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Looking for a
great story to excite your students about the New Year, while also reinforcing
the theme of Self-Reflection and the idea that we all have control over our own
fate? Would you also like to have some fun in your literary classroom before
Winter Break by having the students participate in Reader’s Theater? Then we
have the perfect tale for you from Greece, The Girl Who Changed Her Fate.
Offered in both a story and play script version, this is sure to round out the
end of your school year and excite your students about the possibilities that
the New Year brings.
The story of
Alena, the youngest of three sisters, who has been determined to have an
ill-fate. She leaves her home so that she no longer brings ill-will to her
sisters, only to find that her ill-fate follows her no matter where she goes.
Determined to change the course of her life, she goes in search of her fate.
Can she change her fate, literally and figuratively?
A story from Greece, this
is a great tale to tie into a unit on Greek or Roman Mythology. We love it to
be a New Year’s story, one of Self-Reflection, to spark the discussion with
your students on the idea of determining one’s own fate and the chance that New
Year’s brings to change and renew ourselves and our goals in 2017.
Teaching the Girl Who Changed Her Fate:
Teaching the Girl Who Changed Her Fate:
This story meets Common Core Standards for 3rd-6th grade and is a great springboard to create a Story Map of your students “Story for 2018”
with short and long-term goals for the new year and beyond. You could also
further the learning with higher level thinking skills by doing a unit on Greek Mythology and/or by having a classroom
debate over Greek Philosophy: those who think are destinies are planned by Fate/s
vs. those that think we have complete control over our destiny. 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 Stories to Grow by Stories and accompanying Reader’s Theater scripts.