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PR-6785UK Astonishing Headlines Teacher Resource Book

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6785C


First published SADDLEBACK PUBLISHING, INC.<br />

Three Watson Irvine, CA 92618-2767<br />

Published under licence 2006 by R.I.C. PUBLICATIONS ® PTY LTD<br />

PO Box 332 Greenwood 6924 Western Australia<br />

www.ricpublications.com.au<br />

Distributed by:<br />

Australasia<br />

R.I.C. Publications, PO Box 332, Greenwood 6924, Western Australia: www.ricpublications.com.au<br />

United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing, Bosheen, New Ross, Co. Wexford, Ireland: www.prim-ed.com<br />

Asia<br />

R.I.C. Publications, 5th Floor, Gotanda Mikado Building, 2-5-8 Hiratsuka, Shinagawa-Ku Tokyo, Japan 142-0051:<br />

www.ricpublications.com<br />

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©2006 Saddleback Publishing Inc. All rights reserved.<br />

No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,<br />

recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the publisher.<br />

CODE: 6785<br />

ISBN: 978-1-84654-135-3


FOREWORD<br />

This Prim-Ed Publishing ® series of nonfiction chapter books will grab a student’s interest from the very first<br />

page! Designed with reluctant readers in mind, these riveting 64-page softcover books offer short chapters<br />

on astonishing headlines. The books begin with a chapter explaining the headline. Each subsequent chapter<br />

features a specific event. Chapters begin with a spread titled Datafile, designed to provide background<br />

information helpful in preparing students before reading the chapter. Datafile lists key terms, provides a<br />

historical time line, a map and interesting facts. Fascinating black and white photographs keep the pages<br />

turning.<br />

This teachers guide offers ideas and reproducible worksheets to support the book and extend students’<br />

reading skills. Answers and sample responses are provided for ease of marking.<br />

<strong>Teacher</strong>s Notes.................................. 4–5<br />

<strong>Teacher</strong>s Notes—<br />

Suggested Lesson Plan........................... 6<br />

Attacked<br />

Vocabulary......................................... 7–8<br />

Initial understanding......................... 9–10<br />

Interpretation.................................. 11–12<br />

Reflection.............................................. 13<br />

Critical response................................... 14<br />

Research project............................ 15–16<br />

Captured<br />

Vocabulary..................................... 17–18<br />

Initial understanding....................... 19–20<br />

Interpretation.................................. 21–22<br />

Reflection.............................................. 23<br />

Critical response................................... 24<br />

Research project.............................25–26<br />

Condemned<br />

Vocabulary..................................... 27–28<br />

Initial understanding....................... 29–30<br />

Interpretation.................................. 31–32<br />

Reflection.............................................. 33<br />

Critical response................................... 34<br />

Research project.............................35–36<br />

CONTENTS<br />

Kidnapped<br />

Vocabulary..................................... 37–38<br />

Initial understanding....................... 39–40<br />

Interpretation.................................. 41–42<br />

Reflection.............................................. 43<br />

Critical response................................... 44<br />

Research project.............................45–46<br />

Lost and found<br />

Vocabulary..................................... 47–48<br />

Initial understanding....................... 49–50<br />

Interpretation.................................. 51–52<br />

Reflection.............................................. 53<br />

Critical response................................... 54<br />

Research project.............................55–56<br />

Missing<br />

Vocabulary......................................57–58<br />

Initial understanding........................59–60<br />

Interpretation.................................. 61–62<br />

Reflection.............................................. 63<br />

Critical response................................... 64<br />

Research project.............................65–66<br />

Shot down<br />

Vocabulary..................................... 67–68<br />

Initial understanding........................69–70<br />

Interpretation.................................. 71–72<br />

Reflection.............................................. 73<br />

Critical response................................... 74<br />

Research project.............................75–76<br />

Stowed away<br />

Vocabulary..................................... 77–78<br />

Initial understanding........................79–80<br />

Interpretation.................................. 81–82<br />

Reflection.............................................. 83<br />

Critical response................................... 84<br />

Research project.............................85–86<br />

Stranded at sea<br />

Vocabulary..................................... 87–88<br />

Initial understanding....................... 89–90<br />

Interpretation.................................. 91–92<br />

Reflection.............................................. 93<br />

Critical response................................... 94<br />

Research project.............................95–96<br />

Trapped<br />

Vocabulary..................................... 97–98<br />

Initial understanding..................... 99–100<br />

Interpretation.............................. 101–102<br />

Reflection............................................ 103<br />

Critical response................................. 104<br />

Research project.........................105–106<br />

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Answers......................................107–112<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 3


TEACHERS NOTES<br />

The activities in this teachers guide focus on giving lower-level readers the tools to construct, extend and<br />

examine the meaning of text. The activities focus on the essential elements in reading literacy.<br />

Initial understanding<br />

Vocabulary<br />

Initial understanding of text is the initial impression or unreflected<br />

understanding of what was read. Skills include identifying<br />

details and facts from text read, and recognising aspects of<br />

literal text, such as sequence of events or main ideas. Without<br />

initial understanding, no reader would be able to comprehend<br />

the text on a higher level.<br />

Vocabulary skills include decoding words, using words correctly,<br />

understanding meanings and extending the actual amount<br />

of words the student knows. Increased competency with<br />

vocabulary increases fluency when reading both silently and<br />

aloud. As a student decodes or recognises words more easily,<br />

he/she will also be able to determine and extend the meaning<br />

of entire passages more easily.<br />

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Interpretation<br />

Developing interpretation goes beyond the initial impression to<br />

a more complete understanding of what was read. The reader<br />

must distinguish between and compare separate concepts in<br />

a text to extend its meaning. Examples of interpreting skills<br />

include differentiating facts from opinions, making comparisons,<br />

summarising and identifying cause and effect relationships.<br />

4 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


TEACHERS NOTES<br />

Critical response<br />

Reflection<br />

Personal reflection and response requires the reader to relate<br />

topics to his/her own experience. As each student connects his/<br />

her own experiences with the text, information becomes clearer.<br />

Having internalised ideas, the reader can much more easily<br />

express his/her response.<br />

Demonstrating a critical response requires the reader to detach<br />

himself/herself from the text in order to consider and evaluate it.<br />

A critical stance may include identifying the intended audience<br />

and critiquing the text.<br />

Research project<br />

Students need to develop research skills for academic<br />

competency, as well as personal advantage. Research<br />

requires problem-solving skills and writing proficiency,<br />

along with reading ability.<br />

For many people—including students and teachers—learning about the events in the <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines<br />

series can be both interesting and frightening. You may wish to discuss with the class unsuitable remarks<br />

and behaviour. Point out that people often react oddly to scary or sad situations. Mention that some people<br />

laugh when they are uncomfortable. Remind students not to encourage inappropriate behaviour. Disasters are<br />

typically tragic and shape the lives of many people.<br />

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Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 5


TEACHERS NOTES—Suggested lesson plan<br />

Purpose:<br />

The student will be able to successfully<br />

read a nonfiction text and complete relevant<br />

comprehension and research activities<br />

which correspond to the text.<br />

Materials:<br />

• one copy of the Prim-Ed Publishing<br />

<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines title per student<br />

• sufficient copies of the related<br />

reproducibles for all students<br />

Before reading:<br />

• Introduce students to the vocabulary they will encounter within the text. Students should be<br />

encouraged to use a dictionary wherever possible to strengthen dictionary skills and expand their<br />

knowledge of words and their meanings.<br />

• Set up an ‘<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines dictionary’ by stapling together 13 sheets of paper. Write a<br />

different letter of the alphabet at the top of each page (front and back). As students read, they are<br />

encouraged to write any challenging or unfamiliar words and their definitions on the correct page.<br />

Add new vocabulary words as each book in the <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines series is read.<br />

• Reading the book as an entire class might be helpful for lower-functioning readers. Students<br />

who are more confident may be encouraged to read the book on their own after reading one or<br />

two chapters as a class. For all levels, introduce the topic and highlight key terms, time lines and<br />

maps.<br />

• Point out that studying the information in the Datafile pages can aid understanding later when<br />

reading the text.<br />

• Although most activities are designed for use after reading the book, some are best completed<br />

before students read. A few activities may be used during the reading. These activities were<br />

designed for a variety of teaching styles. You can distribute all of the activities at once or pick and<br />

choose the skills you want to reinforce.<br />

During reading:<br />

• Provide a comfortable place for students to read. It is important that the reading experience be<br />

made as enjoyable as possible for students. Soft music can also be playing in the background<br />

while students are reading.<br />

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After reading:<br />

• Encourage discussion between students about the events outlined in the text. Allow students to<br />

express their opinions and feelings.<br />

• Complete any relevant activities using available resources.<br />

6 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

WORD SCRAMBLE<br />

Date:<br />

Read the definitions. Unscramble the letters to form a word from the book. Then write a synonym<br />

or related word for each.<br />

(a)<br />

Definition Scrambled word Unscrambled word Synonym or related word<br />

to kill a group of<br />

people violently<br />

srmsacae<br />

(b) very scared darfia<br />

(c) an armed fighter delsior<br />

(d)<br />

a sheltered body of<br />

water<br />

rbraohu<br />

(e) a body of salt water aneoc<br />

(f) an aircraft aepnl<br />

(g) an exploding device mbbo<br />

(h)<br />

(i)<br />

(j)<br />

(k)<br />

(l)<br />

an exploding device<br />

fired underwater<br />

a person who<br />

studies<br />

a rally to protest<br />

against an issue<br />

people ruled by one<br />

government<br />

something used to<br />

treat illness<br />

pdrteoo<br />

tdutens<br />

nitonsmrateod<br />

tanion<br />

dcmieine<br />

A ttacked<br />

Vocabulary<br />

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(m) cruel and savage trlbau<br />

(n)<br />

a ship that travels<br />

underwater<br />

srbmeuina<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 7


A ttacked<br />

Vocabulary<br />

CROSSWORD PUZZLE<br />

Date:<br />

Use the clues below to complete the crossword puzzle.<br />

Name:<br />

1 2<br />

11<br />

Across:<br />

10<br />

3. An underwater ship<br />

6<br />

3 4<br />

5<br />

7 8<br />

12 13<br />

5. A battle between two peoples or<br />

countries<br />

7. A settler in a new colony<br />

9. National soldiers<br />

shot students in Kent State<br />

University<br />

11. The Vietnam War was fought here<br />

12. Sarajevo is a city in this state<br />

13. This US state is home to Kent<br />

State University<br />

8 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com<br />

9<br />

Down:<br />

1. A male monarch<br />

2. America was attacked here in 1941<br />

3. A floating vessel<br />

4. England is part of this country<br />

6. The capital city of Massachusetts<br />

8. An underwater missile<br />

10. These people attacked the Muslims in<br />

Sarajevo<br />

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Name:<br />

KEY FACTS<br />

Date:<br />

A ttacked<br />

Initial understanding<br />

As you read Attacked, fill in the chart about each attack. The complete chart might come in handy<br />

when reviewing events in the book.<br />

Boston<br />

massacre<br />

Pearl<br />

Harbour<br />

bombing<br />

Kent State<br />

shooting<br />

Siege of<br />

Sarajevo<br />

When did the<br />

attack happen?<br />

Where did the<br />

attack happen?<br />

Why did the<br />

attack happen?<br />

Results<br />

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Another fact<br />

about the attack<br />

Pentagon<br />

attack<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 9


A ttacked<br />

Initial understanding<br />

BEFORE, DURING, AFTER<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

In the book Attacked, the Sunday morning attack caught the soldiers at Pearl Harbour by<br />

surprise.<br />

Use the information and clues from each event to determine what the people felt before, during and after<br />

the attack.<br />

Boston<br />

massacre<br />

Pearl Harbour<br />

bombing<br />

Kent State<br />

shooting<br />

Siege of<br />

Sarajevo<br />

Before During After<br />

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Pentagon<br />

attack<br />

10 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

VENN DIAGRAM<br />

Date:<br />

A ttacked<br />

Interpretation<br />

To compare is to tell how things are alike. To contrast is to tell how things are different.<br />

Choose two events described in the book. Write their names at the top. List the ways the events are alike<br />

and the ways they are different. In the space below, create a flow chart for an attack of your choice.<br />

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Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 11


1.<br />

2.<br />

A ttacked<br />

Interpretation<br />

FACT OR OPINION?<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

A fact is a statement that can be proved or tested. An opinion is a statement of someone’s feelings<br />

or beliefs.<br />

Read these sentences from and about each event. Tick the appropriate box for either a fact or an opinion.<br />

(a) King George II was unfair to the colonists...............................................................<br />

(b) The king’s soldiers killed five colonists and injured others........................................<br />

(c) I do not like the seventh of December anymore.......................................................<br />

(d) The men aboard USS Arizona served America well..................................................<br />

(e) More than 1100 men died aboard USS Arizona.......................................................<br />

(f) The Ohio National Guard killed four students and wounded nine others....................<br />

(g) Vietnam should solve its own problems..................................................................<br />

(h) Sarajevo was once a beautiful place.......................................................................<br />

(i) The Serbs were brutal in their attack on innocent people.........................................<br />

(j) More than 3500 shells slammed into Sarajevo in one day.......................................<br />

Write a statement of fact and an opinion you hold about one event in Attacked.<br />

Fact<br />

Opinion<br />

Fact<br />

Opinion<br />

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12 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

POINT OF VIEW<br />

Date:<br />

A ttacked<br />

Reflection<br />

A story can change your mind about an issue. It might change your point of view or your attitude<br />

about an issue.<br />

1. Before you read:<br />

2. After you read:<br />

3.<br />

Indicate your point of view about the issues<br />

below. Write A for agree or D for disagree.<br />

(a)<br />

Aeroplane and airport safety<br />

measures were fine before 11<br />

September 2001.<br />

(b) Deadly force should not be used to<br />

stop protests.<br />

(c)<br />

Fighting for independence is often<br />

deadly.<br />

(d) If people are conscripted to fight in a<br />

war, they should also have the right<br />

to vote.<br />

(e)<br />

In the battle for cities, the innocent<br />

civilians suffer most.<br />

Indicate your point of view about the issues<br />

below. Write A for agree or D for disagree.<br />

If you worked in one of the world’s landmarks today, such as the Eiffel Tower, would you be<br />

concerned about future terrorist attacks on landmarks?<br />

Use what you know about the Pentagon attack and your own point of view to answer the question above.<br />

(a)<br />

Aeroplane and airport safety<br />

measures were fine before 11<br />

September 2001.<br />

(b) Deadly force should not be used to<br />

stop protests.<br />

(c)<br />

Fighting for independence is often<br />

deadly.<br />

(d) If people are conscripted to fight in a<br />

war, they should also have the right<br />

to vote.<br />

(e)<br />

In the battle for cities, the innocent<br />

civilians suffer most.<br />

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Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 13


1<br />

2<br />

A ttacked<br />

Critical response<br />

Date:<br />

DIFFERENT PEOPLE, DIFFERENT USES<br />

Name:<br />

One article might have different meanings to different people. For example, a newspaper article about the<br />

attack on the Pentagon would be meaningful to several people, but in very different ways. To a relative<br />

of a defence employee, the article would be a source of information about his or her relative’s final<br />

moments. To a rescue worker, the article could be a source of pride or recognition of her good work in<br />

saving many people from the burning building.<br />

For each type of person below, write how the person might view or use the information from this book<br />

about attacks.<br />

(a) A child living in Boston, USA, in 1770.<br />

(c) A Japanese tourist in Hawaii, USA, today.<br />

(e) A student attending Kent State University, Kent, USA, in 1970.<br />

WHO ELSE?<br />

(b) A reporter working in Sarajevo, Bosnia and<br />

Herzegovina, today.<br />

(d) A firefighter living in Sydney, Australia, on<br />

11 September 2001.<br />

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Think of someone else who might find the information in this book useful. Write a sentence or two telling<br />

who this person is, and why he or she would be interested in the information.<br />

14 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

RESEARCH TIPS<br />

Date:<br />

A ttacked<br />

Research project<br />

Choose another well-known case of an attack from the list below, or find one of your own. Use<br />

these tips to help you write a report about an attack.<br />

• August 2004, A rabid otter bites a six-year-old boy while he swims at a public lake in Putnam<br />

County, USA.<br />

• September 2005, A saltwater crocodile attacked Russell Butel, an experienced diver, in Darwin,<br />

Australia<br />

• April 2004, A great white shark attacks Randall Fry, a famous sports fisherman, while he is diving<br />

16 kilometres north of Fort Bragg, USA.<br />

• March 2004, 10 bombs aboard four trains in Madrid, Spain, kill 191 people and wound more than<br />

1400 others.<br />

• July 2005, Terrorists attempt to explode four bombs in London, Britain, following attacks only a<br />

week earlier.<br />

• September 2001, Aboard Flight 93, passengers attack the cockpit door in an attempt to wrestle<br />

the plane from the hijackers’ control.<br />

Use a newspaper or magazine article, books or the Internet to research the event. Use two or more<br />

sources, such as three different websites, including a newspaper site.<br />

How to use newspapers and magazines …<br />

• Sources the author used are often listed at the end of the<br />

article. Find the books or articles to learn more details.<br />

Remember to list all of your sources.<br />

• Take notes about the information, but remember to use<br />

your own words when writing about it. If you use a direct<br />

quote, use quotation marks and state the reference,<br />

including the title, the article and page number where<br />

you found it.<br />

How to look for a book on the subject …<br />

• Using your library’s catalogue, do a title search or a<br />

subject search. Type the keyword ‘attacked’ and the<br />

place, date, person’s name involved in the event.<br />

How to find information on<br />

the Internet …<br />

• Photographs, maps,<br />

diagrams, charts and<br />

displays always make<br />

research projects more<br />

interesting. Use these visual<br />

aids to print and use with<br />

your report.<br />

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• If a book is shelved by author, it is a fictional or<br />

biographical book. Most nonfiction books are shelved by<br />

number using the Dewey decimal system. Use nonfiction<br />

or biographical books only.<br />

• Not everything on the<br />

Internet is correct! Be sure<br />

to find the information on<br />

a site that ends with .edu,<br />

.org or .gov. Or find the<br />

same information in three<br />

separate places. Maybe<br />

your school knows of some<br />

websites that may be of<br />

use. Ask your teacher or<br />

librarian for help.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 15


A ttacked<br />

Research project<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

WRITE A REPORT<br />

Use the outline below to organise information about your research subject. You might not use every<br />

category listed. On a separate sheet of paper, copy the outline. Add your own headings, subheadings or<br />

numbers, if necessary.<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

Title:<br />

Time and place<br />

(a) Date<br />

(i)<br />

(ii)<br />

Information about why the time was<br />

important to the event:<br />

Another well-known event that<br />

occurred around the same time:<br />

3. 4.<br />

Sequence of events<br />

(a) How the attack started<br />

(i)<br />

(ii)<br />

Why the attack started:<br />

Background information the reader<br />

should know about the cause:<br />

(b) What happened during the attack<br />

(i)<br />

Details:<br />

(c) What happened after the attack<br />

(i)<br />

(ii)<br />

Details:<br />

Recovery, clean-up, repairs:<br />

(b) Place<br />

(i)<br />

(ii)<br />

Information about why the place was<br />

important to the event:<br />

Background information the reader<br />

should know about the place:<br />

(iii) Other well-known places near by, in<br />

case the reader isn’t familiar with<br />

the place:<br />

Result of the attack<br />

(a) Effects<br />

(i)<br />

(ii)<br />

What places were affected:<br />

What animals were affected:<br />

(iii) Who was affected:<br />

(b) Results<br />

(i)<br />

(ii)<br />

(c) Actions taken<br />

(i)<br />

Bad results from the attack:<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

(ii)<br />

Good results from the attack:<br />

What else has been done to<br />

prevent another attack:<br />

What else can be done to prevent<br />

another attack:<br />

Write a short report on the attack using your notes and your outline. Also add images, such as a map or a<br />

photograph. Be sure to proofread and edit your report. List your references at the end.<br />

16 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

CLOZE<br />

Before you read:<br />

Date:<br />

C aptured<br />

Vocabulary<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

3.<br />

Read the paragraph below about a famous capture. Write words in the blanks that make sense in<br />

the sentences.<br />

The agents<br />

they had him back at their safe<br />

1 Eichmann, stuffed him into a car, and gagged and tied him. Soon<br />

2 . At first he denied who he was, but then he<br />

became 3 and nervous. Suddenly, he was eager to 4 all<br />

he knew.<br />

After you read:<br />

Now write words in the blanks that make sense in the sentences and in the story. Reread or skim<br />

the book, if needed.<br />

The agents<br />

they had him back at their safe<br />

1 Eichmann, stuffed him into a car, and gagged and tied him. Soon<br />

2 . At first he denied who he was, but then he<br />

became 3 and nervous. Suddenly, he was eager to 4 all<br />

he knew.<br />

Write a sentence or two to summarise the event above.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 17


1.<br />

2.<br />

C aptured<br />

Vocabulary<br />

COMMON MISSPELLINGS<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

What is wrong with the list of words below? They are all misspelled.<br />

Correctly rewrite each word. Use a dictionary or find the word in the book, if needed. Then define the word.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

(f)<br />

(g)<br />

(h)<br />

(i)<br />

(j)<br />

waet<br />

mised<br />

afrad<br />

terible<br />

falt<br />

crim<br />

iland<br />

prisonar<br />

trii<br />

cel<br />

<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines dictionary<br />

How did you do on correcting the misspellings?<br />

List any words you found difficult in your own<br />

‘<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines dictionary’.<br />

Set up your own ‘<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines<br />

dictionary’ by stapling together a 13-page<br />

booklet. Write a letter or a group of letters on<br />

each side. For example, X–Z words should fit<br />

on one page.<br />

3.<br />

As you read, write any difficult or<br />

unfamiliar words and their definitions<br />

on the correct page. Add new<br />

words as you read each <strong>Astonishing</strong><br />

headlines book.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

18 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

KWL CHART<br />

Date:<br />

C aptured<br />

Initial understanding<br />

Before you read the book Captured, write in the K column facts you already know about famous captures.<br />

In the W column, write questions you would like answered. While you read the book, look for answers to<br />

your questions. After reading, write what you learned about famous captures in the L column.<br />

What I already know What I want to know What I learned<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

2.<br />

3.<br />

RESEARCH<br />

What questions were not answered? Where do you think you could find the answers?<br />

Choose one question from the W column that the book did not answer. Research it and write the question<br />

and answer on another sheet of paper.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 19


1.<br />

C aptured<br />

Initial understanding<br />

FLOW CHART<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

A flow chart can show cause and effect relationships. It can also show a sequence of events.<br />

Complete the flow chart about another captured person or thing described in the book.<br />

2 Oct:<br />

First sniper victim shot and<br />

killed.<br />

3 Oct:<br />

DC Snipers<br />

Five more victims shot and<br />

killed.<br />

4, 7 Oct:<br />

Woman and boy wounded.<br />

9, 11, 14 Oct:<br />

Two more men and a woman<br />

shot and killed.<br />

19, 22 Oct:<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Man wounded; another killed.<br />

24 Oct:<br />

Snipers Muhammad and Malvo<br />

captured.<br />

20 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

BRAINSTORM RESULTS<br />

Date:<br />

C aptured<br />

Interpretation<br />

Think about what might have happened if one of the captured people mentioned in the book escaped. What might<br />

the results have been? Write a few ideas to explain how things might be different.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 21


1.<br />

2.<br />

C aptured<br />

Interpretation<br />

BEFORE, DURING, AFTER<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Choose one event described in the book. Brainstorm as many words as you can to describe the people’s<br />

experience before they were captured, while they were held captive, and if possible, after they escaped.<br />

List up to five words under each heading.<br />

ILLUSTRATE<br />

Before the capture While held captive After they escaped<br />

Draw pictures to show what you think happened before, during and after the event. Write a brief caption<br />

under each picture to explain it.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

22 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

PERSONAL RESPONSE<br />

Date:<br />

Answer the questions below based on your own opinions and knowledge.<br />

C aptured<br />

Reflection<br />

Think of a well-known person or thing that has recently been captured. Who is that person or what is<br />

that thing?<br />

Do you think this event will be remembered in<br />

10 years? Why or why not?<br />

2. 3.<br />

How are the events similar and different?<br />

4. 5.<br />

6.<br />

Does the recent event remind you of an event in<br />

the book? If so, which one?<br />

What feelings do you experience when you read<br />

about people being captured— excitement, fear,<br />

sadness or something else?<br />

Could you capture a famous fugitive? Write a sentence or two about what you might do or say to capture<br />

him or her.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 23


C aptured<br />

Critical response<br />

AUTHOR’S PURPOSE<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Authors write books for many different reasons. Many books are written to inform the reader about<br />

certain facts, events or people. Some books are written to persuade the reader to think, feel, or act<br />

in a certain way. Many are written to entertain the reader. Often books are written for more than<br />

one purpose.<br />

Think about the book Captured. Identify the author’s purpose for writing the book.<br />

To inform—What features or chapters in<br />

the book make it informative?<br />

1. 2.<br />

3.<br />

Viewing<br />

To entertain—What features or chapters in the book make it entertaining?<br />

To persuade—What features or chapters in<br />

the book make it persuasive?<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

24 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

RESEARCH TIPS<br />

Date:<br />

C aptured<br />

Research project<br />

Choose another well-known captured person, animal or thing from the list below, or find one of your<br />

own. Use these tips to help you write a journal about it.<br />

• May 1998, Brendan Abbott, Australia’s most wanted criminal, is captured in Darwin, Australia.<br />

Abbott was wanted for the robberies of several banks.<br />

• November 2001, John Walker-Lindh is captured by US forces in Afghanistan. Lindh is later<br />

charged with fighting against the coalition allies, the Northern Alliance.<br />

• April 1996, Unabomber Ted Kaczynski is captured inside his cabin in Lincoln, USA. Kaczynski is later<br />

charged with 16 bombing incidents.<br />

• May 1934, Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow are captured and killed by a posse outside Sailes, USA.<br />

Police believed Bonnie and Clyde killed 13 people.<br />

Use a newspaper or magazine article, books or the Internet to research the event. Use two or more<br />

sources, such as three different websites, including a newspaper site.<br />

How to use newspapers and magazines …<br />

• Sources the author used are often listed at the end of the<br />

article. Find the books or articles to learn more details.<br />

Remember to list all of your sources.<br />

• Take notes about the information, but remember to use<br />

your own words when writing about it. If you use a direct<br />

quote, use quotation marks and state the reference,<br />

including the title, the article and page number where<br />

you found it.<br />

How to look for a book on the subject …<br />

• Using your library’s catalogue, do a title search or a<br />

subject search. Type the keyword ‘captured’ and the<br />

place, date, person’s name involved in the event.<br />

• If a book is shelved by author, it is a fictional or<br />

biographical book. Most nonfiction books are shelved by<br />

number using the Dewey decimal system. Use nonfiction<br />

or biographical books only.<br />

How to find information on<br />

the Internet …<br />

• Photographs, maps,<br />

diagrams, charts and<br />

displays always make<br />

research projects more<br />

interesting. Use these visual<br />

aids to print and use with<br />

your report.<br />

• Not everything on the<br />

Internet is correct! Be sure<br />

to find the information on<br />

a site that ends with .edu,<br />

.org or .gov. Or find the<br />

same information in three<br />

separate places. Maybe<br />

your school knows of some<br />

websites that may be of<br />

use. Ask your teacher or<br />

librarian for help.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 25


C aptured<br />

Research project<br />

JOURNAL WRITING<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Journal writing is your chance to talk about how you feel about an event. When you write in a journal,<br />

you write about your feelings and what is important to you. Your journal can be like a descriptive essay.<br />

Write a journal entry exploring your feelings about a captive. Think about what the word ‘captured’ means to you.<br />

Then think about how it relates to this particular case. List the key facts, including dates, location and who was<br />

captured.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

26 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

COMMON MISSPELLINGS<br />

Date:<br />

What is wrong with the list of words below? They are all misspelled.<br />

C ondemned<br />

Vocabulary<br />

Correctly rewrite each word. Use a dictionary or find the word in the book, if needed. Then define the word.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

(f)<br />

(g)<br />

(h)<br />

(i)<br />

(j)<br />

evidance<br />

whitchcraft<br />

staton<br />

historick<br />

wolve<br />

wegh<br />

growh<br />

readwood<br />

guiltie<br />

polic<br />

‘<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines dictionary’<br />

How did you do on correcting the misspellings?<br />

List any words you found difficult in your own<br />

‘<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines dictionary’.<br />

Set up your own ‘<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines<br />

dictionary’ by stapling together a 13-page<br />

booklet. Write a letter or a group of letters on<br />

each side. For example, X–Z words should fit<br />

on one page.<br />

3.<br />

As you read, write down any difficult<br />

or unfamiliar words and their<br />

definitions on the correct page.<br />

Add new words as you read each<br />

<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines book.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 27


1.<br />

2.<br />

C ondemned<br />

Vocabulary<br />

SYNONYMS AND ANTONYMS<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Synonyms are words that mean the same thing, or words that mean almost the same thing.<br />

Antonyms are words that are opposite in meaning.<br />

For each pair of words, write ‘A’ if the words are antonyms, or ‘S’ if the words are synonyms.<br />

(a) live – die................................. (b) angry – mad .....................<br />

(c) match – mismatch.................. (d) settle – live ......................<br />

(e) earth – dirt.............................. (f) save – lose .......................<br />

(g) common – rare....................... (h) killer – murderer...............<br />

(i) winter – summer.................... (j) litter – group.....................<br />

(k) stay – leave............................ (l) confess – tell.....................<br />

SYNONYMS ORDER<br />

Organise these synonyms from least to greatest.<br />

(a) heavy light weighty backbreaking<br />

(b) child adult infant teen<br />

(c) detained jailed freed captured<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

(d) stone pebble boulder rock<br />

(e) say call out whisper shout<br />

28 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

Date:<br />

C ondemned<br />

Initial understanding<br />

READ FOR DETAIL<br />

Before you read:<br />

Read the paragraph below about being condemned. Write words in the blanks that make sense in<br />

the sentences.<br />

The people of Salem were in<br />

1 . Two young girls, Ann<br />

Putnam and Abigail Williams, fell<br />

2 . They screamed<br />

and had terrible<br />

3 . However, Dr Griggs could find<br />

4 wrong.<br />

His conclusion: It must be<br />

5 ! The girls blamed some<br />

townspeople for their<br />

6 . The girls said the people’s<br />

spirits<br />

7 them. The girls said the accused must be<br />

8 .<br />

After you read:<br />

Now write words in the blanks that make sense in the sentences and in the story.<br />

Reread or skim the book, if necessary.<br />

The people of Salem were in<br />

1 . Two young girls, Ann<br />

Putnam and Abigail Williams, fell<br />

2 . They screamed<br />

and had terrible<br />

3 . However, Dr Griggs could find<br />

4 wrong.<br />

His conclusion: It must be<br />

5 ! The girls blamed some<br />

townspeople for their<br />

6 . The girls said the people’s<br />

spirits<br />

7 them. The girls said the accused must be<br />

8 .<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 29


C ondemned<br />

Initial understanding<br />

FLOW CHART<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

A flow chart can show cause and effect relationships between events. It can also show a sequence<br />

of events. When one event causes more than one result, a separate box is used for each result.<br />

Read the first flow chart. Then complete the second flow chart using facts from the book. Then, on a<br />

separate sheet of paper, create another flow chart about another condemned person or thing described in<br />

the book.<br />

Snaggletooth murderer<br />

Ray Krone lived near the CBS<br />

Lounge.<br />

He played darts at the CBS<br />

Lounge.<br />

He often talked to Kim.<br />

Someone with crooked teeth bit<br />

and killed Kim Ancona.<br />

Ray Krone had crooked teeth.<br />

Number Ten shot dead<br />

McKittrick saw a silver-grey<br />

wolf.<br />

He ran to get his gun and<br />

aimed.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

The police thought he was the<br />

Snaggletooth Murderer.<br />

30 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

Viewing<br />

CAUSE AND EFFECT<br />

Date:<br />

A cause makes another event happen. An effect happens as a result of a cause.<br />

Underline the cause and circle the effect in each sentence.<br />

(a) When they opened the fence, Number Ten walked out of the pen.<br />

(b) The two wolves played and snuggled, because they liked each other.<br />

(c) Because the shirt still had saliva on it, the shirt could be tested for DNA evidence.<br />

(d) So she would not hurt Luna’s bark, Butterfly took off her shoes.<br />

(e) Butterfly climbed into Luna’s branches, so that the timber company could not cut it down.<br />

(f) Butterfly stayed dry after her friends helped her build a tree house.<br />

(g) Wolves sometimes ate farm animals, so farmers killed them.<br />

(h) Because Dr Griggs could find nothing wrong, he thought it must be witchcraft!<br />

(i) Giles Corey was scared because the court had already hanged 11 people that summer.<br />

(j) Corey could hardly breathe because of the weight on his chest.<br />

(k) Jackie was often seen on TV, so she thought New Yorkers might listen to her.<br />

C ondemned<br />

Interpretation<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

BRAINSTORM RESULTS<br />

Choose one of the cause and effect relationships above and change either the cause or the effect. Write a<br />

sentence to describe what might now have happened.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 31


C ondemned<br />

Interpretation<br />

HEADLINES<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Newspapers and web pages often use large print to headline an article or page. They help to grab<br />

people’s attention. Stories often include both a headline and a subheading.<br />

1.<br />

Choose one event from each chapter. Write a headline and subheading for each one. An event from Chapter<br />

1 is already done for you.<br />

(a) Chapter 1<br />

(b) Chapter 2<br />

(c) Chapter 3<br />

(d) Chapter 4<br />

• The headline tells<br />

the most important<br />

information, or main<br />

idea, about an event. It<br />

is set in large type.<br />

Headline<br />

Giles Corey crushed to<br />

death for refusing to<br />

speak<br />

• The subheading tells<br />

other important details<br />

about the event. It is<br />

set in slightly smaller<br />

type.<br />

Subheading<br />

‘More weight’, is his<br />

only reply<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

(e) Chapter 5<br />

32 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

Date:<br />

PERSONAL RESPONSE<br />

Answer the questions below, based on your own opinions and knowledge.<br />

C ondemned<br />

Reflection<br />

Think of a well-known person or thing that has<br />

recently been convicted of a crime, or was in<br />

some other way condemned. Who is that person<br />

or thing?<br />

1. 2.<br />

3.<br />

4.<br />

5.<br />

6.<br />

Viewing<br />

Does the recent event remind you of an event in the book? If so, which one?<br />

How are the events similar or different?<br />

Similar<br />

Do you think this event will be remembered in<br />

10 years? Why or why not?<br />

Different<br />

What feelings do you experience when you read about people or things being condemned—sadness, fear<br />

or something else?<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Could you prevent a person or thing from becoming condemned? Write a short paragraph about what you<br />

might do to protect a person or a thing from becoming condemned.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 33


C ondemned<br />

Critical response<br />

USEFUL INFORMATION<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

A newspaper article about an innocent person being condemned might be meaningful to different people<br />

for different reasons. To a law student, the article might show how unjust the justice system is.<br />

1.<br />

For each person below, write how the person might view or use the information from this book about<br />

people or things being condemned.<br />

(a) A child who loves nature (b) A history student (c) A police officer<br />

(d) An architect (e) The mayor of a city (f) An adult who loves animals<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

34 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

RESEARCH TIPS<br />

Date:<br />

C ondemned<br />

Research project<br />

Choose another well-known case of someone or something condemned from the list below, or find<br />

one of your own. Use these tips to help you write a newspaper article about it.<br />

• 2009, the Three Gorges Dam Project in China will submerge 632 square kilometres of land, 113<br />

cities, 140 towns, 1352 villages and 657 factories; and will force the relocation of more than 1.3<br />

million people.<br />

• July 2004, Bird flu caused Thai government officials to kill 25 000 fowl in an attempt to wipe out<br />

the virus.<br />

• January 1999, Mary Chipperfield and her husband, Roger Cawley, are condemned on charges of<br />

animal cruelty. They are world famous circus trainers.<br />

• April 2006, Martin Stephens is condemned to 20 years’ imprisonment for drug smuggling. He is<br />

known as a member of the ‘Bali Nine’.<br />

Use an encyclopedia, books, or the Internet to research the event. Use two or more sources, such<br />

as three different websites, including a newspaper site.<br />

How to use an encyclopedia …<br />

• Sources the author used are often at the end of the<br />

article. Find the books or articles to learn more details.<br />

Remember to list all of your sources.<br />

• Take notes about the information, but remember to use<br />

your own words when writing about it. If you use a<br />

direct quote, use quotation marks and state the source<br />

including the encyclopedia, the article, and the volume<br />

and page number where you found it.<br />

How to look for a book on the subject …<br />

• Using your library’s catalogue, do a title search or a<br />

subject search. Type the keyword ‘condemned’ and the<br />

place, date, person’s name involved in the event.<br />

How to find information on<br />

the Internet …<br />

• Photographs, maps,<br />

diagrams, charts and<br />

displays always make<br />

research projects more<br />

interesting. Use these visual<br />

aids to print and use with<br />

your report.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

• If a book is shelved by author, it is a fictional or<br />

biographical book. Most nonfiction books are shelved by<br />

number using the Dewey decimal system. Use nonfiction<br />

or biographical books only.<br />

• Not everything on the<br />

Internet is correct! Be sure<br />

to find the information on<br />

a site that ends with .edu,<br />

.org or .gov. Or find the<br />

same information in three<br />

separate places. Maybe<br />

your school knows of some<br />

websites that may be of<br />

use. Ask your teacher or<br />

librarian for help.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 35


1.<br />

C ondemned<br />

Research project<br />

NEWSPAPER ARTICLE<br />

Date:<br />

Answer the questions below about your research subject.<br />

Name:<br />

(a) Where did the event take place? (b) When did it happen?<br />

(c) Was anyone else condemned?<br />

(d) What was the charge, if any? (e) What was the punishment, if any?<br />

(f) List any other interesting facts about the<br />

event.<br />

(g) List any other facts that might affect you<br />

personally. (Do you know the condemned person<br />

or animal? Have you visited Bali? Have you<br />

visited China? Do you like going to the circus?)<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

2.<br />

Use the facts above to write a newspaper article about the event. Write your article on a separate sheet<br />

of paper. Include an attention-grabbing headline and images, such as maps or photos. Write the most<br />

important facts first. Then add the least important details at the end. Mention or quote your references. Be<br />

sure to proofread and edit your article.<br />

36 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

Date:<br />

SYLLABLES<br />

What is a two-syllable word that is the theme of this book?<br />

Kidnapped<br />

K idnapped<br />

Vocabulary<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

A syllable is a word part containing one vowel sound. ‘Kidnapped’ contains two syllables: kid/<br />

napped.<br />

Use the clues to determine each key term. Use the Key Terms feature at the beginning of each chapter, if<br />

needed.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

(f)<br />

Two-syllable word that means ‘to make public’.<br />

Three-syllable word that means ‘a study done on a dead<br />

body to determine the cause of death’.<br />

Three-syllable word that means ‘a codename’.<br />

One-syllable word that means ‘to shine brightly’.<br />

Three-syllable word that means ‘a sleep-like state that<br />

can help people remember forgotten events’.<br />

Two-syllable word that means ‘a person held captive<br />

until certain promises or conditions are met’.<br />

Use each key term above in a sentence about kidnapping.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 37


1.<br />

K idnapped<br />

Vocabulary<br />

PLACE NAMES<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Draw lines to match the place names on the right with the descriptions on the left.<br />

2.<br />

WORD SCRAMBLE<br />

Read the definitions. Unscramble the letters to form place names from the book.<br />

(a) A city in Utah. slta lkea cyit<br />

(b)<br />

Elizabeth Smart was found in this<br />

state.<br />

huta<br />

(c) Beirut is located in this country. nnaoebl<br />

(d) Terry Anderson was abducted here. tieubr<br />

(e)<br />

(a) A city in Utah that is home to the Smart<br />

family.<br />

(b) A city in Iran that was the site for the<br />

1979 US Embassy siege.<br />

(c) A city in Lebanon where Terry Anderson<br />

was taken hostage.<br />

(d) A quiet town in New Jersey where the<br />

Lindberghs made their home.<br />

(e) A tourist site in New Hampshire.<br />

The 1979 US Embassy siege<br />

occurred here.<br />

hrnate<br />

(f) A state next to Vermont. wne emhpsiarh<br />

(g) The Hills came from here. hutomtsorp<br />

Tehran<br />

Hopewell<br />

White Mountains<br />

Beirut<br />

Salt Lake City<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

(h) The capital city of France. rasip<br />

(i)<br />

This state was home to the<br />

Lindberghs.<br />

nwe yjsere<br />

(j) The Woodlawn Cemetery was here. xrbno<br />

38 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

KWL CHART<br />

Date:<br />

K idnapped<br />

Initial understanding<br />

Before you read the book Kidnapped, write in the K column facts you already know about kidnapping. In<br />

the W column, write questions you would like answered. While you read the book, look for answers to your<br />

questions. After reading, write what you learned about famous captures in the L column.<br />

What I already know What I want to know What I learned<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

2.<br />

3.<br />

RESEARCH<br />

What questions were not answered? Where do you think you could find the answers?<br />

Choose one question from the W column that the book did not answer. Research it and write the question<br />

and answer on another sheet of paper.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 39


K idnapped<br />

Initial understanding<br />

WORD WEB<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

What does the word ‘hostage’ mean? Use the word web to show and expand your understanding<br />

of the word.<br />

Hostage: a person held captive until certain promises or conditions are met.<br />

Add three or more related words to each circle to complete the word web.<br />

Where<br />

Beirut<br />

Hostage<br />

Why<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

How<br />

40 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

ARTEFACT FILE<br />

Date:<br />

K idnapped<br />

Interpretation<br />

A display about the Lindbergh baby kidnapping might include the following artefacts: the wood<br />

from the ladder, the baby’s sleepsuit and the ransom note.<br />

1.<br />

If you were making a display or collage about one event in the book, what kinds of objects or<br />

artefacts would you use?<br />

List up to ten artefacts you would use to illustrate or explain one of the kidnapping cases in the book. Have<br />

someone guess which kidnapping case you chose.<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

3.<br />

4.<br />

5.<br />

6.<br />

7.<br />

8.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

9.<br />

10.<br />

2.<br />

ARTEFACT DISPLAY<br />

Using the artefacts listed above, design a display about the kidnapping case on another sheet of paper. You<br />

can make your display look like a bulletin board or a web page.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 41


K idnapped<br />

Interpretation<br />

PUNCTUATION<br />

Date:<br />

Punctuation helps you read and understand the text.<br />

Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

. Full stops tell you when a sentence ends.<br />

, Commas show you where to pause.<br />

? Question marks show when someone asks a question.<br />

‘ ’ Quotation marks show what a person said.<br />

Read the following passage about Elizabeth Smart’s kidnapping. Add the correct punctuation.<br />

REVIEW<br />

The man entered the girls’ bedroom First he looked around the room He stood over Mary<br />

Katherine for a moment Then he walked back to Elizabeth’s side He pulled her out of bed It<br />

seemed as if he had a gun<br />

At first Mary Katherine was too scared to move She hid in her bed It was several hours before<br />

she finally left her room Hiding behind a blanket she told her parents<br />

Read the passage to yourself once you are done. Does it make sense now? If not, try again.<br />

The man entered the girls’ bedroom First he looked around the room He stood over Mary<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Katherine for a moment Then he walked back to Elizabeth’s side He pulled her out of bed It<br />

seemed as if he had a gun<br />

At first Mary Katherine was too scared to move She hid in her bed It was several hours before<br />

she finally left her room Hiding behind a blanket she told her parents<br />

42 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

REACTION<br />

Date:<br />

What is your first reaction when you hear the word ‘kidnapped’? Do you think of children or adults<br />

being kidnapped?<br />

Write down ten words or phrases that describe what you think of when you hear the word ‘kidnapped’.<br />

Include both positive and negative reactions.<br />

REFLECTION<br />

When you reflect on something, you think deeply about it.<br />

Write a sentence to answer each question.<br />

(a)<br />

How does the Amber Alert help find kidnapped<br />

children?<br />

(b)<br />

K idnapped<br />

Reflection<br />

Which is worse: kidnapping a child or taking an<br />

adult hostage? Why?<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

(c) Do you think the Amber Alert will deter kidnappers from snatching children? yes no<br />

Why or why not?<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 43


K idnapped<br />

Critical response<br />

WHAT DO YOU THINK?<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Kidnappings happen every day. In the US in 1999, 58 200 children were abducted by non-family<br />

members, and 203 900 children were the victims of family abductions.<br />

In Kidnapped, the author did not list every type of kidnapping, nor did she talk about every famous<br />

kidnapping that has occurred in the world.<br />

What do you think of the kidnappings discussed in the book? Were they the most interesting ones you had<br />

ever heard about? What other kidnappings do you want to learn about? Should the author have replaced a<br />

story with the one you want told? Why?<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

44 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

RESEARCH TIPS<br />

Date:<br />

K idnapped<br />

Research project<br />

Choose another kidnapping case from the list below, or find one of your own. Use these tips to help<br />

you write a journal about it.<br />

• June 2005, Douglas Wood, 63 years old, is kidnapped and held hostage in Baghdad, Iraq.<br />

• February 2004, Carlie Brucia, 11 years old, is kidnapped and murdered in Sarasota, USA.<br />

• October 2002, Imari Brooks, five years old, is taken from her home by James Bennett and Daryl<br />

Davis. She was found in a Euclid, USA, apartment building thanks to the Amber Alert program.<br />

• November 2002, Ryan Schmitt, seven years old, is found unharmed when a man who allegedly<br />

kidnapped him overnight heard his name broadcast on a statewide alert system and turned himself<br />

into police at Stockton, USA.<br />

• January 1996, Amber Hagerman, nine years old, is kidnapped and brutally murdered in Arlington,<br />

USA.<br />

Use newspapers, documentary films or TV shows, or the Internet to research the kidnapping. Use<br />

two or more sources, such as three different websites, including a newspaper site.<br />

How to use the library to find information …<br />

• Use the reference section of the library to find current<br />

newspapers. Past newspapers are sometimes filed in<br />

the reference section.<br />

• Take notes about the information, but remember to use<br />

your own words when writing. If you use a direct quote,<br />

use quotation marks and state the reference, including<br />

the article, the date and the page number where you<br />

found it.<br />

How to use a documentary film or TV show for<br />

information ...<br />

• First make sure the film or TV show is a documentary<br />

and not historical fiction or ‘based on a true story’. Actual<br />

facts and fiction are combined in historical fiction.<br />

How to find information on<br />

the Internet …<br />

• Photographs, maps,<br />

diagrams, charts and<br />

displays always make<br />

research projects more<br />

interesting. Use these visual<br />

aids to print and use with<br />

your report.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

• Take notes as you watch the film or TV show. Watch it<br />

more than once. You will probably hear and understand<br />

more information the second or third time you watch it.<br />

• Not everything on the<br />

Internet is correct! Be sure<br />

to find the information on<br />

a site that ends with .edu,<br />

.org or .gov. Or find the<br />

same information in three<br />

separate places. Maybe<br />

your school knows of some<br />

websites that may be of<br />

use. Ask your teacher or<br />

librarian for help.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 45


K idnapped<br />

Research project<br />

JOURNAL WRITING<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Journal writing is your chance to talk about how you feel about an event. When you write a journal, you<br />

discuss your feelings and what is important to you. Your journal can be like a descriptive essay.<br />

Write a journal entry exploring your feelings about a kidnapping case. Think about what the word ‘kidnapped’<br />

means to you. Then think about how it relates to this particular case. List the key facts, including dates, location<br />

and who was involved in the kidnapping you researched.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

46 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

MAKE CONNECTIONS<br />

Date:<br />

Lost and found<br />

Vocabulary<br />

Explain how each pair of words relates to each other when applied to the subject of lost and<br />

found.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

(f)<br />

buried – ash<br />

hidden – city<br />

pilot – missing<br />

plane – wreckage<br />

adoption – reunion<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

escape – recovery<br />

2.<br />

Viewing<br />

SENTENCES<br />

Choose a pair and use it in a sentence about being lost and found.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 47


Lost and found<br />

Vocabulary<br />

PAST TENSE<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Verb forms indicate the time the action happens: past, present or future. The verb form that tells<br />

that action happened in the past is called past tense.<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

• Most verbs form the past tense by adding ‘–ed’, or adding ‘–d’ if the verb ends in ‘e’.<br />

erupt—The volcano erupted violently.<br />

• Verbs that end in y form the past tense by changing ‘y’ to ‘i’ and adding ‘–ed’.<br />

marry—Amelia Earhart did not take her husband’s name after she married him.<br />

• Verbs with a consonant-short vowel-consonant pattern, double the final consonant<br />

before adding ‘–ed’.<br />

plan—Amelia planned to fly around the equator.<br />

• Irregular verbs form the past tense in their own unique way.<br />

run—Tuffy ran away from home.<br />

Use the rules above to change each verb to its past tense form.<br />

(a) stop (b) lose<br />

(c) destroy (d) cover<br />

(e) dig (f) fly<br />

(g) know<br />

(h) forget<br />

(i) move (j) find<br />

(k) study (l) take<br />

WRITE IN THE PAST<br />

Choose three or more words from the activity above. Use them to write a few sentences about what<br />

happened in an event from Lost and found.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

48 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

WORD WEB<br />

Date:<br />

Lost and found<br />

Initial understanding<br />

What do the words ‘lost’ and ‘found’ mean? Use the word web to show and expand your understanding of the<br />

words.<br />

Add related words to complete the word web.<br />

Where<br />

Lost and found<br />

Who/What<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

How<br />

Pompeii<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 49


Lost and found<br />

Initial understanding<br />

HEADLINES<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Newspapers and websites often use large print to headline an article or page. They help to grab<br />

people’s attention. Stories often include both a headline and a subheading.<br />

1.<br />

Choose one event from each chapter. Write a headline and subheading for each one. An event from Chapter<br />

1 is already done for you.<br />

(a) Chapter 1<br />

(b) Chapter 2<br />

(c) Chapter 3<br />

(d) Chapter 4<br />

• The headline tells<br />

the most important<br />

information, or main<br />

idea, about an event. It<br />

is set in large type.<br />

Headline<br />

Lost city of Pompeii<br />

found!<br />

• The subheading tells<br />

other important details<br />

about the event. It is<br />

set in slightly smaller<br />

type.<br />

Subheading<br />

Ancient city buried under<br />

volcanic ash<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

(e) Chapter 5<br />

50 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

FLOW CHART<br />

Date:<br />

Lost and found<br />

Interpretation<br />

A flow chart can show cause and effect relationships. It can also show a sequence of events. When<br />

one event causes more than one result, a separate box is used for each result.<br />

Complete the flow chart about another lost and found person or thing described in the book.<br />

Pompeii<br />

Pompeii is built near Mount<br />

Vesuvius.<br />

Mount Vesuvius erupts.<br />

The volcano spews fiery ash<br />

into the air.<br />

Pompeii burns.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

The city of Pompeii is buried<br />

under ash.<br />

Archaeologists find Pompeii.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 51


Lost and found<br />

Interpretation<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

DESIGN THE TOOLS<br />

Veterinarians use equipment, such as scanners, to find identification chips. Diagrams often use both art and text<br />

to give information.<br />

Create a diagram by drawing any equipment or tools a veterinarian may need. Label and explain what<br />

each part is or what it does.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

52 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

3.<br />

Viewing<br />

POINT OF VIEW<br />

Date:<br />

Lost and found<br />

Reflection<br />

A story can change your mind about an issue. It might change your point of view or your attitude<br />

about an issue.<br />

Before you read:<br />

Indicate your point of view about the issues below.<br />

Write A for agree or D for disagree.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

After you read:<br />

Archaeologists should not disturb ancient cities.............................................................<br />

Pilots should not expect others to search for them if they get lost..................................<br />

Owners need to be responsible for their pets.................................................................<br />

Adopted children should have access to information about their birth parents...............<br />

Searching for lost ships or planes is very costly and is not worth it................................<br />

Indicate your point of view about the issues below.<br />

Write A for agree or D for disagree.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

Archaeologists should not disturb ancient cities.............................................................<br />

Pilots should not expect others to search for them if they get lost..................................<br />

Owners need to be responsible for their pets.................................................................<br />

Adopted children should have access to information about their birth parents...............<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Searching for lost ships or planes is very costly and is not worth it................................<br />

If you found an old coin that might have formed part of a lost treasure, who would you tell first?<br />

Use what you know about the events in Lost and found and your own point of view to answer the question<br />

above.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 53


1.<br />

2.<br />

Lost and found<br />

Critical response<br />

USEFUL INFORMATION<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

A newspaper article about the return of a loved pet might be meaningful to different people for<br />

different reasons. To dog owners, the article might show how kind people help each other to find<br />

their pets. To science and technology students, the article might show the latest developments in<br />

microchips.<br />

For each person below, write how the person might view or use the information from this book about<br />

people, places or things that are lost and found.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

A veterinarian<br />

A technology<br />

student<br />

A police officer<br />

A teacher<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

A history student<br />

WHO ELSE?<br />

Think of someone else who might find the information in Lost and found useful. Write a sentence or two<br />

telling who this person is, and why he or she would be interested in the information.<br />

54 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

RESEARCH TIPS<br />

Date:<br />

Lost and found<br />

Research project<br />

Choose another well-known lost and found person, animal or thing from the list below, or find one<br />

of your own. Use these tips to help you write a news article about it.<br />

• September 2004, Zookeepers find ‘Chucky’, a 3.6-metre alligator who went missing from the<br />

Alabama Gulf Coast Zoo during Hurricane Ivan.<br />

• November 1922, Howard Carter finds the entrance to the tomb of Tutankhamen, a pharaoh, or king,<br />

of ancient Egypt.<br />

• April 1912, Titanic sinks 640 kilometres off the coast of Newfoundland. In September 1985, divers<br />

find Titanic.<br />

• September 1994, David Noble finds a Wollemi pine, which were thought to be extinct, in Wollemi<br />

National Park, Australia.<br />

• 1906–Today, More than one million fossils have been found in the Rancho La Brea Tar Pits, Los<br />

Angeles, California.<br />

Use newspapers, magazines, books, or the Internet to research the event. Use two or more sources,<br />

such as three different websites, including a newspaper site.<br />

How to use newspapers and magazines …<br />

• References the author used are often at the end of the<br />

article. Find the books or articles to learn more details.<br />

Remember to list all of your sources.<br />

• Take notes about the information, but remember to<br />

use your own words when writing it down. If you use a<br />

direct quote, use quotation marks and state the source<br />

including the title, the article, the date and page number<br />

where you found it.<br />

How to look for a book on the subject …<br />

• Using your library’s catalogue, do a title search or a<br />

subject search. Use the keywords ‘lost and found’ and<br />

the place, date or names of the people involved in the<br />

event.<br />

• If a book is shelved by author, it is a fictional or<br />

biographical book. Most nonfiction books are shelved by<br />

number using the Dewey decimal system. Use nonfiction<br />

or biographical books only.<br />

How to find information on<br />

the Internet …<br />

• Photographs, maps,<br />

diagrams, charts and<br />

displays always make<br />

research projects more<br />

interesting. Use these visual<br />

aids to print and use with<br />

your report.<br />

• Not everything on the<br />

Internet is correct! Be sure<br />

to find the information on<br />

a site that ends with .edu,<br />

.org or .gov. Or find the<br />

same information in three<br />

separate places. Maybe<br />

your school knows of some<br />

websites that may be of<br />

use. Ask your teacher or<br />

librarian for help.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 55


1.<br />

Lost and found<br />

Research project<br />

WRITE A NEWS ARTICLE<br />

Date:<br />

Answer the questions below about your research subject.<br />

Name:<br />

(a) Where did the event take place? (b) When did it happen?<br />

(c) Who or what was lost?<br />

(d) Where was the person, place, animal or<br />

thing found?<br />

(f) List any other interesting facts about the<br />

event.<br />

(e) Who found the person, place, animal or thing?<br />

(g) List any other facts that might affect you<br />

personally. (Do you know someone or something<br />

that was lost? Was he, she or it ever found?)<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

2.<br />

Use the facts above to write a news article about the event. Write your article on a separate sheet of paper.<br />

Include an attention-grabbing headline and images, such as maps or photos. Write the most important facts<br />

first. Then add the least important details at the end. Mention or quote your sources. Be sure to proofread<br />

and edit your article.<br />

56 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

CROSSWORD PUZZLE<br />

Use words from Missing and<br />

the clues below to complete the<br />

crossword puzzle.<br />

8.<br />

10.<br />

5.<br />

4.<br />

3.<br />

2.<br />

Date:<br />

6. 7.<br />

9.<br />

1.<br />

M issing<br />

Vocabulary<br />

Across:<br />

1. A spaceship that landed on Mars in<br />

1997<br />

3. Hunted by law enforcement<br />

4. A puzzling event<br />

6. Lost<br />

8. A large body of salt water<br />

9. Lowell thought he saw these on<br />

Mars<br />

10. A vessel that sails on water<br />

11. The shape of a mysterious body of<br />

water near Bermuda<br />

Down:<br />

1. A vehicle that flies in the air<br />

2. A focused study of a crime<br />

5. A pattern of ridges on the fingertip<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

7. A Martian moon<br />

11.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 57


1.<br />

2.<br />

M issing<br />

Vocabulary<br />

WORD SCRAMBLE<br />

‘<strong>Astonishing</strong> <strong>Headlines</strong> Dictionary’<br />

Date:<br />

How did you go with unscrambling the<br />

scrambled words? List any words you found<br />

difficult in your own ‘<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines<br />

dictionary’.<br />

Set up your own ‘<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines<br />

dictionary’ by stapling together a 13-page<br />

booklet. Write a letter or a group of letters on<br />

each side. For example, X–Z words should fit<br />

on one page.<br />

Name:<br />

Read the definitions. Unscramble the letters to form a word from Missing. Then write a synonym or related<br />

word for each.<br />

(a) A walk through the forest kihe<br />

(b)<br />

A group of people working<br />

towards a common goal.<br />

Scrambled<br />

word<br />

amte<br />

(c) To strongly wish ohep<br />

(d) Very old enitacn<br />

(e) To defeat by force qocunre<br />

(f) To see kloo<br />

(g) Great riches useretar<br />

(h) Our star usn<br />

Unscrambled word<br />

3.<br />

Synonym or related word<br />

As you read, write any difficult or<br />

unfamiliar words and their definitions<br />

on the correct page. Add new<br />

words as you read each <strong>Astonishing</strong><br />

headlines book.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

58 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

KWL CHART<br />

Date:<br />

M issing<br />

Initial understanding<br />

Before you read the book Missing, write down the facts you already know about missing people, animals,<br />

or things in the K column. In the W column, write questions you would like answered. While you read the<br />

book, look for answers to your questions. Write everything you learned about a missing person, animal or<br />

thing in the L column.<br />

What I already know What I want to know What I learned<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Write a sentence describing the most interesting thing you learned about a missing person, animal or thing<br />

while reading Missing.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 59


M issing<br />

Initial understanding<br />

TRUE OR FALSE?<br />

Before you read<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

Read the statements and decide whether they are true or false. As you read, watch for facts that prove the<br />

statements true of false.<br />

(a) Phobos I landed on Mars in 1998.<br />

(b) Sojourner landed on Mars in 1997.<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

The Bermuda Triangle is off the coast of Florida.<br />

J Edgar Hoover created the name ‘Bermuda Triangle’.<br />

(e) Hoover created a fingerprint file in 1926.<br />

(f)<br />

(g)<br />

(h)<br />

(i)<br />

(j)<br />

Osama bin Laden was added to the FBI’s Most Wanted<br />

list in 2001.<br />

Another name for the Bermuda Triangle is the ‘Devil’s<br />

Triangle’.<br />

Captain Sharpe was a brutal pirate.<br />

El Muerto means ‘the mouse’.<br />

The ivory-billed woodpecker is America’s only<br />

woodpecker.<br />

After you read<br />

Before reading<br />

After reading<br />

True False True False<br />

Use information in the book to correct your answers above. Choose one true statement above and write<br />

examples from the book that prove it. Then choose a false statement above and write examples that<br />

disprove it.<br />

True:<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

False:<br />

60 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

ANALOGIES<br />

Date:<br />

Boats and planes are to the Bermuda Triangle as spacecraft are to Mars.<br />

The sentence above is an analogy. Analogies can also be written like this:<br />

Boats and planes : Bermuda Triangle / Spacecraft : Mars<br />

M issing<br />

Interpretation<br />

Analogies are based on relationships between word meanings, such as:<br />

• antonyms (opposites) – Missing : Found<br />

• synonyms (alike) – Detective : Investigator<br />

• descriptive – Large Bird: Ivory-billed woodpecker<br />

• part to whole (or whole to part) – Minutes : Hour<br />

• item to category (or category to item) – Nozomi : Spacecraft<br />

Decide how the first pair of words relates to each other. Write the type of analogy first. Then write a word to<br />

complete the analogy.<br />

(a) Fingerprint : Finger / Thumbprint :<br />

(b) Seek : Hide / Run :<br />

(c) Criminal : Outlaw / Detective :<br />

(d) Bin Laden : / Hoover : Crime fighter<br />

(e) Mysterious : Disappearances / : Bermuda Triangle<br />

WRITE YOUR OWN ANALOGIES<br />

Write your own analogies to describe an event in Missing. Make sure both pairs of words relate to each<br />

other in the same way.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 61


M issing<br />

Interpretation<br />

BRAINSTORM RESULTS<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Think about what might have happened if one of the missing people or animals was found. What might the results<br />

have been? Write a few ideas to explain how things might be different.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

62 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

REACTION<br />

Before you read:<br />

Date:<br />

M issing<br />

Reflection<br />

Choose one photograph from the book. Write a description of, and your reaction to, the photo.<br />

2.<br />

3.<br />

Description:<br />

My reaction:<br />

After you read:<br />

Write a description of, and your reaction to, the same photo.<br />

Description:<br />

My reaction:<br />

Choose the chapter you found most interesting. Write a brief paragraph explaining the reasons why you<br />

found it interesting.<br />

Then, in a small group, discuss what you wrote. Compare and contrast the reasons you chose your<br />

favourite chapter with other students’ choices in your group. After the discussion, add to your paragraph.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 63


1.<br />

2.<br />

M issing<br />

Critical response<br />

DIFFERENT PEOPLE, DIFFERENT USES<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

One article might have different meanings to different people. For example, a newspaper article about an<br />

escaped fugitive would be interesting to many people, but in different ways. To local people, the article<br />

would inform them of a dangerous criminal in their area. To other people, they might be excited by the idea<br />

of an escaped criminal.<br />

For each person below, write how the person might view or use the information from this book about<br />

missing people or animals.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

WHO ELSE?<br />

A birdwatcher<br />

A police officer<br />

A mother<br />

A young child<br />

A fugitive<br />

Think of someone else who might find the information in Missing useful. Write a sentence or two explaining<br />

who this person is, and why he or she might be interested in the information.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

64 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

RESEARCH TIPS<br />

Date:<br />

M issing<br />

Research project<br />

Choose another well-known missing person, animal or thing from the list below, or find one of your<br />

own. Use these tips to help you write a book chapter about it.<br />

• August 2004, Edward Munch’s famous painting, The Scream, is stolen from the Munch Museum in<br />

Norway.<br />

• April 2003, the Iraqi National Museum in Baghdad is looted. Sculptures, paintings, photographs,<br />

records and computer files are stolen and destroyed.<br />

• June 1924, Mallory and Irvine disappear while climbing Mt Everest. Mallory’s body is found in May<br />

1999. Irvine’s body has never been found.<br />

• August 1871, D Mackenzie sees an unknown creature in the waters of Loch Ness, Scotland. Later<br />

called the Loch Ness Monster, the mystery is still unsolved.<br />

Use a newspaper or magazine article, books or the Internet to research the event. Use two or more<br />

sources, such as three different websites, including a newspaper site.<br />

How to use newspapers and magazines …<br />

• Sources the author used are often listed at the end of the<br />

article. Find the books or articles to learn more details.<br />

Remember to list all of your sources.<br />

• Take notes about the information, but remember to use<br />

your own words when writing about it. If you use a direct<br />

quote, use quotation marks and state the reference,<br />

including the title, the article and page number where<br />

you found it.<br />

How to look for a book on the subject …<br />

• Using your library’s catalogue, do a title search or a<br />

subject search. Type the keyword ‘missing’ and the place,<br />

date or person’s name involved in the event.<br />

• If a book is shelved by author, it is a fictional or<br />

biographical book. Most nonfiction books are shelved by<br />

number using the Dewey decimal system. Use nonfiction<br />

or biographical books only.<br />

How to find<br />

information on the<br />

Internet …<br />

• Photographs, maps,<br />

diagrams, charts and<br />

displays always make<br />

research projects more<br />

interesting. Use these visual<br />

aids to print and use with<br />

your report.<br />

• Not everything on the<br />

Internet is correct! Be sure<br />

to find the information on<br />

a site that ends with .edu,<br />

.org or .gov. Or find the<br />

same information in three<br />

separate places. Maybe<br />

your school knows of some<br />

websites that may be of<br />

use. Ask your teacher or<br />

librarian for help.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 65


1.<br />

M issing<br />

Research project<br />

Write a chapter<br />

Date:<br />

Answer the questions below about your research subject.<br />

Name:<br />

(a)<br />

(c)<br />

When did the person, animal or thing go<br />

missing?<br />

What were the results?<br />

(e) What are the key terms used and which words did you need to look up?<br />

(f) What is the sequence of events?<br />

(g) Where did you find your information?<br />

(b)<br />

(d)<br />

Where was he, she or it last seen?<br />

Was the missing person, animal or thing ever<br />

found? How was he, she or it found?<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Use the facts above to write another chapter for the book, or expand upon one of the stories mentioned.<br />

Use each chapter as a model, adding a time line, a map, key terms and a ‘Did you know?’ section.<br />

Proofread and edit your chapter. List your sources at the end of the chapter.<br />

66 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

Label groups<br />

Date:<br />

Shot down<br />

Vocabulary<br />

1.<br />

What do these words have in common?<br />

aviator pilot<br />

They both mean a ‘person who flies an aeroplane’.<br />

Tell what the words or phrases in each group have in common.<br />

Add another word or phrase to each list.<br />

What do these words have in common?<br />

(a) take-off depart exit<br />

(b) fly soar breeze<br />

(c) France Britain Germany<br />

(d) FW190 U-2 747<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

(e) American Soviet French<br />

(f) New York Fallujah Bordeaux<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 67


1.<br />

Shot down<br />

Vocabulary<br />

Make connections<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Explain how each pair of words relates to each other when applied to the subject of being shot down.<br />

2.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

(f)<br />

rage – war<br />

secret – spy<br />

formation – position<br />

parachute – rescue<br />

mission – purpose<br />

helicopter – plane<br />

Choose two pairs and use them in two sentences about being shot down.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

68 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

TRUE OR FALSE?<br />

Before you read<br />

Date:<br />

Shot down<br />

Initial understanding<br />

Read the statements below and decide whether they are true or false. As you read, watch for facts that<br />

prove the statements true or false. After reading, use information in the book to correct your answers.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

(f)<br />

(g)<br />

Some aeroplanes have air marshals on board.<br />

The US president gave the ‘shoot down’ order on<br />

11/9/01.<br />

Fewer than 2000 people died at the World Trade<br />

Centre.<br />

Capt. Kimberly Hampton was the first pilot to be killed<br />

in Iraq.<br />

Capt. Hampton’s helicopter’s code name was ‘Dark<br />

Horse Six’.<br />

Black boxes are not black, they are orange.<br />

Flight 007 was a Vietnamese aeroplane.<br />

(h) Soviet fighter planes shot down Flight 007.<br />

(i)<br />

Do it yourself<br />

Francis Gary Powers was traded for a Russian spy.<br />

Before reading<br />

After reading<br />

True False True False<br />

Choose one true statement above and write examples from the book that prove it. Then choose a false<br />

statement above and write examples that disprove it.<br />

True:<br />

False:<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 69


1<br />

Shot down<br />

Initial understanding<br />

Identify structure<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

The ideas in a well-written paragraph can be related to each other in one of these ways:<br />

• Main idea and supportive details<br />

• Cause and effect<br />

• Sequence of events<br />

• Compare and contrast<br />

Write the following abbreviations in the blanks to show how the ideas are related: MI/SD = main idea and<br />

supportive details, C/E = cause and effect, SOE = sequence of events and C/C = compare and contrast.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

(f)<br />

(g)<br />

(h)<br />

It was a dangerous mission. German fighter planes protected the airfields. They<br />

patrolled the skies, looking for American and English planes to shoot down.<br />

As the bullets hit the plane, they cut its elevator cables. Yeager could not control his<br />

plane’s altitude.<br />

Yeager pulled open the cockpit. He rolled into the air. He fell toward the ground. Then<br />

his parachute opened.<br />

Yeager’s parachute snapped him to an almost dead stop in midair. Below him, his<br />

plane fell until it crashed to the earth.<br />

Yeager spoke no French. The French people spoke no English.<br />

Because of its long wings, the U-2 could fly higher than any other plane.<br />

At first his instruments did not show any problems. But then he felt a change. The<br />

plane tipped forward a little. Then, it tipped a little more!<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

The U-2 had one small bomb. But it was not for dropping on the enemy. It was to<br />

destroy the plane itself, before it crashed.<br />

(i)<br />

Because Powers was caught with a spy plane, the Soviet government said that<br />

Powers was a spy.<br />

(j)<br />

The Su-15 fighter pilots called to Flight 007 by radio. The pilot did not answer. The<br />

Su-15 fighter pilots then flew in front of Flight 007. The plane did not turn.<br />

70 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

BEFORE, DURING, AFTER<br />

Date:<br />

Shot down<br />

Interpretation<br />

Choose one event described in the book. Brainstorm as many words as you can to describe the people’s<br />

experience before they were shot down, while they were being shot down and after they were shot down, if<br />

possible. List up to five words under each heading.<br />

Before being shot down While being shot down After they were shot down<br />

ILLUSTRATE<br />

Draw pictures to show what you think happened before, during and after the event described above. Write<br />

a brief caption under each picture to explain it.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 71


Shot down<br />

Interpretation<br />

Design the Tools<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Pilots wear special gear and use equipment, such as parachutes, when they fly their planes. Diagrams<br />

often use both art and text to give information.<br />

Create a diagram by drawing clothes, equipment and other tools a pilot might need. Label and explain what each<br />

part is or does.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

72 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

Discussion group<br />

Date:<br />

Shot down<br />

Reflection<br />

Choose the chapter you found most interesting. Write a brief summary, stating the reasons why you found it<br />

interesting.<br />

Then discuss what you wrote in a small group. Compare and contrast the reasons you chose the chapter with<br />

other students in your group. After the discussion, add to your summary.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 73


Shot down<br />

Critical response<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Many planes are shot down during times of war. However, a few are also shot down during peacetime.<br />

Answer the following questions about an event from the book that happened during your lifetime.<br />

1.<br />

3.<br />

4.<br />

What happened?<br />

Was this event important to you? Why or why not?<br />

How did you first find out about this event?<br />

How is the description in the chapter different from what you remember about the event?<br />

Did you learn any important new information?<br />

If so, what?<br />

2.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

5. 6.<br />

Did the chapter leave out information you think is<br />

important? If so, what?<br />

74 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

RESEARCH TIPS<br />

Date:<br />

Shot down<br />

Research project<br />

Choose another well-known case of someone or something becoming shot down from the list<br />

below, or find one of your own. Use these tips to help you write a chapter about it.<br />

• August 2004, A US Marine helicopter is shot down by men loyal to radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr<br />

near the southern city of Najaf, Iraq.<br />

• May 2006, Five British Marines are killed when their helicopter is shot down over Basra, Iraq.<br />

• April 1994, The presidents of the African states of Rwanda and Burundi are killed when their<br />

plane is shot down near the Rwandan capital, Kigali.<br />

• April 1918, The Red Baron, Manfred Freiherr von Richthofen, is shot down by Allied troops over<br />

the Somme Valley, France.<br />

Use a newspaper or magazine article, books or the Internet to research the event. Use two or more<br />

sources, such as three different websites, including a newspaper site.<br />

How to use the library to find information …<br />

• Use the reference section of the library to find current<br />

newspapers. Past newspapers are sometimes filed in<br />

the reference section.<br />

• Take notes about the information, but remember to use<br />

your own words when writing. If you use a direct quote,<br />

use quotation marks and state the reference, including<br />

the article, the date and the page number where you<br />

found it.<br />

How to use a documentary film or TV show for<br />

information ...<br />

• First make sure the film or TV show is a documentary<br />

and not historical fiction or ‘based on a true story’. Actual<br />

facts and fiction are combined in historical fiction.<br />

• Take notes as you watch the film or TV show. Watch it<br />

more than once. You will probably hear and understand<br />

more information the second or third time you watch it.<br />

How to find<br />

information on the<br />

Internet …<br />

• Photographs, maps,<br />

diagrams, charts and<br />

displays always make<br />

research projects more<br />

interesting. Use these visual<br />

aids to print and use with<br />

your report.<br />

• Not everything on the<br />

Internet is correct! Be sure<br />

to find the information on<br />

a site that ends with .edu,<br />

.org or .gov. Or find the<br />

same information in three<br />

separate places. Maybe<br />

your school knows of some<br />

websites that may be of<br />

use. Ask your teacher or<br />

librarian for help.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 75


1.<br />

Shot down<br />

Research project<br />

write a chapter<br />

Date:<br />

Answer the questions below about your research subject.<br />

Name:<br />

(a) Where did the event happen? (b) When did the event happen?<br />

(c) Who was involved?<br />

(d) What resulted from the event? (e) What information do officials still need?<br />

(f) What are the key terms used and what<br />

words did you need to look up?<br />

(h) Where did you get your information?<br />

(g) What is the sequence of events?<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

2.<br />

Use the facts above to write another chapter for Shot down. Use each chapter as a model, adding a time<br />

line, a map, key terms and a ‘Did you know?’ section. Proofread and edit your chapter. List your references<br />

at the end of your chapter.<br />

76 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

multiple meaning words<br />

Date:<br />

English words can have more than one meaning. For example:<br />

The ship left the harbour. Charles decided to ship himself to Texas.<br />

Read each sentence. Circle the definition that best fits how the word is used in the sentence.<br />

(a) The police quickly solved the case.<br />

(i) a set of circumstances or conditions<br />

(b) He felt he had no choice.<br />

(i) a cloth made of wool and fur<br />

(c) The treasure went down with the ship.<br />

(i) to love or hold as precious<br />

(d) Balboa arrived at the coast four days later.<br />

(i) the shoreline<br />

(e) Balboa feared the captain would leave him behind.<br />

(i) a holiday from work<br />

(f) The brown tree snake’s eyes have a yellow centre.<br />

(i) the middle<br />

(g) It took her months to recover.<br />

(i) to get well again<br />

(ii) a piece of luggage<br />

(ii) to believe or be aware of<br />

(ii) vast riches<br />

(ii) to move along without much effort<br />

(ii) to fail to include or take along<br />

(ii) a space for a certain activity<br />

(ii) to find<br />

Stowed away<br />

Vocabulary<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

(h) Harriet planned to go back and free her family.<br />

(i) the rear part of the body between the neck<br />

and the hips<br />

(ii) to return<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 77


Stowed away<br />

Vocabulary<br />

Word ladders<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Climb these word ladders to make words related to the book Stowed away.<br />

Change one or more letters in each word to create the next word described.<br />

1. 2.<br />

a person forced to<br />

serve others<br />

to rescue<br />

to move the hands<br />

as a signal<br />

to give in<br />

cave<br />

3. 4.<br />

to remain in one place<br />

to speak<br />

to have permission<br />

stay<br />

the upper<br />

atmosphere<br />

to take flight<br />

cunning or crafty<br />

of or relating to me<br />

having a low<br />

temperature<br />

given up for<br />

money<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

to lay one part<br />

over another<br />

sly<br />

a protected body of<br />

water<br />

brave<br />

bold<br />

78 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

FLOW CHART<br />

Date:<br />

Stowed away<br />

Initial understanding<br />

A flow chart can show cause and effect relationships between events. It can also show a sequence<br />

of events. When one event causes more than one result, a separate box is used for each result.<br />

Read the first flow chart about Juan Guzman. Then complete the second flow chart about Charles McKinley,<br />

using facts from the book.<br />

Juan Guzman<br />

Dreamed of living in America<br />

Learned about wheel<br />

compartments<br />

Stowed away in wheel<br />

compartment<br />

Arrived in Miami<br />

Sent back to Colombia<br />

Stowed away a second time<br />

Charles McKinley<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Sent back to Colombia<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 79


Stowed away<br />

Initial understanding<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Concept web<br />

Complete the concept web about stowing away, using information from the book and facts you already know.<br />

How<br />

Where<br />

When<br />

Stowed<br />

away<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Who<br />

Why<br />

80 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

Fact or opinion?<br />

Date:<br />

Stowed away<br />

Interpretation<br />

A fact is a statement that can be proved or tested. An opinion is a statement of someone’s feelings<br />

or beliefs.<br />

Read these sentences from and about each event. Tick the appropriate box for either a fact or an opinion.<br />

(a) More than 170 Americans die from heatstroke each year.....................................<br />

(b) Transporting illegal immigrants is wrong..............................................................<br />

(c) Edson was trapped with two others, both of whom were dead.............................<br />

(d) Governments should tighten security around cargo..............................................<br />

(e) Juan felt his mother did not want him anymore...................................................<br />

(f) Living in America was the answer to all of Juan’s problems.................................<br />

(g) Juan stowed away in a wheel compartment, twice..............................................<br />

(h) Most people who stow away in a wheel compartment die during the flight..........<br />

(i) ‘Don’t worry, I know what I’m doing.’...................................................................<br />

(j) I think stowaways are brave.................................................................................<br />

Write a statement of fact and an opinion you hold about an event in Stowed away.<br />

Fact<br />

Opinion<br />

Fact<br />

Opinion<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 81


1.<br />

2.<br />

3.<br />

Stowed away<br />

Interpretation<br />

POINT OF VIEW<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

A story can change your mind about an issue. It might change your point of view or your attitude<br />

about an issue.<br />

Before you read:<br />

Indicate your point of view about the issues below.<br />

Write A for agree or D for disagree.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

After you read:<br />

Governments should allow all illegal immigrants to stay in the country they’ve arrived at....<br />

Stowing away is a dangerous thing to attempt.....................................................................<br />

We should find a way to secure cargo and keep animals or people out of it.........................<br />

It is good that slavery is illegal.............................................................................................<br />

Stowaways do not have any other choice but to stow away.................................................<br />

Indicate your point of view about the issues below.<br />

Write A for agree or D for disagree.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

Governments should allow all illegal immigrants to stay in the country they’ve arrived at....<br />

Stowing away is a dangerous thing to attempt.....................................................................<br />

We should find a way to secure cargo and keep animals or people out of it.........................<br />

It is good that slavery is illegal.............................................................................................<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Stowaways do not have any other choice but to stow away.................................................<br />

If you worked at an airport or shipping company and found a stowaway, would you turn him or her over<br />

to the authorities? Why or why not?<br />

82 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

Date:<br />

Personal Response<br />

Answer the questions below based on your own opinions and knowledge.<br />

Stowed away<br />

Reflection<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

3.<br />

4.<br />

5.<br />

6.<br />

Think of a well-known person or thing that has recently<br />

stowed away on a vehicle. Who is that person or thing?<br />

Does the recent event remind you of an event in the book? If so, which one?<br />

Do you think this event will be remembered in 10 years? Why or why not?<br />

How are the events similar or different?<br />

Similar<br />

Different<br />

What feelings do you experience when you read about stowaways—excitement, fear, sadness, or<br />

something else?<br />

Could you stop someone from stowing away? Write a sentence or two about what you might do or say to<br />

stop someone from stowing away.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 83


Stowed away<br />

Critical response<br />

Author’s purpose<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Authors write books for many different reasons. Many books are written to inform the reader about certain<br />

facts, events or people. Some books are written to persuade the reader to think, feel or act in a certain<br />

way. Many are written to entertain the reader. Often books are written for more than one purpose.<br />

Think about the book Stowed away. Identify the author’s purpose for writing the book.<br />

1. 2.<br />

3.<br />

To inform—What features or chapters in the<br />

book make it informative?<br />

To entertain—What features or chapters in the book make it entertaining?<br />

To persuade—What features or chapters in<br />

the book make it persuasive?<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

84 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

RESEARCH TIPS<br />

Date:<br />

Stowed away<br />

Research project<br />

Choose another well-known case of someone or something stowing away from the list below, or<br />

find one of your own. Use these tips to help you write a chapter about it.<br />

• July 2004, Six Dominican stowaways are caught by the tug Sea islander’s onboard camera.<br />

• February 2001, Chinese stowaways arrive in Dover, Britain. They arrive in a cargo container; 58<br />

people are found dead.<br />

• December 2002, 12 Romanian stowaways arrive in Halifax, Canada aboard the Zim California. They<br />

had stowed away in a cargo container.<br />

• November 1988, Microbes stow away on the International Space Station hardware and on the<br />

bodies of the astronauts that later assembled the station.<br />

Use a newspaper or magazine article, books or the Internet to research the event. Use two or more<br />

sources, such as three different websites, including a newspaper site.<br />

How to use the library to find information …<br />

• Use the reference section of the library to find current<br />

newspapers. Past newspapers are sometimes filed in<br />

the reference section.<br />

• Take notes about the information, but remember to use<br />

your own words when writing. If you use a direct quote,<br />

use quotation marks and state the reference, including<br />

the article, the date and the page number where you<br />

found it.<br />

How to use a documentary film or TV show for<br />

information ...<br />

• First make sure the film or TV show is a documentary<br />

and not historical fiction or ‘based on a true story’. Actual<br />

facts and fiction are combined in historical fiction.<br />

• Take notes as you watch the film or TV show. Watch it<br />

more than once. You will probably hear and understand<br />

more information the second or third time you watch it.<br />

How to find<br />

information on the<br />

Internet …<br />

• Photographs, maps,<br />

diagrams, charts and<br />

displays always make<br />

research projects more<br />

interesting. Use these visual<br />

aids to print and use with<br />

your report.<br />

• Not everything on the<br />

Internet is correct! Be sure<br />

to find the information on<br />

a site that ends with .edu,<br />

.org or .gov. Or find the<br />

same information in three<br />

separate places. Maybe<br />

your school knows of some<br />

websites that may be of<br />

use. Ask your teacher or<br />

librarian for help.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 85


Stowed away<br />

Research project<br />

Journal WRITING<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Journal writing is your chance to talk about how you feel about an event. When you write in a journal, you write<br />

about your feelings and what is important to you. Your journal can be like a descriptive essay.<br />

Write a journal entry exploring your feelings about a stowaway. Think about what the word ‘stowaway’ means to<br />

you. Then think about how it relates to this particular case. List the key facts, including dates, location and who<br />

stowed away.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

86 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2. Viewing<br />

Specialised vocabulary<br />

Date:<br />

Sailors have their own specialised vocabulary when talking about the sea.<br />

Write a definition for each word or phrase.<br />

rigged<br />

torpedo<br />

mutiny<br />

set sail<br />

scurvy<br />

voyage<br />

chronometer<br />

deck<br />

adrift<br />

pirate<br />

crew<br />

chart<br />

whaleboat<br />

sprung<br />

‘<strong>Astonishing</strong> <strong>Headlines</strong> Dictionary’<br />

List any words you found difficult in your own<br />

‘<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines dictionary’.<br />

Set up your own ‘<strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines dictionary’<br />

by stapling together a 13-page booklet. Write<br />

a letter or a group of letters on each side. For<br />

example, X–Z words should fit on one page.<br />

3.<br />

Stranded at sea<br />

Vocabulary<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

As you read, write any difficult or<br />

unfamiliar words and their definitions<br />

on the correct page. Add new<br />

words as you read each <strong>Astonishing</strong><br />

headlines book.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 87


1.<br />

2.<br />

3.<br />

Stranded at sea<br />

Vocabulary<br />

CLOZE<br />

Before you read:<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Read the paragraph below about a famous shipwreck. Write words in the blanks that make sense<br />

in the sentences.<br />

The crew had little hope when they left the<br />

1 . They were so<br />

2 that they could no longer 3 . The men just lay there in<br />

the 4 . A 5 blew up and the three boats were separated.<br />

One boat was<br />

After you read:<br />

6 seen again.<br />

Now write words in the blanks that make sense in the sentences and in the story. Reread or skim<br />

the book, if needed.<br />

The crew had little hope when they left the<br />

1 . They were so<br />

2 that they could no longer 3 . The men just lay there in<br />

the 4 . A 5 blew up and the three boats were separated.<br />

One boat was<br />

6 seen again.<br />

Write a sentence or two to summarise the event above.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

88 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

HEADLINES<br />

Date:<br />

Stranded at sea<br />

Initial understanding<br />

Newspapers and websites often use large print to headline an article or page. Stories often<br />

include:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

• The headline tells<br />

the most important<br />

information, or<br />

main idea, about<br />

an event. It is set in<br />

large type.<br />

• The subheading<br />

tells other<br />

important details<br />

about the event.<br />

It is set in slightly<br />

smaller type.<br />

Read the headline, subheading and story beginning below.<br />

• The story tells us<br />

about the topic in<br />

detail. It is set in<br />

regular-sized type.<br />

Mutiny on HMS Bounty!<br />

Fletcher Christian Leads Mutiny Against Bligh<br />

28 April 1789, Christian and most of the crew dragged<br />

Capt. Bligh on deck with his hands tied …<br />

• The caption tells<br />

about the picture.<br />

Find another important event in Stranded at sea. Write a headline about the event. Write a subheading to<br />

tell another important detail. Then draw a picture and write a caption for it.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 89


Stranded at sea<br />

Initial understanding<br />

CAUSE AND EFFECT<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

A cause makes another event happen. An effect happens as a result of a cause.<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

Cause Hundreds of people crammed onto a small boat.<br />

Effect<br />

The boat sank under their weight.<br />

For each sentence below, draw one line under the part that tells the cause, and draw two lines under the<br />

part that tells the effect.<br />

(a) Because word spread about the pirates, many people headed for Malaysia.<br />

(b) Many Jewish people returned to the horrors of the Nazis, after they were taken in by Holland,<br />

France and Belgium.<br />

(c) Hoffman was not allowed to bring anything on board with him, so he met Schiendick on shore.<br />

(d) The Jews were upset because Schiendick sang Nazi songs.<br />

(e) By zigzagging, British ships hoped to avoid being torpedoed by the Germans.<br />

(f)<br />

With only 19 of 25 boilers in use, Lusitania could not travel at top speed.<br />

BRAINSTORM RESULTS<br />

Choose one of the cause and effect relationships above and change either the cause or the effect. Write a<br />

sentence to describe what might have happened.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

90 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

Compare and Contrast<br />

Date:<br />

To compare is to tell how things are alike. To contrast is to tell how things are different.<br />

Stranded at sea<br />

Interpretation<br />

Choose two events described in the book. List the ways they are alike and the ways they are different.<br />

Comparisons<br />

Contrasts<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 91


Stranded at sea<br />

Interpretation<br />

Sequence<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

The order events happen in a story is called the sequence. A flow chart shows the sequence of<br />

events in a story.<br />

Complete the flow chart using facts from ‘The wreck of Essex’. Then, on a separate sheet of paper, create a<br />

flow chart about ‘Lusitania caught off guard’.<br />

The wreck of Essex<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

92 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

Similes<br />

Date:<br />

A simile compares two unlike things using the words ‘like’ or ‘as’. For example:<br />

Tahiti seemed like paradise to the Bounty’s crew.<br />

Captain Turner was as fearless as a lioness protecting her cubs.<br />

Create similes about the vocabulary words below.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

(f)<br />

recluse<br />

scapegoat<br />

refugee<br />

Nazi<br />

boat people<br />

mutiny<br />

Answer the following question about an event in the book.<br />

Stranded at sea<br />

Reflection<br />

What were the signs that told you that Essex’s crew suffered while they were stranded at sea?<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 93


Stranded at sea<br />

Critical response<br />

AUTHOR’S PURPOSE<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Authors write books for many different reasons. Many books are written to inform the reader about<br />

certain facts, events or people. Some books are written to persuade the reader to think, feel or act<br />

in a certain way. Many are written to entertain the reader. Often books are written for more than<br />

one purpose.<br />

Think about the book Stranded at sea. Identify the author’s purpose for writing the book.<br />

To inform—What features or chapters in<br />

the book make it informative?<br />

1. 2.<br />

3.<br />

Viewing<br />

To entertain—What features or chapters in the book make it entertaining?<br />

To persuade—What features or chapters in<br />

the book make it persuasive?<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

94 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

RESEARCH TIPS<br />

Date:<br />

Stranded at sea<br />

Research project<br />

Choose another well-known case of someone or something becoming stranded at sea from the list<br />

below, or find one of your own. Use the tips to help you create a news segment about it.<br />

• April 1959–Today, Many Cuban refugees are stranded at sea off the US coast every year after<br />

escaping from communist Cuba.<br />

• January 2004, More than 250 Liberian refugees are stranded at sea off the coast of West Africa<br />

when the El Shaddei’s engines failed.<br />

• January 1998, Tom and Eileen Lonergan are left at sea after scuba diving on the Great Barrier Reef,<br />

Australia.<br />

• September 2003, 500 sheep are stranded at sea aboard the Cormo Express in the Persian Gulf<br />

because the Saudi government believed the sheep were infected by the disease scabby mouth.<br />

• April 2002, The crew of the tugboat American quest rescues a small, white dog that has been<br />

stranded aboard a refueling tanker off the coast of Honolulu, USA, for 24 days.<br />

Use a newspaper or magazine article, books or the Internet to research the event. Use two or more<br />

sources, such as three different websites, including a newspaper site.<br />

How to use newspapers and magazines …<br />

• Sources the author used are often listed at the end of the<br />

article. Find the books or articles to learn more details.<br />

Remember to list all of your sources.<br />

• Take notes about the information, but remember to use<br />

your own words when writing about it. If you use a direct<br />

quote, use quotation marks and state the reference,<br />

including the title, the article and page number where<br />

you found it.<br />

How to look for a book on the subject …<br />

• Using your library’s catalogue, do a title search or a<br />

subject search. Type the keywords ‘stranded at sea’ and<br />

the place, date, person’s name involved in the event.<br />

How to find<br />

information on the<br />

Internet …<br />

• Photographs, maps,<br />

diagrams, charts and<br />

displays always make<br />

research projects more<br />

interesting. Use these visual<br />

aids to print and use with<br />

your report.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

• If a book is shelved by author, it is a fictional or<br />

biographical book. Most nonfiction books are shelved by<br />

number using the Dewey decimal system. Use nonfiction<br />

or biographical books only.<br />

• Not everything on the<br />

Internet is correct! Be sure<br />

to find the information on<br />

a site that ends with .edu,<br />

.org or .gov. Or find the<br />

same information in three<br />

separate places. Maybe<br />

your school knows of some<br />

websites that may be of<br />

use. Ask your teacher or<br />

librarian for help.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 95


1.<br />

Stranded at sea<br />

Research project<br />

news segment<br />

Date:<br />

Answer the questions below about your research subject.<br />

Name:<br />

(a) Where did the event take place? (b) When did it happen?<br />

(c) Who was stranded at sea?<br />

(d) Where did they come from and where<br />

were they going?<br />

(f) List any other interesting facts about the<br />

event.<br />

(e) How did they become stranded at sea?<br />

(g) List any other facts that might affect you<br />

personally. (Do you know someone or something<br />

that was stranded at sea? Do you like travelling<br />

by boat?)<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

2.<br />

Use the facts above to write a newspaper article about the event. Write your article on a separate sheet<br />

of paper. Include an attention-grabbing headline and images, such as maps or photos. Write the most<br />

important facts first. Then add the least important details at the end. Mention or quote your references.<br />

Then watch a news segment to see how information is presented. Think about how a news segment is<br />

similar to and different from a news article. Be sure to edit and practise reading your article. Then perform<br />

your news segment to the class or record your segment using a video or digital camera.<br />

96 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

Date:<br />

Word ladders<br />

Climb these word ladders to make words related to the book Trapped.<br />

T rapped<br />

Vocabulary<br />

Change one, two or three letters in each word to create the next word described.<br />

1. 2.<br />

a picture that tells<br />

where you are<br />

to catch someone<br />

and hold them<br />

a type of music<br />

something worn<br />

on the head<br />

cap<br />

3. 4.<br />

when land is<br />

underwater<br />

what people walk on<br />

the way to leave a<br />

building<br />

map<br />

flood<br />

the past tense of<br />

‘stink’<br />

a large container<br />

that holds liquid<br />

to express<br />

gratitude<br />

to use your mind<br />

an underwater<br />

vehicle<br />

another word for<br />

‘bath’<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

a heavy stick<br />

stank<br />

sub<br />

one part of a building<br />

room<br />

to stroke firmly<br />

and quickly<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 97


1.<br />

2.<br />

T rapped<br />

Vocabulary<br />

word parts<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

The word ‘inspector’ comes from the word parts ‘inspect’ meaning ‘to study closely’ and ‘or’<br />

meaning ‘a person who does’. An inspector is someone who studies things closely.<br />

Use the explanations of the word parts to write your own definition for each word. Use the book or a<br />

dictionary, if needed.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

sweatshop<br />

worker<br />

(c) everywhere<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

unsafe<br />

government<br />

‘sweat’: to perspire<br />

‘shop’: a factory<br />

‘work’: to toil<br />

‘er’: a person who does<br />

‘every’: total<br />

‘where’: place<br />

‘un’: not<br />

‘safe’: free from harm<br />

‘govern’: to rule<br />

‘ment’: a condition or thing<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

When you look at a new word, try to find word parts that are familiar to you.<br />

Draw a line to match each word to its definition.<br />

(a) sunken • • an underwater vehicle<br />

(b) survivor • • a state of being free<br />

(c) submarine • • lying on the bottom of a body of water<br />

(d) rescuer • • a person who remains alive<br />

(e) freedom • • a person who saves others<br />

98 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

Concept web<br />

Date:<br />

T rapped<br />

Initial understanding<br />

Complete the concept web about traps, using information from the book and facts you already know.<br />

How<br />

When<br />

Traps<br />

Where<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Who<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 99


T rapped<br />

Initial understanding<br />

summary chart<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

A summary is a short description of events; it ‘sums up’ what you read. A summary lists the main<br />

ideas, not the supporting details.<br />

1.<br />

Passage: The basket was like a cage. It was<br />

just 55 centimetres wide. The basket<br />

carried food and drink for the men.<br />

After eating, the first man climbed<br />

into the basket. At 1.00 a.m., he was<br />

lifted to the surface.<br />

After you read each chapter in Trapped, write a summary of the chapter. Use only one or two sentences to<br />

tell the main idea.<br />

(a) Chapter 1<br />

(b) Chapter 2<br />

(c) Chapter 3<br />

(d) Chapter 4<br />

Summary: At 1.00 a.m., the small, cage-like<br />

basket lifted the first man to the<br />

surface.<br />

Summary of chapter<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

(e) Chapter 5<br />

100 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

2.<br />

ANALOGIES<br />

Date:<br />

Fire is to New York as Tank Rupture is to Boston.<br />

The sentence above is an analogy. Analogies can also be written like this:<br />

Fire : New York / Tank Rupture : Boston<br />

T rapped<br />

Interpretation<br />

Analogies are based on relationships between word meanings, such as:<br />

• antonyms (opposites) – Burn : Extinguish<br />

• synonyms (alike) – Rescuer : Firefighter<br />

• descriptive – Large : Kursk<br />

• part to whole (or whole to part) – Minutes : Hour<br />

• item to category (or category to item) – Steamer : Ship<br />

Decide how the first pair of words relates to each other. Write the type of analogy first. Then write a word to<br />

complete the analogy.<br />

(a) East Germans : Trapped / West Germans :<br />

(b) Sailor : Crew / <strong>Teacher</strong> :<br />

(c) City : Town / Large :<br />

(d) Midnight : Night / Midday :<br />

(e) Gram : Kilogram / Metre :<br />

WRITE YOUR OWN ANALOGIES<br />

Write your own analogies to describe an event in Trapped. Make sure both pairs of words relate to each<br />

other in the same way.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 101


1.<br />

2.<br />

T rapped<br />

Interpretation<br />

BEFORE, DURING, AFTER<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Choose one event described in the book. Brainstorm as many words as you can to describe the people’s<br />

experience before they were trapped, while they were trapped and after they escaped. List up to five words<br />

under each heading.<br />

Before becoming trapped While trapped After they escaped<br />

ILLUSTRATE<br />

Draw pictures to show what you think happened before, during and after the event. Write a brief caption<br />

under each picture to explain it.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

102 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

1.<br />

REACTION<br />

Before you read:<br />

Date:<br />

T rapped<br />

Reflection<br />

Choose one photograph from the book. Write a description of, and your reaction to, the photo.<br />

2.<br />

3.<br />

Description:<br />

My reaction:<br />

After you read:<br />

Write a description of, and your reaction to, the same photo.<br />

Description:<br />

My reaction:<br />

Choose the chapter you found the most interesting. On another sheet of paper, write a brief summary<br />

stating the reasons why you found it interesting.<br />

Then, in a small group, discuss what you wrote. Compare and contrast the reasons you chose the chapter<br />

with other student’s choices in your group. After the discussion, add to your summary.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 103


1.<br />

2.<br />

T rapped<br />

Critical response<br />

USEFUL INFORMATION<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

One article might have different meanings to different people. For example, a newspaper article about<br />

someone being rescued from a collapsed mineshaft would be meaningful to many people, but in<br />

different ways. To the rescue worker, the article would be a source of pride or recognition of his or her<br />

work. To the people of the small mining town, the article could celebrate a triumph over adversity.<br />

For each person below, write how the person might view or use the information from this book about being<br />

trapped.<br />

(a)<br />

(b)<br />

(c)<br />

(d)<br />

(e)<br />

A Russian child<br />

A miner<br />

A submarine<br />

captain<br />

A tourist about to<br />

visit Germany<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

A Boston news<br />

reporter<br />

WHO ELSE?<br />

Think of someone else who might find the information in Trapped useful. Write a sentence or two telling<br />

who this person is, and why he or she would be interested in the information.<br />

104 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Name:<br />

RESEARCH TIPS<br />

Date:<br />

T rapped<br />

Research project<br />

Choose another well-known case of someone or something trapped from the list below, or find one<br />

of your own. Use these tips to help you write a newspaper article about it.<br />

• July 2004, 20 people are trapped 107 metres in the air aboard a hot-air balloon when its winch<br />

failed near Baltimore’s (USA) inner harbour.<br />

• July 2004, 4000 pilgrims are trapped by mudslides while travelling to the holy town of Badrinath,<br />

India.<br />

• November 1999, Seven explorers are trapped in a flooded cave in Southern France.<br />

• September 2001, Alan Mann is trapped along with 24 other people in No. 13 Elevator in the South<br />

tower of the World Trade Centre.<br />

• June 1985, Joe Simpson is trapped high on a mountain, and thought to be dead, in Peru.<br />

Use an encyclopedia, books or the Internet to research the event. Use two or more sources, such<br />

as three different websites, including a newspaper site.<br />

How to use an encyclopedia …<br />

• You can find encyclopedias in the reference sections of<br />

libraries as well as online.<br />

• Most encyclopedias include cross-references at the<br />

end of each article. This means that it lists other places<br />

in the encyclopedia where the event is mentioned.<br />

For example, facts about Kursk might be found under<br />

‘Kursk’, ‘submarine’ and ‘sinking’. Sometimes the crossreference<br />

will not be labelled, but it might be in small<br />

capital letters or italics.<br />

How to look for a book on the subject …<br />

• Using your library’s catalogue, do a title search or a<br />

subject search. Type the keyword ‘trapped’ and the place,<br />

date, person’s name involved in the event.<br />

How to find<br />

information on the<br />

Internet …<br />

• Photographs, maps,<br />

diagrams, charts and<br />

displays always make<br />

research projects more<br />

interesting. Use these visual<br />

aids to print and use with<br />

your report.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

• If a book is shelved by author, it is a fictional or<br />

biographical book. Most nonfiction books are shelved by<br />

number using the Dewey decimal system. Use nonfiction<br />

or biographical books only.<br />

• Not everything on the<br />

Internet is correct! Be sure<br />

to find the information on<br />

a site that ends with .edu,<br />

.org or .gov. Or find the<br />

same information in three<br />

separate places. Maybe<br />

your school knows of some<br />

websites that may be of<br />

use. Ask your teacher or<br />

librarian for help.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 105


1.<br />

T rapped<br />

Research project<br />

KWL CHART<br />

Date:<br />

Name:<br />

Before you read the book Trapped, write in the K column facts you already know about being trapped. In<br />

the W column, write questions you would like answered. While you read the book, look for answers to your<br />

questions. After reading, write what you learned about being trapped in the L column.<br />

What I already know What I want to know What I learned<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

2. Share your KWL chart with your class. Meet as a group with your fellow classmates who researched the<br />

same topic. Share what you learned and what you would still like to know. Perhaps someone found an<br />

answer you could not.<br />

106 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Attacked<br />

Word scramble page 7<br />

1. (a) massacre, kill (b) afraid, frightened<br />

(c) soldier, fighter (d) harbour, shelter<br />

(e) ocean, sea (f) plane, aircraft<br />

(g) bomb, rocket (h) torpedo, missile<br />

(i) student, pupil (j) demonstration, rally<br />

(k) nation, country (l) medicine, drug<br />

(m) brutal, cruel (n) submarine, underwater<br />

boat<br />

Crossword puzzle page 8<br />

Across:<br />

3. submarine, 5. war, 7. colonist, 9. guard,<br />

11. Vietnam, 12. Bosnia, 13. Ohio<br />

Down:<br />

1. king, 2, Pearl Harbour, 3. ship, 4. Britain,<br />

6. Boston, 8. torpedo, 10. Serb<br />

Key facts page 9<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Before, during, after page 10<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Venn diagram page 11<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Fact or opinion? page 12<br />

1. (a) Opinion (b) Fact (c) Opinion<br />

(d) Opinion (e) Fact (f) Fact<br />

(g) Opinion (h) Opinion (i) Opinion<br />

(j) Fact<br />

2. Answers will vary.<br />

Point of view page 13<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Different people, different uses page 14<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Research project pages 15–16<br />

Answers will vary<br />

ANSWERS<br />

Captured<br />

Cloze page 17<br />

1 – 2. grabbed (1) house (2)<br />

frightened (3) tell (4)<br />

3. Answers will vary.<br />

Common misspellings page 18<br />

1. (a) wait: to linger; remain<br />

(b) missed: failed to reach or meet<br />

(c) afraid: frightened<br />

(d) terrible: very awful; horrible<br />

(e) fault: a weakness<br />

(f) crime: an illegal act<br />

(g) island: a piece of land entirely surrounded by<br />

water<br />

(h) prisoner: a jailed person<br />

(i) try: to attempt to do something<br />

(j) cell: a room with a locked door and bars on the<br />

windows<br />

2 – 3. Answers will vary<br />

KWL chart page 19<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Flow chart page 20<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Brainstorm results page 21<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Before, during, after page 22<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Personal response page 23<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Author’s purpose page 24<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Research project pages 25–26<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 107


Condemned<br />

Common misspellings page 27<br />

1. (a) evidence: something that shows proof<br />

(b) witchcraft: the use of magic<br />

(c) station: a place to catch trains or buses<br />

(d) historic: important to a community<br />

(e) wolf: a member of the dog family that hunts and<br />

lives in packs<br />

(f) weigh: to have a certain heaviness<br />

(g) growth: the process of growing<br />

(h) redwood: a tree that has red wood<br />

(i) guilty: deserving of punishment; not innocent<br />

(j) police: law enforcement officials<br />

2–3. Answers will vary.<br />

Synonyms and antonyms page 28<br />

1. (a) A (b) S (c) A<br />

(d) S (e) S (f) A<br />

(g) A (h) S (i) A<br />

(j) S (k) A (l) S<br />

2. (a) light, weighty, heavy, backbreaking<br />

(b) infant, child, teen, adult<br />

(c) freed, captured, detained, jailed<br />

(d) pebble, stone, rock, boulder<br />

(e) whisper, say, call out, shout<br />

Read for detail page 29<br />

1–2. hysterics (1) ill (2) fits (3)<br />

nothing (4) witchcraft (5) illness (6)<br />

tortured (7) witches (8)<br />

Flow chart page 30<br />

Possible answers include:<br />

Dusty Steinmasel told McKittrick not to shoot.<br />

McKittrick fired.<br />

Number Ten fell dead.<br />

Cause and effect page 31<br />

1. (a) Cause: When they opened the fence.<br />

Effect: Number Ten walked out of the pen.<br />

(b) Cause: Because they liked each other.<br />

Effect: The two wolves played and snuggled.<br />

(c) Cause: Because the shirt had saliva on it.<br />

Effect: The shirt could be tested for DNA<br />

evidence.<br />

ANSWERS<br />

(d) Cause: So she would not hurt Luna’s bark.<br />

Effect: Butterfly took off her shoes.<br />

(e) Cause: So that the timber company could not<br />

cut it down.<br />

Effect: Butterfly climbed into Luna’s branches.<br />

(f) Cause: After her friends helped her build a tree<br />

house.<br />

Effect: Butterfly stayed dry.<br />

(g) Cause: Wolves sometimes ate farm animals.<br />

Effect: So farmers killed them.<br />

(h) Cause: Because Dr Griggs could find nothing<br />

wrong.<br />

Effect: He thought it must be witchcraft.<br />

(i) Cause: Because the court had already hanged<br />

11 people that summer.<br />

Effect: Giles Corey was scared.<br />

(j) Cause: Because of the weight on his chest.<br />

Effect: Corey could hardly breathe.<br />

(k) Cause: Jackie was often seen on TV.<br />

Effect: So she thought New Yorkers might listen<br />

to her.<br />

2. Answers will vary.<br />

<strong>Headlines</strong> page 32<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Personal response page 33<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Useful information page 34<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Research project pages 35–36<br />

Kidnapped<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Syllables page 37<br />

1. (a) release (b) autopsy (c) alias<br />

(d) blaze (e) hypnosis (f) hostage<br />

2. Answers will vary<br />

Place names page 38<br />

1. (a) e (b) a<br />

(c) d<br />

(d) b<br />

(e) c<br />

108 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


2. (a) Salt Lake City (b) Utah<br />

(c) Lebanon (d) Beirut<br />

(e) Tehran<br />

(f) New Hampshire<br />

(g) Portsmouth (h) Paris<br />

(i) New Jersey (j) Bronx<br />

KWL chart page 39<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Word web page 40<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Artefact file page 41<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Punctuation page 42<br />

See page 53 of Kidnapped.<br />

Reaction page 43<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

What do you think? page 44<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Research project pages 45–46<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Lost and found<br />

Make connections page 47<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Past tense page 48<br />

1. (a) stopped (b) lost<br />

(c) destroyed (d) covered<br />

(e) dug<br />

(f) flew<br />

(g) knew<br />

(h) forgotten<br />

(i) moved<br />

(j) found<br />

(k) studied (l) took/taken<br />

2. Answers will vary.<br />

Word web page 49<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

<strong>Headlines</strong> page 50<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

ANSWERS<br />

Flow chart page 51<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Design the tools page 52<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Point of view page 53<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Useful information page 54<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Research project page 55–56<br />

Missing<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Crossword Puzzle page 57<br />

Across:<br />

1. Pathfinder, 3. wanted, 4. mystery, 6. missing,<br />

8. ocean, 9. canals, 10. ship, 11. triangle<br />

Down:<br />

1. plane, 2. investigation, 5. fingerprint, 7. Phobos<br />

Word scramble page 58<br />

1. (a) hike/trek<br />

(b) team/group<br />

(c) hope/wish<br />

(d) ancient/old<br />

(e) conquer/beat<br />

(f) look/gaze<br />

(g) treasure/jewels<br />

(h) sun/star<br />

2. Answers will vary.<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

KWL chart page 59<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

True or False? page 60<br />

1. (a) F (b) T (c) T<br />

(d) F (e) T (f) F<br />

(g) T (h) T (i) F<br />

(j) F<br />

2. Answers will vary.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 109


Analogies page 61<br />

1. (a) Thumb—part to whole<br />

(b) Walk—antonyms<br />

(c) Investigator—synonyms<br />

(d) Terrorist—item to category<br />

(e) Dangerous—descriptive<br />

2. Answers will vary.<br />

Brainstorm results page 62<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Reaction page 63<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Different people, different uses page 64<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Research project pages 65–66<br />

Shot down<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Label groups page 67<br />

1. (a) They are all things planes do., lift off<br />

(b) They all describe flying., float<br />

(c) They are all country names., Australia<br />

(d) They are all names of planes., Su-15<br />

(e) They are all names of nationalities., British<br />

(f) They are all names of cities., Sydney<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Make connections page 68<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

True or false? page 69<br />

1. (a) True (b) True (c) False<br />

(d) False (e) True (f) True<br />

(g) False (h) True (i) True<br />

2. Answers will vary.<br />

Identify structure page 70<br />

1. (a) MI/SD (b) C/E (c) SOE<br />

(d) C/C (e) C/C (f) C/E<br />

(g) SOE (h) MI/SD (i) C/E<br />

(j) SOE<br />

ANSWERS<br />

Before, during, after page 71<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Design the tools page 72<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Discussion group page 73<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Critical response page 74<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Research project pages 75–76<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Stowed away<br />

Multiple meaning words page 77<br />

1. (a) i (b) ii (c) ii<br />

(d) i (e) ii (f) i<br />

(g) i<br />

(h) ii<br />

Word ladders page 78<br />

1. slave, save, wave, cave<br />

2. sky, fly, sly, my<br />

3. stay, say, may, bay<br />

4. cold, sold, fold, bold<br />

Flow chart page 79<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Concept web page 80<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Fact or opinion? page 81<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

1. (a) F (b) O (c) F<br />

(d) O (e) O (f) O<br />

(g) F (h) F (i) O<br />

(j) O<br />

2. Answers will vary.<br />

Point of view page 82<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

110 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com


Personal response page 83<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Author’s purpose page 84<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Research project pages 85–86<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Stranded at sea<br />

Specialised vocabulary page 87<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Cloze page 88<br />

1–2. island (1) weak (2) navigate (3)<br />

boats (4) storm (5) never (6)<br />

3. Answers will vary.<br />

<strong>Headlines</strong> page 89<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Cause and effect page 90<br />

1. (a) Cause: Because word spread about the pirates<br />

Effect: many people headed for Malaysia.<br />

(b) Effect: Many Jewish people returned to the<br />

horrors of the Nazis<br />

Cause: after they were taken in by Holland,<br />

France and Belgium.<br />

(c) Cause: Hoffman was not allowed to bring<br />

anything on board with him<br />

Effect: so he met Schiendick on shore.<br />

(d) Cause: because Schiendick sang Nazi songs.<br />

Effect: The Jews were upset<br />

(e) Cause: By zigzagging<br />

Effect: British ships hoped to avoid being<br />

torpedoed by the Germans.<br />

(f) Cause: With only 19 of 25 boilers in use<br />

Effect: Lusitania could not travel at top speed.<br />

2. Answers will vary.<br />

Compare and contrast page 91<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

ANSWERS<br />

Sequence page 92<br />

Essex leaves Nantucket, USA on a two-year whaling<br />

voyage.<br />

A sperm whale twice charges Essex.<br />

Essex sinks in 10 minutes.<br />

The crew sails in whaleboats to Henderson Island.<br />

Most of the crew leaves the island in search of more<br />

food.<br />

Dying of starvation, the crew decides to eat each<br />

other.<br />

The crews of Indian and Dauphin rescue the crew.<br />

Chase writes a famous novel about his experience.<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Similes page 93<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Author’s purpose page 94<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Research project pages 95–96<br />

Trapped<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Word ladders page 97<br />

1. map, trap, rap, cap<br />

2. stank, tank, thank, think<br />

3. flood, floor, door, room<br />

4. sub, tub, club, rub<br />

Word parts page 98<br />

1. Answers will vary.<br />

2. (a) c (b) d (c) a<br />

(d) e<br />

(e) b<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

Concept web page 99<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Summary chart page 100<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines 111


Analogies page 101<br />

1. (a) Free – descriptive<br />

(b) Staff – item to category<br />

(c) Small – antonyms<br />

(d) Day – synonyms<br />

(e) Kilometre – part to whole<br />

2. Answers will vary.<br />

Before, during, after page 102<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Reaction page 103<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Useful information page 104<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

Research project pages 105–106<br />

Answers will vary.<br />

ANSWERS<br />

Viewing Sample<br />

112 <strong>Astonishing</strong> headlines Prim-Ed Publishing ~ www.prim-ed.com

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