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Malala: My Story of Standing Up for Girls' Rights Novel Unit

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Grade Levels
4th - 6th, Homeschool
Standards
Formats Included
  • PDF
$7.25
$7.25
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Description

This 3-week novel study unit for Malala My Story of Standing Up for Girls' Rights by Malala Yousafzai is ideal for 4th, 5th, or 6th-grade classrooms and is a great book unit to add to your civil rights study or for use during Women's History Month. Daily comprehension activities make great discussion questions and require students to focus on text analysis and responding to literature without overwhelming them with countless chapter questions that have learners regurgitate the text.

Malala: My Story of Standing Up for Girls' Rights is a great book for a cross-curricular literature unit or book club. The book and this printable novel study unit will engage readers while you cover important comprehension skills & vocabulary without losing precious planning time. With this Malala: My Story of Standing Up for Girls' Rights book unit, you'll have more time to do what you love: teach.

Standards-aligned & perfect for novel studies, small group book clubs or lit circles, independent reading, or monitoring and teaching during read-aloud.

Your download includes:

✔ Daily comprehension prompts in 2 formats for differentiation

  • Foldable trifold brochures
  • Cut & paste journal prompts for interactive notebooks

✔ Weekly word of the day flip books for text-based vocabulary

✔ Easy-to-follow directions for printing & prep

✔ Instructional planning guide

✔Answer keys

In this Malala My Story of Standing Up for Girls' Rights Novel Unit, you'll find:

1) Student comprehension practice (up to 15 instructional days)

  • Each day's work focuses on a single standards-based comprehension skill
  • Short, written responses include opportunities to apply thinking to text
  • Designed with reluctant and struggling learners in mind
  • Built-in graphic organizers to support skill acquisition
  • Approachable questions help make connections & start conversations
  • No boring multiple-choice or fill-in-the-blank questions!
  • Available in both printable trifolds and reading journal prompts

2) Approachable practice with key reading standards and skills including:

  • Generating a summary of key events
  • Explore point of view and its impact on the reader
  • Story elements & plot analysis, including rising action, climax, setting, & more
  • Analyzing the author's use of irony
  • Examining character development, traits, and motivation through plot
  • Synthesizing to identify key themes
  • And so much more!

3) Text-based & academic vocabulary

  • One target word identified for each day's reading
  • A flexible foldable format allows for the study and application of new vocabulary
  • Opportunities to make connections to academic vocabulary for daily skills

4) Teacher support materials

  • Unit scope & sequence lay out the day's comprehension & vocabulary focus
  • Answer Keys for all comprehension activities
  • Tips for preparation and implementation

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How Novel Units from Differentiated Teaching Work...

▸ Teachers can introduce the day's vocabulary word & discuss before reading.

▸ Students complete just one section of the trifold or a single Google Slide each day.

▸ Daily work focuses on target skills needed for success in reading vs. plot recall.

▸ The low-pressure format provides novelty & encourages student engagement

▸ Less overwhelming to reluctant readers and writers

▸ Requires deep analysis and application of text-based knowledge

▸ Encourages discussion about skills & strategies

Here's why teachers love these novel units...

We used these for a whole-class novel study. Pre-printed brochures fully encompassed ELA skills for the novel. This is an extremely easy, but very rich set of activities for understanding and enriching student's ELA skills. I will be using this for our first novel study again in class this fall. I highly recommend this! -Allison M.

This has helped me so much in teaching Holes to my students this year. Other resources overwhelm students with too much vocabulary and literal comprehension questions but these slides give students one vocabulary word for each chapter and a grade-level higher-order comprehension skill to practice. - Kristin P.

I LOVE the layout and how it guides my son and I through our reading time. As a homeschool parent, I still wanted to give him that opportunity to discuss and grapple with the text and I love this quick format as a brochure. I also love the vocab focus for each section and the skill listed so I can monitor his understanding of these as we move through a variety of texts this year. - Antonia S.

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Terms of Use:

© Rebecca Davies. All rights reserved by the author. These materials are intended for personal use by a single classroom only. Copying for more than one teacher, classroom, department, school, or school system is prohibited. For use in multiple classrooms, please purchase additional licenses. This product may not be distributed or displayed digitally for public view. Failure to comply is a copyright infringement and a violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Clipart and elements in this PDF are copyrighted and cannot be extracted or used outside this file without permission or license. See the product file for clip art and font credits.

Total Pages
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
3 Weeks
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Refer to details and examples in a text when explaining what the text says explicitly and when drawing inferences from the text.
Determine a theme of a story, drama, or poem from details in the text; summarize the text.
Describe in depth a character, setting, or event in a story or drama, drawing on specific details in the text (e.g., a character’s thoughts, words, or actions).
Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including those that allude to significant characters found in mythology (e.g., Herculean).
Compare and contrast the point of view from which different stories are narrated, including the difference between first- and third-person narrations.

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