1 Discover Our Topic: Remarkable Accomplishments in Space Science
2 Determine Central Idea and Analyze Point of View
3 Analyze Point of View: Team Moon
4 Mid-Unit 1 Assessment: Analyze Point of View: “An Account of the Moon Landing”
5 Close Read: “This Is How the Space Race Changed the Great Power Rivalry Forever”
6 Language Dive: “This Is How the Space Race Changed the Great Power Rivalry Forever”
7 Reading and Writing: Focused Read-aloud, Session 2: Oliver’s Tree
8 End of Unit 1 Assessment: Analyze Argument and Point of View: “An Argument against the Moon Mission”
These are DRAFT materials developed by OUSD teachers for OUSD teachers, not yet a complete core ELD program.
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G6-M4-U1-L1 - Pictorial Language Development and Student Handout
G6-M4-U1-L2- Clarifying Bookmark "Team Moon"
G6-M4-U1-L3-Language Dive (Slides & Student Handout & Chunks & Text)
G6-M4-U1-L4 - Text Reconstruction
G6-M4-U1-L5- Possible Sentences
This module is designed to highlight the many contributors to the advancements in space science--those who most often receive recognition and those who are often overlooked. To set up this juxtaposition for students, Unit 1 is designed to provide background information about the Space Race of the 1960s, featuring popular accounts of this historic course of events. Students generate excitement about the topic by watching videos, viewing images, and reading primary sources about the Space Race, a competition between the United States and the Soviet Union to be the first country to land an astronaut on the moon. Students learn how the Space Race supported advancements in math and science and notice which figures are highlighted in these sources.
As students build their background knowledge, they practice citing text evidence, identifying central idea(s), and determining the points of view expressed in the different texts. Critical to their understanding of this time period is the exposure to varying perspectives, including those who believed the funds used to send humans to the moon could be better spent improving the lives of the destitute and depressed at home. Students learn to trace the arguments in these claims by identifying the evidence and reasoning that supports these views. Once students begin their reading of the anchor text, Hidden Figures (Young Readers' Edition) by Margot Lee Shetterly, in Unit 2, they will have the necessary background to better appreciate the contributions of the black women of NASA and how they impacted scientific and social progress in the face of both racial and gender discrimination.
Central to the EL Education curriculum is a focus on "habits of character" and social-emotional learning. Students work to become effective learners, developing mindsets and skills for success in college, career, and life (e.g., initiative, responsibility, perseverance, collaboration); work to become ethical people, treating others well and standing up for what is right (e.g., empathy, integrity, respect, compassion); and work to contribute to a better world, putting their learning to use to improve communities (e.g., citizenship, service).
In this unit, students focus on initiative and perseverance as they read about the traits that the scientists, mathematicians, and astronauts harnessed to compete in the Space Race. They also practice empathy and compassion as they read arguments texts that highlight how the money and energy allocated for space exploration could be used to solve issues of poverty in the United States.
Hidden Figures (Picture Book)
by Margot Lee Shetterly
one per class
Prepare vocabulary logs and independent reading journals as needed for a new module.
Carefully read the many texts introduced in this unit to develop strong background knowledge about the Space Race and the women of the West Computing Pool whose work helped land humans on the moon.
Prepare technology necessary to show the videos and audio clips suggested in Lesson 1.