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Teacher Resource Guides Grades 2/3 Try these activities in your grade 2/3 classrooms: 1 Cover Creativity Reproducible Page 5 Have your students draw their own version of a cover for the book. Ask them to discuss what the actual book cover tells us about the book, and why they chose the scene they did for their own cover. Display all the covers together. Curriculum Connections: fine art Learning Outcomes: discussing, creating a visual representation of fiction Grouping: individual, small group, or class 2 Map It Reproducible Page 6 Ask your students to mark the story location on a map of Canada and list three things they learned about that place. Curriculum Connections: social studies (geography) Learning Outcomes: mapping, extending understanding Groupings: individual or whole class 1

3 Imagine Have students imagine a scenario where they can invite any character in the book over to their house to play, chat, have dinner, or just hang out. Have each student tell the others in the group who they would choose (and why), and what they would do. Curriculum Connections: language arts (oral) Learning Outcomes: making connections Groupings: individual, small group, or class 4 Role-play Break the class into groups to role-play Matt, Emily, and any of the other main characters. Have the students come up with a short conversation between the time travellers and the character(s) they meet for the first time. Curriculum Connections: drama, language arts Learning Outcomes: speaking, role-playing Groupings: small group and class 5 Picture This Reproducible Page 7 Get students to draw themselves meeting a character in the book. What would they say? What would they do? How would they feel? Curriculum Connections: fine arts, language arts Learning Outcomes: visualizing, making connections Groupings: individual 6 Flying Away Reproducible Page 8 Ask students to imagine they found a sled that could fly. Where would they go (name three places) and why? Curriculum Connections: language arts Learning Outcomes: making connections Grouping: individual 2

7 Setting a Scene Reproducible Page 9 Direct students to draw a scene that s described in the book but that the illustrator didn t draw. Ask them to identify what part of the story they re showing using a title or labels. Have them share their illustrations with the rest of the class and explain why they chose to draw that particular scene. Display the art in class. Curriculum Connections: language arts (oral), arts Learning Outcomes: creating a visual representation of fiction, visualizing, discussing Grouping: individual, whole class 8 Pen Pals Reproducible Page 10 Ask students to write a letter to one of the characters in a book. Their letter should tell about themselves and ask the character questions about his/her life. Curriculum Connections: language arts, social studies Learning Outcomes: making connections Grouping: individual 9 Word Play Reproducible Page 11 Have your students identify five nouns and five adjectives in the book, then write two new sentences using any of the adjectives and nouns they ve selected. Curriculum Connections: language arts (word study) Learning Outcomes: grammar (nouns and adjectives) Grouping: small group, whole class 10 Community Reproducible Page 12 Using two or more books from the series, have kids look at communities and roles and responsibilities. How are they the same and/or different at different times? For example, do the characters they meet live in an isolated setting or in a larger community? What 3

are the roles of women and men? How are the children s lives different or the same? Have students identify three kinds of people in both stories (example: child, woman, father) and compare how their roles are alike and not alike in the stories. Curriculum Connections: social studies (community roles and responsibilities) Learning Outcomes: extending understanding, making connections Grouping: individual, small group, or class 11 Then and Now Reproducible Page 13 Draw students attention to details of daily life (communication, food, clothing, transportation, for example) at the time featured in the book. Ask them to find another detail of everyday life in the story and research how that has evolved over time. Example: in Far from Home, the kids rely on the radio and letters (which could take weeks or even months during the war) to hear news from home. Today we can use videophones and instant messaging to be in touch in seconds with someone anywhere in the world. Curriculum Connections: social studies (research) Learning Outcomes: extending understanding, research, making connections Grouping: individual 4

Cover Creativity What does the book cover art tell you about the book? Draw your own cover for the book. What scene did you choose to show, and why? 5

Map It! Find and label where in Canada this Canadian Flyer Adventures story took place. List three things that you learned about the place where the story is set: 1. 2. 3. 6

Picture This Draw a picture of yourself meeting a character in the book: What would you do and say at your meeting? How would you feel? 7

Flying Away Imagine if you found a sled that could fly into the past. Think about where you would like the sled to take you, and why. Write down three places you d like to travel to on your magic sled. Why did you choose these places? 1. 2. 3. 8

Setting a Scene Draw a scene that s described in the book but not illustrated. Include a title or labels to tell what part of the story you ve illustrated. Prepare to share your illustration with the class and tell everyone why you chose to draw this particular scene. 9

Pen Pals Imagine that you and one of the characters in the book are pen pals. Write a letter telling about yourself and asking the character questions about his or her life. Use information from the book to help you. Continue on the back of the page if you need more space to write. 10

Word Play Nouns are words for objects, like sled, boy, whale. List five nouns from the book: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Adjectives describe nouns and make sentences more colourful and interesting. For example, slimy, happy, late. List five adjectives from the book: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Write three new sentences using any of the nouns and adjectives you ve found. 1. 2. 3. 11

Community Look at two or more books in the Canadian Flyer Adventures series and compare how people are living. 1. What kind of community are the people living in who Emily and Matt meet in each story? Is it an isolated place or a city or town? 2. How does the size and type of community affect how people behave? For instance, if it s a small, isolated community, does everyone need to help each other out? 3. What do you learn about the lives of women and men in each story? And what is life like for the children in each time and place? Identify three kinds of people (example: father, woman, child) and look at how their roles are alike and not alike in the stories you re comparing. 1. 2. 3. 12

Then and Now The books in the Canadian Flyer Adventures series are full of details about life in another time. Think about your daily life: how you get around, how you keep in touch with people, what you eat, the clothes you wear. Look for an everyday detail like this that is mentioned in the book and research what it was like then and how it has evolved to what it is now. For example, in Pioneer Kids, Emily and Matt go to school in a horse-drawn wagon. In Lost in the Snow, Claire bakes the bread for the family there are no stores around the corner to buy food in. Combine your research with what you learn in the book and write how that part of daily life was at the time of the story, and how it is for you now. Continue on the back of the page or another sheet of paper if you need more room to write. 13