literatureplace.com supports school librarians with its database of award winning books for children and young adults.
literatureplace.com enhances any reading or language arts curriculum through diverse activities and lesson plans related to the teaching of literature in the elementary and middle school classroom. Register Now for the literatureplace.com
. .
literatureplace.com offers activities, lesson plans and teaching units that are ideal for your independent reader.
. .
literatureplace.com provides elementary and middle school reading and language arts teachers with a variety of student activities and lessons. Bookfolios  |  BookfolioPLUS  |  Reading Guides  |  Curriculum Collections  |  Planning & Purchasing Guides  |  Subscription  |  Award Winners  |  Home
Enhance your elementary school's reading curriculum with activities found at literatureplace.com
|
. literatureplace.com provides multicultural lesson plans and multicultural teaching units for teachers in grades three through eight.

Valley of the Broken Cherry Trees: Bookfolio Student Activity Guide and More for Your Lesson Plans

Author: Lensey Namioka  |  Originally Published: 1980  |  Genre: Historical Fiction  |  Recommended for: Grades 5-8

Bookfolio Activity Guide
Download Version  Add to cart for $12.95
Print Version  Add to cart for $17.95

The Bookfolio Student Activity Guide Series features:

  • Six Independent Activities
  • Six Group Activities Including End-of-book Discussion Questions
  • End-of-book Multiple Choice Questions

Story Summary:      Zenta and Matsuzo are unemployed samurai in sixteenth-century Japan.  They arrive at a country inn, hoping to enjoy the magnificent cherry blossoms and the hospitality of the innkeeper and his family whom Zenta had saved from warring soldiers two years earlier.  When they learn that someone has been mutilating the revered cherry trees, the samurai become determined to uncover the culprit.  Very soon, however, Zenta and Matsuzo find themselves embroiled in the violence and treachery between Lord Ohmori and his feudal overlord, Lord Kawai.  After a series of adventures, they are finally able to save Lord Kawai from assassination and reconcile the overlord with his troubled son, Torazo.   View activities list for this Bookfolio.

Read-aloud Recommendation: Chapter 3 (pages 28-41)
Valley of the Broken Cherry Trees - Independent Activities Skills  ?
1. Historian and Storyteller (Examining facts in historical fiction) R , W
2. Words in Cherry Blossom (Identifying words unique to setting) D , R , S
3. Zenta Shares His Past (Creating a dialogue between two characters) S , W
4. Japanese Theater Traditions (Dramatizing a story event) R , W
5. The Samurai Method (Researching a topic) R , S , W
6. Japan (Making a map) D , R
Valley of the Broken Cherry Trees - Group Activities Skills  ?
1. A Good Storyteller (Discussing story elements) L , S
2. An Exciting Table of Contents (Writing chapter titles) S , W
3. Two Years Later (Writing a new chapter) D , S , W
4. A View of the Valley (Making a diorama) D
5. Products of Japan (Making a collage) D , R
6. "Let's Talk About..." (Discussing the story) L , S


All download products from literatureplace.com require Adobe Acrobat.  Please download your free copy of Adobe Acrobat NOW if you do not already have this program installed. BookfolioPLUS - the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
Each BookfolioPLUS includes the Reading Guide (Chapter-by-Chapter Questions) and Bookfolio (Independent Activities, Group Activities, and Multiple Choice Questions.)
 
Each Reading Guide contains a story summary, list of other books by the author, book awards won by the book, and related websites as well as the following resources for your use in your classroom.

The Reading Guide is designed to offer you many choices in using its contents. As with all our online resources, the contents and its design reflect input from classroom teachers who participated in their development. The following describes each section and teacher recommended choices. 

Introducing the book: This section can be used to acquaint students with the story, the author, or the illustrator, to open a discussion that capitalizes on students’ prior knowledge, and/or to motivate student interest. While it is important to accomplish any one or more of the components above, it is more important to get them into the book as soon as their interest is peaked. 

Ongoing activity: This activity is optional. It is designed to highlight an important feature of the book. Often this is based on the characters, the plot, the setting, the author’s craft, the illustrator, and any other literary element that students will be asked to observe throughout their reading of the book. The last question in each reading assignment focuses their attention on this feature. The Culminating Activity provides a follow-up to this activity. 

Vocabulary: The vocabulary words for this list are sequenced according to their occurrence in the story. You can add words to the list or delete words according to your students’ needs. Page references are provided in the reading guide for your convenience. Space is available on the student guide should you prefer to add page references. When working with groups, you might encourage students to use context clues as well as picture clues where relevant for word meanings before using a dictionary, or integrate the words into your vocabulary program.

Discussion Guide: The discussion guide for each reading assignment can be used in a variety of instructional settings. You may choose to have students use the questions to guide them while reading or you might use them when you meet with your students after they have read the selection. A Student Guide version is available should you choose to have students use them as a guide in preparing for a group discussion. You may also choose to assign some of the questions, or add/edit questions in the space below the box. Finally, you might choose to assign just the ongoing activity and its related question (the last question for each assignment) to those students who do not require the question guide and benefit most from working independently. The instructional options are numerous. 

Note: Possible responses and/or answer keys are not included as the questions, many of which are open-ended, are designed to encourage a variety of responses. The intent of the questions is to guide the students toward a more interactive and engaging discussion of the story and its many views. Such a discussion is taken to a higher level when the teacher is also an active participant. Questions that generate a more literal response are included when necessary to help lead students toward a subsequent question that requires a more inferential response and/or a higher level of literary appreciation. 

Related Bookfolio Activities: Correlations to activities in the Bookfolio are provided as a convenience for those who are using the Bookfolio. 

Culminating Activity: This activity is a follow-up to the Ongoing Activity. It may take the form of a group discussion or group collaboration; or it may require an independent or group written response. After having read the book, students have the opportunity to revisit the book from a specific perspective, oftentimes with a focus on a literary element or feature unique to the title.

Student Guide Overview
The most important purpose for the Student Guide is to save you time by providing students with a hands-on guide, or a set of questions, to prepare for a group discussion. The vocabulary list for each reading assignment is also included. They could use the write-on lines to answer questions, take notes, respond to the last question and/or the On-going Activity, or write their own questions. Likewise students can personalize the vocabulary list by adding more words of their choice from the selection. Page references for the vocabulary words are not included on the Student Guide page, however you can add them if you feel they are necessary. Students will need to continue their work on additional paper if there is not enough space on the worksheet. 

Bookfolio Activity Guide
Download Version  Add to cart for $12.95
Print Version  Add to cart for $17.95
Take Advantage of Volume Discounts

Select titles that meet
your thematic needs.

 
View Related Titles
By Theme


. .
 
Bookfolio Series | Curriculum Collections | BookfolioPlus Series | Reading Guides | Subscription | Award Winners
Help | Register | Contact | Sitemap | Home Page





Return to the top of this literatureplace.com page.

literatureplace.com
-

Reproducible Reusable Resources
Student Activity Guides ::  Chapter Questions ::  Lesson Plans  ::  Curriculum Collections  ::  Multiple Genres  ::  Literature Skills
Comprehension Skills  ::  Children's Classics  ::  Award Winning Titles  ::  Enrichment and Extension Activities  ::  Guided Reading Instructions
Multiple Learning Modalities  ::  Group and Independent Activities  ::  Literature Circles  ::  Independent Reading


literatureplace.com provides literature based resources to teachers, educators, and parents of students from kindergarten through eighth grade.

Literature Resources Online, LLC
Post Office Box 33  -  St. Augustine, FL 32085
Phone: 800-609-2830


Email Us Today!
 

 Copyright © 2000 -2010 by Literature Resources Online LLC.  All rights reserved.
Use of this site indicates your agreement to our Terms of Use

Web Design / Development provided by Web Solutions, Inc.