Common Core Standards
Grade 5
Reading 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.
As opposed to fourth graders who only have to identify a theme and then provide a general reason why it's there, fifth graders have to be able to point to more specific plot points or explicit scenes of reflection when they identify a theme. The second half of this standard means students have to be able to summarize what they read, though it doesn't need need to be completely objectively (that's only required from sixth graders and above).
Aligned Resources
- Teaching Number the Stars: Book of Scraps
- Teaching Number the Stars: What Is It Good For?
- Teaching Charlotte's Web: With a Little Help from Our Friends
- Teaching Seedfolks: Something to Talk About
- Teaching Seedfolks: Hi. Where Are You From?
- Teaching Seedfolks: How Does Your Garden Grow?
- Teaching The Borrowers: If I Could Turn Back Time: A Pre-reading Vocabulary Activity
- Teaching The Secret Garden: A Game Is Happening in the Garden
- Teaching Esperanza Rising: What's New with You: An Interview
- Teaching The Invention of Hugo Cabret: The Automaton's Message
- Teaching The Borrowers: Come Out, Come Out, Wherever You Are!
- Teaching The Secret Garden: Mary and Colin Become Tech Savvy
- Teaching The Borrowers: Keeping Up With the Korrowers