Day 16
To the Teachers:
Organization
By looking at how a passage or selection is organized, students can better understand the author’s intent, as well as predict what information is likely to appear later in the text. Texts are often organized sequentially, around main ideas and details, according to causes and effects, or by comparison and contrast .
Introduce the Organization strategy to students and explain: By looking at the organization of a passage, we can get a better idea of what the author intended to tell us. Many of the same types of passages are organized the same way. Explain to students that the passage they are about to read is a biography. Ask: What do we usually see in biographies? (dates, names, important events in a person’s life, etc.) Then say: I expect to see this passage organized sequentially around important dates in the life of this person. Have students read the instructions at the top of the page and read the passage. When students have finished reading, direct them to complete the strategy practice activity. Ask volunteers to share their responses. Then direct students to complete the skill practice activity. Review the answers together.
Reading:
In April 1863, a Civil War soldier known as Franklin Thompson deserted from the Union Army. Thompson was sick with malaria but was afraid to go to an army hospital. What was Thompson so afraid of? His real name was Sarah Edmonds—and “he” was one of hundreds of women who pretended to be men so that they could fight in the Civil War.
Edmonds was born in Canada in 1841 and came to the United States in 1858. She disguised herself as Franklin Thompson and worked as a book salesman. In May 1861, one month after the Civil War began, she enlisted in the Second Michigan Infantry.
For two years, Edmonds served in the army as Private Thompson. The Second Michigan Infantry fought in some important and violent battles, including First Bull Run in July 1861, Antietam in September 1862, and Fredericksburg in December 1862. Edmonds kept her gender a secret by sleeping in her own tent and sneaking off to bathe privately.
Upon leaving the army, Edmonds resumed her real identity. She eventually revealed her service as Thompson in order to get a pension as a Civil War soldier. In 1886, the War Department recognized her as a female soldier who had served faithfully as a private during the war. She received the $12-a-month pension and was cleared of the desertion charge. When she died in 1898, Edmonds was buried with military honors.
Questions:
STRATEGY PRACTICE: How does adding dates to the passage help organize it?
SKILL PRACTICE: Read each question. Fill in the bubble next to the correct answer.
1. What caused Franklin Thompson to desert from the Union Army?
fear of fighting in the war
fear of illnesses such as malaria
fear of being discovered as a woman soldier
fear of being shot or killed in a bloody battle
2. Because Edmonds revealed the truth about her service in the Civil War, she .....
was buried with military honors
was forced to return to Canada
could resume her identity as a woman
could finally forget about the war
3. The War Department’s recognition of Edmonds proves that .....
the army was embarrassed by Sarah
Sarah gained the rank of officer
Sarah never learned to be a good soldier
the army respected Sarah’s war service
4. Which of these events happened first in Sarah Edmonds’s life?
She got malaria.
She deserted from the Union Army.
She sold books for a living.
She applied for a pension as a Civil War soldier.
Organization
By looking at how a passage or selection is organized, students can better understand the author’s intent, as well as predict what information is likely to appear later in the text. Texts are often organized sequentially, around main ideas and details, according to causes and effects, or by comparison and contrast .
Introduce the Organization strategy to students and explain: By looking at the organization of a passage, we can get a better idea of what the author intended to tell us. Many of the same types of passages are organized the same way. Explain to students that the passage they are about to read is a biography. Ask: What do we usually see in biographies? (dates, names, important events in a person’s life, etc.) Then say: I expect to see this passage organized sequentially around important dates in the life of this person. Have students read the instructions at the top of the page and read the passage. When students have finished reading, direct them to complete the strategy practice activity. Ask volunteers to share their responses. Then direct students to complete the skill practice activity. Review the answers together.
Reading:
Soldier in Disguise
In April 1863, a Civil War soldier known as Franklin Thompson deserted from the Union Army. Thompson was sick with malaria but was afraid to go to an army hospital. What was Thompson so afraid of? His real name was Sarah Edmonds—and “he” was one of hundreds of women who pretended to be men so that they could fight in the Civil War.
Edmonds was born in Canada in 1841 and came to the United States in 1858. She disguised herself as Franklin Thompson and worked as a book salesman. In May 1861, one month after the Civil War began, she enlisted in the Second Michigan Infantry.
For two years, Edmonds served in the army as Private Thompson. The Second Michigan Infantry fought in some important and violent battles, including First Bull Run in July 1861, Antietam in September 1862, and Fredericksburg in December 1862. Edmonds kept her gender a secret by sleeping in her own tent and sneaking off to bathe privately.
Upon leaving the army, Edmonds resumed her real identity. She eventually revealed her service as Thompson in order to get a pension as a Civil War soldier. In 1886, the War Department recognized her as a female soldier who had served faithfully as a private during the war. She received the $12-a-month pension and was cleared of the desertion charge. When she died in 1898, Edmonds was buried with military honors.
Questions:
STRATEGY PRACTICE: How does adding dates to the passage help organize it?
SKILL PRACTICE: Read each question. Fill in the bubble next to the correct answer.
1. What caused Franklin Thompson to desert from the Union Army?
fear of fighting in the war
fear of illnesses such as malaria
fear of being discovered as a woman soldier
fear of being shot or killed in a bloody battle
2. Because Edmonds revealed the truth about her service in the Civil War, she .....
was buried with military honors
was forced to return to Canada
could resume her identity as a woman
could finally forget about the war
3. The War Department’s recognition of Edmonds proves that .....
the army was embarrassed by Sarah
Sarah gained the rank of officer
Sarah never learned to be a good soldier
the army respected Sarah’s war service
4. Which of these events happened first in Sarah Edmonds’s life?
She got malaria.
She deserted from the Union Army.
She sold books for a living.
She applied for a pension as a Civil War soldier.
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