Belonging to a Movement: One Crazy Summer

Lesson 8
icon/ela/white

ELA

Unit 5

5th Grade

Lesson 8 of 31

Objective


Compare and contrast the girls’ attitudes of the revolution with those of the people who work and attend the center.

Readings and Materials


  • Book: One Crazy Summer by Rita Williams-Garcia  — "Breakfast Program" and "Even the Earth is Revolutionary"

Fishtank Plus

Unlock features to optimize your prep time, plan engaging lessons, and monitor student progress.

Target Task


Writing Prompt

Compare and contrast the girls’ attitudes of the revolution with those of the people who work and attend the center.

Sample Response

Create a free account or sign in to view Sample Response

Key Questions


  • Was the breakfast program like what Delphine had envisioned? Defend why or why not. 

  • Why does Kelvin challenge Fern? How do others at the breakfast program respond? How does Fern respond? How does Delphine respond? 

  • At the end of the chapter, a few Black Panthers say, “Those are Sister Inzilla’s, all right.” Why do they say this? How do you think this makes Delphine feel? Why? 

  • Why does Sister Mukumbu include the example of the earth turning on its axis? What point is she trying to reinforce?

  • Should Vonetta have spoken up to say that they didn’t come for the revolution? Defend why or why not. 

  • Why does Delphine change her mind about asking Sister Mukumbu about her mother’s name? 

Vocabulary


humiliation

n.

(p. 62)

the act of being made to feel ashamed or foolish

envious

adj.

(p. 62)

feeling or showing jealousy

Enhanced Lesson Plan

Fishtank Plus Content

Bring your most engaging lessons to life with comprehensive instructional guidance, detailed pacing, supports to meet every student's needs, and resources to strengthen your lesson planning and delivery.

Common Core Standards


  • L.5.3.b — Compare and contrast the varieties of English (e.g., dialects, registers) used in stories, dramas, or poems.
  • RL.5.2 — Determine a theme of a story, drama, or poem from details in the text, including how characters in a story or drama respond to challenges or how the speaker in a poem reflects upon a topic; summarize the text.
  • RL.5.3 — Compare and contrast two or more characters, settings, or events in a story or drama, drawing on specific details in the text (e.g., how characters interact).

Supporting Standards

L.5.4
L.5.4.b
L.5.5
RF.5.3
RF.5.4
RL.5.1
RL.5.4
RL.5.10
SL.5.1
W.5.10
icon/arrow/right/large copy

Lesson 7

icon/arrow/right/large

Lesson 9

Lesson Map

A7CB09C2-D12F-4F55-80DB-37298FF0A765

Request a Demo

See all of the features of Fishtank in action and begin the conversation about adoption.

Learn more about Fishtank Learning School Adoption.

Contact Information

School Information

What courses are you interested in?

ELA

Math

Are you interested in onboarding professional learning for your teachers and instructional leaders?

Yes

No

Any other information you would like to provide about your school?

Effective Instruction Made Easy

Effective Instruction Made Easy

Access rigorous, relevant, and adaptable ELA lesson plans for free