the story, which also went off without a hitch.
Day 3 was also great – we had students practicing the analytical skills they traditionally have so much trouble with when it comes time to write their literary analysis papers. We pulled 10 quotes from the text and asked students to first categorize them (does the quote describe Eddie’s environment, his friends & family or his options for the future?) and then explain the significance of the quote in at least one sentence. During share-out, students who were extremely literal benefited from seeing how their classmates read between the lines to find the deeper meaning.
for example:
2. Still the babies cried, and their crying stirred up our frustration because we were like those strollers going back and forth, back and forth, getting nowhere (pg. 2).
Category: Eddie’s environment/Eddie’s future
Explanation: He compares the people in his community as “like those strollers going back and forth… getting nowhere.” He feels as if the people around him get nowhere in life, and he will have the same fate.
Of course not all of the students got it. Some just thought that Eddie was annoyed at the babies crying, but it was great to see the recognition in their eyes when they heard the deeper analysis coming from their peers.
This is the type of lesson we need to do regularly – pick a skill we know kids will have trouble with when it’s time to write, and just have them practice. The fact that we pulled the quotes for them was what made this work – all they had to do was analyze… after a few rounds of this, they’ll be ready to pick their own quotes!
Click here to see the lessons from the first week of LBB, and check out some examples of found poems from the kids.
Little BIG Books – Week One September 8, 2007
Hey Foxes:
Are we all assigning reading for homework on day one? How do we feel about some kind of written response as a do-now on Tuesday to encourage accountability? I’m setting up folders for all of my students like I did last year, and my sections are color-coded… so I’m wondering how the binders will fit in to the picture. Are you having your students keep those in class? Last year I also handed out calendars that kids kept in their folders & signed each day they were present – superfluous?
Thoughts and comments welcome…
PS: I thought you might want this document in electronic form, just in case you lose your master copy or your kids misplace theirs. I can also get it up on the ESA homepage if you want.
good luck foxes! September 7, 2007
dear foxes,
i am sitting at the computer in the sweltering heat. we are sweaty and stinky. tryna get these copies done. we wouldn’t have to have no goddamn copies if our books were here. but they ain’t here of course. i say people – literature books are definitely worth fighting for.
Anyway, here’s a document for you.
Proposal for Little BIG Books: Weekly Point Sheet September 7, 2007
Hello team,
Just trying to get the Point Sheet together for lBb. Given what we want to focus on, here’s a sample setup for 25 points a day:
We also need to decide on what assignments will make up the last 75 points. For Author Study, we’re doing 25 points each for weekly JOURNAL, DISCUSSION & GROUP WORK assignments. What do we want to use?
- Journal/Reader Response log
- Binder Grade
- Weekly Writing Assignment (on the literature)
- Weekly Reflection (on process – reading or writing)
- Something else?
We can remove Class Participation from the daily score & just do a weekly Class Participation/Discussion grade, which will eliminate going back & putting in a score for that each day. (We’ll just put those points somewhere else)
I’ve uploaded a draft for you to play with in the orange box on the right. Edit at will. Let me know what you think!
Nikki

