Looking for a
great story to excite your students about the warmth (Spring!) returning after
the cold Winter months, while also reinforcing the theme of Cooperation and
Friendship? Would you also like to have some fun in your literary classroom by
having the students participate in Reader’s Theater? Then we have the perfect tale for you from Canada, The Long Winter.
Offered in both a story
and play script version, this is sure to reinforce the importance of working
together towards a common goal and excite your students that after the long cold
winter months, the heat will return!
Cooperation & Friendship: Problem Solving
with
A story of the missing
heat and the plan to bring it back; a group of animals with varying strengths
go in search of the warmth and learn the importance of working together and
admiring the differences each friend brings to solve the problem.
A story from
Canada, this Native American Folk Tale gives a wonderful explanation of how and
why the warmth returns after the cold. We love it to be a Wintery tale, one of
Cooperation and Friendship, to spark the discussion with your students on how
important it is to creatively work together to achieve a common goal. This
story also reinforces the theme of Friendship as many different animals work
together and utilize their strengths to help each other succeed.
Teaching The Long Winter:
Teaching The Long Winter:
This story meets
Common Core Standards for 1st -3rd grade and is a wonderful addition
to a Unit on Friendship, Problem Solving or Cooperation. You could further the
learning with higher level thinking skills by having your students devise their
own problem solving plan on how to distract the bears and create their own
stories with their classmates as the Main Characters. We also offer a Teacher’s Resource Guide which includes activities on Plot, Sequence of Events, Setting,
Characterization, Describing Words, Main Ideas as well as an Assessment and
Games/Coloring Pages. A Unit Plan already made for you! This story can also be Cross-Curricular with a Science
Lesson on the Changing of the Seasons or on Native American studies and how
they use tales to describe events in Nature. Extend your standard learning of
the literary skills with a story that your students will sure to ponder and
love. Happy Storytelling!
A positive message
while teaching an important literary skill: this is what you will find in all
the Whootie Owl Stories to Grow by Stories and accompanying Reader’s Theater scripts.
Great overview of the story. You really draw your blog readers in to want to read the book! Fabulous post.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I try very hard to show the importance of the messages in our stories and how easily they can be used in the classroom :)
DeleteThanks for sharing. Love how you re-tell the story.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much! It's important I get across how each story has a unique message that youth can relate to both in the classroom and at home :)
ReplyDelete