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Adam GidwitzA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
The protagonists of a journey story often learn important lessons as they travel. What are some of the lessons about life that Jeanne, William, and Jacob learn? How do they learn these lessons? What evidence in the story shows that they have learned these lessons?
Teaching Suggestion: This prompt asks students to identify lessons the three children learn but does not specify the number of lessons. By choosing a number of lessons, you can tailor this prompt to your students’ ability level and the time you have available. After identifying the requisite number of lessons, students are asked to find evidence that follows a before-during-after pattern for each lesson: What are the children like before learning the lesson, what formative experience changes them, and what are they like after learning the lesson?
If you suspect your students will struggle to derive this pattern from the prompt, you might guide them through setting up a graphic organizer in this pattern before they attempt to answer. If your students are ready for a challenge, consider extending this assignment by asking them also to discuss how the lessons the children learn support larger thematic ideas found in the text.
Differentiation Suggestion: Students still developing higher-level abstract thought may not immediately note the key phrase “lessons about life” in this prompt and may focus on “lessons” more concretely.
By Adam Gidwitz