Haven't signed into your Scholastic account before?
Teachers, not yet a subscriber?
Subscribers receive access to the website and print magazine.
You are being redirecting to Scholastic's authentication page...
Announcements & Tutorials
How Students and Families Can Log In
1 min.
Setting Up Student View
Sharing Articles with Your Students
2 min.
Interactive Activities
5 min.
Sharing Videos with Students
Using Action with Educational Apps
Join Our Facebook Group!
Differentiating with Action
Subscriber Only Resources
Access this article and hundreds more like it with a subscription to Action magazine.
Standards Correlations
R.1, R.2, R.3, R.4, R.6, R.7, W.2, SL.1, SL.2, L.4, L.6
Learning Objective
Students will read a play based on true events and make inferences about the plot and characters.
Key Skills
inference, text features, vocabulary, understanding genre, character motivation, character, cause and effect, making a personal connection, informational writing
Complexity Factors
Levels of Meaning: Based on a true story, the play explores the challenges faced by Ted Fujita in his quest to advance tornado science.
Structure: The play is chronological and has five scenes, a prologue, and an epilogue.
Language: The play includes some figurative language.
Knowledge Demands: No special knowledge is required.
Levels
Guided Reading Level: S
DRA Level: 40
SEL Connection
This play and lesson plan promote social awareness.
Lesson Plan: Storm Chasers
Essential Questions
Literature Connection
1. Preparing to Read
Preview Text Features (10 minutes)
Guide students to locate the story. Then preview text features with the following prompts:
Preview Vocabulary (10 minutes)
Make a Plan for Reading
2. Reading and Unpacking the Text
Close-Reading Questions (20 minutes)
Critical-Thinking Questions (10 minutes)
3. Skill Building and Writing
Learn-Anywhere Activity
An enrichment activity to extend the learning journey at home or in the classroom
Project the task below on your whiteboard or share it with students in your LMS.
Make a Movie Poster
A movie poster tells people a little bit about a movie to try to get them interested in watching it. Imagine that you’ve made a movie based on the play “Storm Chasers.” Make a poster to advertise your movie.
First think of a title for your movie. (It can be similar to the play’s title, but you should take this chance to be creative. Have fun coming up with your own exciting title!)
Next create your poster by following these steps:
Language-Acquisition Springboard
Review contractions to boost fluency.
Before reading the play, remind students that a contraction is the shortened form of two words put together, with an apostrophe taking the place of letters that have been removed. Review the following common contractions and their meanings. Each of these words appears more than once in the play.
Next ask students to find three lines in the play that include a contraction. Here are a few examples:
Looking for more ELL support? Download our full lesson plan and scroll to p. 5 to find questions that will help your ELLs respond to the text at the level that’s right for them.
Print This Lesson Plan