Connecting to prior knowledge

  • Discuss the meaning of “waiting”. What does it mean to wait for something? What things do we wait for?
  • Assist students to make connections with their prior knowledge through discussion of the following questions:
    • What do you know about weather, rain and raining? (text-to-world)
    • Can you think of any other books we have read that have a focus on weather? (text-to-text)
    • What kind of weather do you like? How does the weather change what you do? (text-to-self)
  • Brainstorm a list of “Weather Words” to be used while reading the book. Display as a word wall for the students to refer to during writing activities.
  • After the first reading of the text, ask the students to respond in a Choral Reading, making sure to demonstrate changes in intonation with character speech.
  • Discuss the meaning of interesting words from the text, and the structure of the words including the beginning, medial and ending sounds, the number of syllables and how the word can be changed if at all.
    (ACELT1575)   (ACELA1437)   (ENe-1A)

 

Exploring the text in context of our community, school and ‘me’

  • Keep a weather diary for a week. Discuss where to look to find information about the weather. Record findings.
  • Compare the European seasons (Summer, Autumn, Winter, Spring) with Indigenous seasons which note more subtle changes in the weather of Australia.
  • Read a non-fiction text about billabongs or use the Questacon website. Discuss why they might also be called “dead rivers”. Predict the relationship between rain and billabongs. Access Indigenous artist Lance Tjyllyungoo’s painting “Trees at a billabong” via the National Museum of Australia‘s website. Discuss the feelings elicited by the painting. Ask students to visualise sitting on the banks of the billabong. What would they see, hear, feel and smell?
    (ACELY1646)    (ENe-1A)

 

Rich assessment task

Students will create three illustrations showing their connections (or disconnections) with the story. Divide a blank piece of paper into three sections and ask students to illustrate how they connect with the text at the level of self, text and world. Note: the students must be well versed in the different types of connecting before attempting this activity. For example, a student may choose to make a text-to-self connection by illustrating themselves sleeping outside under the moon. A text-to-text connection could be an illustration of another story, movie or other text that draws commonalities for the student. A text-to-world connection could be illustrated through a diagram of a billabong. Students may also include disconnections if they cannot make a connection based on their own experiences. For example, some students may not be able to make personal connections to the setting of the Australian outback so are encouraged to note this as a disconnection, meaning that they have recognised an event, character or setting that is unknown to them.
(ACELT1575)   (ENe-1A)