Patricia Polacco, Author and Illustrator
Grade Levels: 3 - 5
INTRODUCTION
Students will get a nonfiction glimpse at Patricia Polacco, a storyteller
and illustrator who makes imaginations swirl and hearts dance.
SUGGESTED TIME ALLOWANCE
1 hour
OBJECTIVES
Students will:
gather facts from autobiographical text.
learn about the writing and illustrating process.
discover how fiction draws from life experiences.
have an opportunity to correspond with a published author/illustrator.
practice letter-writing skills.
MATERIALS
Patricia Polacco Facts and Questions Worksheet
Letter to Patricia Polacco, Rough Draft
PROCEDURE
1. Introduce key vocabulary: illustrator, learning disability, meteor, publisher.
2. If students have never read a Patricia Polacco book, read at least one of
her books aloud before having them do this Web activity. A few favorite Polacco books
to start with are Chicken Sunday, Thunder Cake, Appelemando's Dreams, or Boat
Ride with Lilian Two Blossoms.
3. Go to Patricia Polacco's website (http://www.patriciapolacco.com).
From there, students will find Meet Patricia Polacco written at the top left
of the contents column. Clicking on this will bring them to the autobiographical
section.
4. Choose from the following autobiographical links in the following sections:
Meet Patricia Polacco; Who the Heck is Patricia Polacco; Welcome to My Home;
A Visit at Work.
5. Using the Patricia Polacco Facts and Questions Worksheet,
students should first write which link they have chosen, then read the autobiographical
text. As they read the text a second time, they should record facts about Patricia
Polacco on the worksheet.
6. After writing facts about Patricia Polacco, students will record facts about
themselves. This will give them some ways to compare and contrast their lives
and interests to this author/illustrator.
7. Next, students use the Back arrow to return to the four choices on the Meet
Patricia Polacco page. Click on the fourth section, New Books and Projects,
to see what Patricia Polacco is currently working on. On the worksheet, students
should record at least two questions they have about her recent work or things
they read in her autobiography section.
8. After completing the Facts and Questions Worksheet, students will compose
a letter using the Letter to Patricia Polacco
Rough Draft.
ASSESSMENT
Each student's progress will be measured by the information recorded on his or her
worksheet, as well as by the draft of the letter he or she composes to Patricia
Polacco.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES
Revise and send student letters to Patricia Polacco by U.S. mail (Patricia
Polacco, 118 Berry St., Union City, MI 49090).
Explore the Books section on the website http://www.patriciapolacco.com,
and read the summaries of some of Patricia Polacco's books.
Read Appelemando's Dreams, then do illustrations of your own dreams using
oil pastels and watercolor paints on butcher paper to make a mural.
Watch the Reading Rainbow video, Rechenka's Eggs, read Chicken Sunday,
then make pysanky eggs like the ones in those two stories, using crayons and
egg dyes.
Have your students read Thank You, Mr. Falker, then interview your
school's learning specialist about learning disabilities and how they teach
students with visual and auditory processing problems.
For a complete list of Polacco titles, go to the Books section on the website
http://www.patriciapolacco.com.
STANDARDS CORRELATION
Standards at McRel: http://www.mcrel.org/standards-benchmarks/
Language Arts
Students:
use strategies to draft and revise written work.
write in response to literature.
write in a variety of formats, including personal letters.
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