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Home › Classroom Resources › Lesson Plans
Lesson Plan
Building a Matrix for Leo Lionni Books: An Author Study
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| Grades | K – 2 |
| Lesson Plan Type | Standard Lesson |
| Estimated Time | Five 50-minute sessions |
| Lesson Author |
Magalia, California |
| Publisher |
OVERVIEW
In this author study, students listen to four books by author Leo Lionni over the course of four days. Each reading is followed by discussion focusing on literary elements and comparing characters and plots. After discussion, students participate in creating and organizing information on a large matrix which depicts the main elements of that day’s story. During the week, the matrix helps students review and retell each story and to compare details of two or more stories at a time. On the final day of this lesson, individual students choose any two books to compare using a Venn diagram.
FEATURED RESOURCES
Interactive Venn Diagram: Students use this online tool to compare and contrast the details of two books. The tool can also be used to organize ideas for a compare and contrast essay.
FROM THEORY TO PRACTICE
Engaging students in making text-to-text connections through classroom discussion can contribute to a deeper comprehension of stories. As Joy Moss explains, "Through genuine dialogue, teachers and students collaborate as they respond to literature, explore possibilities, and construct meanings together. These literary conversations offer students opportunities to discover new ways to think about literary texts, to enrich their own responses as readers, and to extend their language competence. The invitation to 'think out loud' in the context of these literary conversations provides students with the opportunity to practice the strategies that readers use to build understanding in response to literary texts" (7).
Gambrell and Almasi similarly address the importance of discussing texts to increase comprehension in Lively Discussions! Fostering Engaged Reading. It follows that engaging students in making text-to-text connections can contribute to a deeper comprehension of stories. Additionally, comparing a series of texts by one author can help students identify an author's tendencies of plot and character relationships, giving them tools for making predictions as they read books in the future.
Further Reading
Moss, Joy. 2002. Literary Discussion in the Elementary School. Urbana, IL: NCTE.
Gambell, Linda B., and Janice F. Almasi, eds. 1996. Lively Discussions! Fostering Engaged Reading. Newark, DE: IRA.

