READ Magazine Teaching Center


Fiction, nonfiction, and reader’s theater for grades 6–10


Q: What did the Triceratops sit on?
A: Its Tricera-bottom!

We didn’t exactly plan to do an issue of READ on dinosaurs—the concept just sort of evolved. (Ahem ...) For reasons that baffle even the most astute observers of popular culture, people are fascinated by dinosaurs. Small children, as described in the poem on the back page of the student edition, are intuitively drawn to the “terrible lizards” of the prehistoric world. Why is that? And though the miniature paleontologists may outgrow their dinosaur toys and model collections, do they—we—ever really outgrow that dino mania? Search for dinosaur jokes online and you’ll see that the great lizards enjoy a popularity that many other life forms, extinct or not, can’t claim. (Try protoplasm jokes, for example, and that truth becomes quite clear.)

Any subject that so strongly sparks the human imagination will surely find expression in literature. And so, we present a readers’ theater version of Arthur Conan Doyle’s adventure fantasy The Lost World. Ray Bradbury’s short story “The Fog Horn” is a haunting, heartbreaking meditation on what it might be like to be the last of your species. In the nonfiction piece, a scholar posits the theory that the fossils of extinct species inspired the implausible beasts of ancient myth and legend. Loch Ness Monster, anyone? Finally, look at the lovely poem, “The Age of Dinosaurs,” by James Scruton, on the back page for some wonderful imagery and wordplay.

READ Aligns to Common Core State Standards—READ aligns to most of the English Language Arts Standards for Reading: Literature for grades 6–10.
• Most of the content meets standards 1–3, Key Ideas and Details.
• Lit Scene Investigation (LSI) connects to standards 4–6, Craft and Structure.
• Extension activities, critical thinking exercises, and writing prompts connect to standards 7–9, Integration of Knowledge and Ideas.
In addition:
• Vocabulary words and LSI reinforce the standards for Language: Vocabulary Acquisition and Use.
To help you determine which standards a READ story aligns to, we list the standards by code on page 2 of this Teacher’s Guide. You can find the corresponding standards on the Web at www.corestandards.org.

Past Teaching Centers

August - What's Old Is New Again
September - Ordinary People, Extraordinary Situations
October - Strange

November - American Tales
December - Peace
January - Dystopia
February - Love and Longing

 

 

 

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