Table of ContentsUnit 1: Analytical Reading- Fiction stories for analyzing plots, themes and characters- News articles for identifying key details and claims- Diagrams, charts and maps for interpretation
Fiction Stories:
- Read "The Tortoise and the Hare" and have students create a plot diagram, analyzing the exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution.
- Read "The Secret Garden" and analyze how the setting of a lonely mansion impacts the characters. Discuss how a different setting would change the plot.
- Bovel Study: Read "Esperanza Rising" and identify the theme of friendship. Find textual evidence that supports this theme. Use the Engage New York curriculum
Here are some of the other major novel studies contained in the EngageNY English Language Arts curriculum for grades 3-5:
Grade 3:
- Charlotte's Web by E.B. White
- The Cricket in Times Square by George Selden
- Sarah, Plain and Tall by Patricia MacLachlan
Grade 4:
- The Cricket in Times Square by George Selden
- Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing by Judy Blume
- Mr. Popper's Penguins by Richard & Florence Atwater
Grade 5:
- Birchbark House by Louise Erdrich
- Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt
- The People Could Fly by Virginia Hamilton
- Esperanza Rising by Pam Munoz Ryan
The EngageNY curriculum also incorporates short nonfiction texts on topics like science, arts, and ethics. Students analyze these texts to build vocabulary, knowledge, and reading comprehension.
News Articles and Expository Texts:
- Read "Scientists Discover New Mammal Species in Rainforest" and identify the 5 W's. Discuss the key details.
- Read "New Study Shows Benefits of Exercise" and identify claims made. Evaluate if the evidence fully supports the claims.
- Read "Best Pizza Shop in Town?" and distinguish between facts and opinions in the article. Discuss how word choice shows bias.
Here are some examples of expository texts used in the Core Knowledge Language Arts (CKLA) curriculum for social studies units in grades 3-5:
Grade 3:
- "The Geography of Greece"
- "The Olympic Games"
- "Athens and Sparta"
- "Myths of Ancient Greece"
Grade 4:
- "The Thirteen Colonies"
- "The Revolutionary War"
- "Westward Expansion"
- "Native Americans: Regions and Culture"
Grade 5:
- "The Development of Canada"
- "British Exploration in the Americas"
- "The American Revolution"
- "Women's Suffrage Movement"
- "Industrialization and Urbanization"
The social studies units use informational texts from textbooks, biographies, primary sources, magazine articles, and other nonfiction sources. Students practice skills like summarizing key details, understanding text structures, interpreting maps/charts, and distinguishing fact vs opinion.
Maps:
- Interpret the "World Map" and describe what it shows about the continents, oceans, and geographic features.
- Analyze the "Map of Ancient Rome" - identify locations, roads, landmarks. Ask questions that can be answered by the map.
- Evaluate the effectiveness of a physical map vs. political map. Discuss when certain map types are most useful.
- Create a map of a character's travels in a story like "The Odyssey." Compare to existing maps of Odysseus' journey.
Unit 2: Logic Puzzles- Spatial reasoning puzzles and games- Lateral thinking riddles- Sequences and patternsUnit 3: Ethics Case Studies- Real-world ethical dilemmas for debate- Critical reflection writingUnit 4: Harkness Discussions- Prompts and readings to facilitate student-led conversationsUnit 5: Public Speaking and Debate- Argument construction and rhetorical techniques- Presentation skills- Friendly debating and persuasionUnit 6: AI Technology Projects- Intro to algorithms, bots and machine learning through games and simulations- Evaluating online information sources- Coding with visual block languagesUnit 7: Group Problem Solving- Design thinking challenges- Creative solutions for community issuesUnit 8: Growth Portfolios and Reflections- Assembling sample work with self-evaluation- Learning logs- Surveys and knowledge fair
Unit 9: Readers Theater
- Performing and analyzing plays, poems, and stories
- Reading with expression and dramatization
- Creating original scripts
Unit 10: Greek Mythology
- Reading classic myths about the gods, heroes, and monsters
- Comparing myths across cultures
- Writing original myths
Unit 11: Socratic Seminars
- Reading philosophical passages
- Facilitating dialogue through questioning and discussion
- Constructing reasoned arguments
Unit 12: Expository Writing
- Reading and analyzing expository essays and articles
- Planning, drafting and revising explanatory pieces
- Research skills for nonfiction writing
Unit 13: Opinion Writing
- Reading editorial columns, op-eds, reviews and letters
- Outlining claims supported by evidence
- Writing persuasive essays and arguments
Unit 14: Current Events
- Reading and discussing news articles
- Media literacy skills for evaluating sources
- Connecting current issues to history and ethics
Appendix A - How to Read a Book
Based on Mortimer Adler's classic work, covering:
- Active reading strategies
- Annotating, highlighting and marginalia
- Determining purpose and relevance
- Outlining key points
- Critical analysis and evaluation
- Seminal texts worth studying deeply
Appendix B - Building Vocabulary
- Tier 2 academic words for precision and analysis
- Tier 3 domain-specific words for each discipline
- Word analysis through roots, prefixes and suffixes
- Latin and Greek etymology and morphemes
- Using context clues, dictionaries and thesaurusesAppendix C - Latin and Greek Word Roots
- Common Latin and Greek prefixes, suffixes and word roots
- Guidance on deciphering meaning and usage
- Exercises and games for application
- Connecting word origins to specific fields like medicine, law, rhetoric, logic, mathematics and more
The New McGuffey Reader:
Sparking Young Minds in the Age of AI
Introduction
The original McGuffey Readers were wildly popular primers that educated generations of American schoolchildren in the 19th century. They emphasized phonics, reading comprehension, and recitation to teach the fundamentals of literacy. But education today must adapt to prepare students for a rapidly changing world shaped by technology. To truly spark young minds in the 21st century, the spirit of McGuffey Readers should be revived with a modern twist: integrating critical thinking, inquiry-based learning, and AI literacy.
Vision
Children have an innate curiosity and drive to understand the world. Effective education should nurture these instincts by creating an engaging, student-driven learning experience focused on developing core capacities like critical thinking, creativity, communication, and collaboration. Rote memorization must be replaced with active mental development.
The New McGuffey Reader will achieve this through three primary components:
1. Critical Thinking Skill Development: Cross-disciplinary readings, logic puzzles, ethics case studies and creative exercises will flex mental muscles needed for analysis, evaluation, inference, and reasoning.
2. Student-Led Inquiry: Harkness discussion methodologies will empower kids to direct their own explorations of texts and concepts through dialogue, debate, questioning and team assignments.
3. AI and Technology Literacy: Students will gain practical understanding of how algorithms, automation and intelligent machines like chatbots work through hands-on interaction and coding basic programs.
By interweaving these elements, the New McGuffey Reader will prepare 4th graders for higher-order thinking in the technological age while instilling a passion for learning.
Critical Thinking Skill Development
To thrive in the 21st century, students require adaptability, complex communication skills, and the ability to solve ambiguous problems. Developing these capacities must begin early. The New McGuffey Reader will include developmentally appropriate readings, puzzles, case studies and creative challenges to build core critical thinking skills:
- Analysis: Carefully breaks down concepts, texts, or problems into smaller parts to understand structure and relevance. Example activities include spotting patterns in logic puzzles, identifying rhetorical devices in speeches, and determining key themes in short stories.
- Evaluation: Judging validity, quality, importance or implications through reasoned inquiry. Students will practice this by discussing ethical dilemmas, debating historical decisions, and critiquing poems or short stories.
- Inference: Surmising unstated assumptions, evidence-based predictions, or interpreting meaning from creative works. Students will infer implications from fictional stories, make predictions based on data sets, deduce author intent, and hypothesize meanings from poems.
- Reasoning: Constructing logical chains of thinking to connect evidence and support arguments and conclusions. Activities include following if-then scenarios, identifying false logic, and structuring written arguments using claims and evidence.
These skills provide mental habits needed for higher-level scholarship in later grades across all subjects.
Student-Led Inquiry
Direct instruction should be balanced with student-driven explorations. Building on the Socratic method, the New McGuffey Reader will frequently use Harkness pedagogy where groups of students engage in their own discussions, questions, and debates on prompts from texts. This teaches:
- Speaking and listening: Students must articulate thoughts, build on others' ideas, and respectfully disagree through dialogue.
- Collaboration: Working together to analyze texts and co-create meaning builds teamwork.
- Self-directed learning: Guiding their own discussions without teacher lecturing fosters student ownership of knowledge.
Sample Harkness activities may include discussing the motives of characters in a short story, debating the best solution to a hypothetical dilemma, or collaboratively composing a poem analyzing a current event before presenting to the class.
Teachers act as facilitators, interjecting occasionally to spur deeper inquiry. Over time, students learn to self-manage discussions productively. This provides authentic purpose for practicing critical thinking.
AI and Technology Literacy
Technology shapes nearly all aspects of modern life, so developing a practical understanding is essential. The New McGuffey Reader will include:
- Introductory computer science concepts through coding simple programs and games using visual block languages like Scratch. This builds computational thinking.
- Hands-on experiments with chatbots and other conversational agents to understand how they utilize natural language processing and neural networks. Students will gain basic AI literacy.
- Guidance on evaluating online information sources, recognizing disinformation tactics “Dionysian Sophistry”, and practicing ethical digital citizenship.
- Primers on recent technological advances like machine learning, autonomous robots, and synthetic biology to inspire interest in STEM careers.
- Thought experiments on the societal impacts of emerging technologies and discussions of associated risks, ethics, and policies.
This exposure allows students to become critical consumers and creators, not just passive users, of technology.
The original McGuffey Readers open young minds through basic literacy. The New McGuffey Reader will achieve this for the digital age, preparing 4th graders for higher-order thinking with core skills in analysis, evaluation, collaboration, and technological literacy. Just as McGuffey Readers once aligned with industrialization, this modern primer will develop engaged citizens and thinkers for an AI-driven world. The innovative integration of critical thinking, student-led inquiry, and technology engagement will kindle the intellectual spark in 21st century children.
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