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Lesson Plan - Predator and Prey
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Learning Objective
Students will learn why some common myths about sharks are unfounded and understand why sharks need protection.
Text Structure
Comparison, Cause/Effect
Content-Area Connections
Life Science
Standards Correlations
CCSS: R.1, R.2, R.3, R.4, R.5, R.6, R.7, R.8, R.9, R.10, L.4, SL.1, W.2
NGSS: From Molecules to Organisms
TEKS: Science 5.9, 6.12
1. Preparing to Read
Watch a Video: What You Need to Know About SharksDiscuss: Why are sharks important to their ecosystems?
Preview Words to KnowProject the online vocabulary slideshow and introduce the Words to Know.
Set a Purpose for ReadingAs students read, have them think about some threats that humans pose to sharks.
2. Close-Reading Questions
1. Why do you think the author chose the title “Predator and Prey” for this article? Sample response: The author probably chose this title to make people think. Many people would consider sharks to be the predators and people to be the prey. But after reading the facts in the article, it is clear that the reverse is in many ways true. R.1 Inference
2. According to the article, why do many people fear sharks? Many people fear sharks because they think of one shark species—the great white shark. This fierce predator is just one out of more than 500 shark species. R.5 Cause and Effect
3. How does the author support the claim that the loss of sharks is bad for oceans?The author explains that large sharks eat other fish and large marine creatures, keeping those populations under control. Sharks also keep other ocean species healthy by preying on sick or weak animals. R.8 Reasons and Evidence
3. Skill Building
FEATURED SKILL: Write a SummaryUse the Skill Builder “Be a Summary Superstar” to have students write a summary of the article.
Multilingual Learners Use the Skill Builder “What I Learned” (available below) to assess comprehension. Sentence stems and other question formats help scaffold understanding.
Striving Readers Have students read or listen to the lower-level version of the article (available here), underlining main ideas and important details.
Critical Thinking Discuss what Catherine Macdonald means when she says “You don’t need to love something to acknowledge it has a right to exist and an important role in the ecosystem.”