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Understanding Different Perspectives

English (ELA) • Year 4 • 35 • 5 students • Created with AI following Aligned with provincial curriculum standards

English (ELA)
4Year 4
35
5 students
24 February 2025

Teaching Instructions

Create a lesson plan for my advanced grade 3 readers being for guided reading for the book "A Gift for Aunty Ngā" using comprehension skills of point of view and having the what to teach off of Comprehension Text forms and genre • identify the audience and purpose of texts that entertain, inform, and persuade • identify the audience and purpose of cultural texts from their own and others’ cultures

Incorporate blooms taxonomy and Bronfenbrenner

Understanding Different Perspectives

Lesson Overview

Grade Level: Year 4 (Advanced Grade 3 Readers)
Subject: English Language Arts (ELA)
Duration: 35 minutes
Curriculum Focus: California Common Core State Standards (CCSS)
Guided Reading Text: A Gift for Aunty Ngā
Comprehension Skills: Point of View & Audience and Purpose of Texts

Learning Objectives

By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:

  • Analyze A Gift for Aunty Ngā to determine the author's purpose.
  • Identify the intended audience for the story.
  • Explore different cultural perspectives within the text.
  • Use Bloom’s Taxonomy to engage in deep comprehension.
  • Apply Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Systems Theory to understand the character's experiences.

Standards Alignment

California Common Core Standards (Grade 4)

  • RL.4.6: Compare and contrast points of view from different narratives.
  • RL.4.2: Determine a theme and summarize the text.
  • RI.4.6: Identify the author’s purpose and intended audience.
  • SL.4.1: Engage in collaborative discussions about the story.

Lesson Structure

1. Warm-Up Activity (5 minutes) — Think, Pair, Share

Question:
"What makes a gift meaningful? Have you ever given a gift that had a special meaning for the person receiving it?"

  • Think – Students jot down ideas individually.
  • Pair – Discuss thoughts with a partner.
  • Share – Each pair shares one idea with the class.
  • Purpose: Activates prior knowledge and introduces the theme of the book.

2. Guided Reading (10 minutes) — First-Person vs. Third-Person Perspective

  • Read a selected passage from A Gift for Aunty Ngā aloud.
  • Discuss the story’s perspective.

Mini-Lesson: Identifying Point of View

  • Who is telling the story?
  • What emotions and thoughts are revealed?
  • How would the story change if another character were telling it?

📌 Bloom’s Taxonomy: Understanding & Analyzing
Students identify the narrator and discuss how this influences the reader’s connection to the characters.


3. Exploring Audience & Purpose (10 minutes) — Cultural Connections

  • Discuss how the story reflects the author’s cultural perspective.
  • Compare experiences in the story to students’ own backgrounds.
  • Think Deeper: Why might the author have chosen to write this story?

📌 Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Systems Theory

  • Microsystem: How does the main character’s relationship with Aunty Ngā shape the story?
  • Macrosystem: What cultural values can we see reflected in the text?

4. Creative Thinking Task (7 minutes) — Perspective Shift Writing

  • Student Task: Rewrite a short scene from the book from a different character’s perspective.
  • Encourage students to think about how the new narrator’s emotions and experiences change the story.
  • Share rewritten passages in small groups.

📌 Bloom’s Taxonomy: Applying & Creating
Students engage in higher-order thinking by transforming the story from a different viewpoint.


Assessment & Exit Ticket (3 minutes)

Verbal Reflection:

  • "What did you learn about author’s purpose today?"
  • "Who do you think this story was written for?"

Written Question (Exit Ticket):
"If you could ask the author one question about their perspective, what would it be?"


Differentiation & Support

  • For Struggling Readers: Provide a sentence starter for their rewritten scene.
  • For Advanced Learners: Challenge them to analyze a second story with a different cultural background and compare the perspectives.
  • ELL Support: Pair ELL students with a peer for discussion, providing cultural visuals for deeper understanding.

Teacher Reflection & Notes

  • Were students able to identify different perspectives?
  • Did they make meaningful connections to their own experiences?
  • How effectively did they apply new comprehension strategies?

This lesson integrates critical thinking, cultural awareness, and multiple theoretical frameworks to deepen student engagement with A Gift for Aunty Ngā. It also aligns with Bloom’s Taxonomy and Bronfenbrenner’s model, allowing students to explore how stories reflect diverse human experiences and viewpoints.

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