The Great Kapok Tree: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest (Rise and Shine)

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The Great Kapok Tree: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest (Rise and Shine)

The Great Kapok Tree: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest (Rise and Shine)

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In the Kapok tree, there lived a boa constrictor, who slithered down the trunk to where the man was sleeping. He looked at the gash the axe had made in the tree. Then, the huge snake slid very close to the man and hissed in his ear: “Senhor, this tree is a tree of miracles. It is my home and where generations of my family have lived. Do not chop it down.” This is a template that highlights the different things your children should consider when writing a persuasive letter to the man from the story. It is important that each of the skills mentioned should be taught discretely to your class before writing the letter. Things to explore with your class: – State the argument and where you stand from the offset – State the facts and relate them to your point of view – Present alternative viewpoints to balance the argument – Use connectives, emotive words, quotations, repeat words/phrases, rule of three & rhetorical questions Kidadl is independent and to make our service free to you the reader we are supported by advertising. BBC Earth News) "Sacred plants of the Maya forest", 5 June 2009 accessed 12.25 on February 10 2021.

RL.7 Explain how specific aspects of a text’s illustrations contribute to what is conveyed by the words in a story Tambopota Rainforest Preserve, Peru, 2000". Archived from the original on 2008-12-01 . Retrieved 2017-02-03. No one notices the jaguar “because his spotted coat blended into the dappled light and shadows of the understory.” Can you find out about other animals that use camouflage? To answer who, I know there were two men so I write two men under Who. To answer what, I read and see that they entered the rain forest. So, I write entered the rain forest and one pointed to the Kapok tree under What. To answer why, I have to think and make a connection between the words, illustration and what I know. The words don't tell me why, but the illustration does. The man has an ax, I bet he is going to chop down the tree. So, I write chop down the tree under Why. I will use the information on the chart to tell the main idea; two men entered the rain forest, and they were going to chop down the Kapok tree. The commercial tree is most heavily cultivated in the rainforests of Asia, notably in Java (hence one of its common names), the Philippines, Malaysia, and Hainan Island in China, as well as in South America.

There are several words in this book that may be unfamiliar to early readers. Here are some of them:

Soon, the man grew tired. He sat down to rest at the foot of the great Kapok tree. Before he knew it, the heat and hum of the forest had lulled him to sleep. Augh! You can make a case for this perfectly good message without being patronizing about it. You can make a case for the message without cramming it down the reader's throat. You can talk about these things without having each animal coming to him brimming with exposition. She's a great artist. I would say she's not that good of a writer. It's the equivalent of drawing diagrams of everything. You don't need to spell it out. When you do that, it becomes uninteresting to read. The person who's reading it feels like you're talking down to them. They feel like you're saying you're better than they are. Nobody wants to read a book like that. I don't want to read it again, and I don't want to read it to my kids. I can't imagine a child being interested in anything beyond the pictures. This is a gorgeous book that talks about how important it is to save our rainforests. Also it did a great job of explaining the different levels of the rainforest as well and what animals lived in each level! It was gorgeously illustrated and was a great message for kids!We have been discussing the kapok tree, its habitat and seeds, and so on. Now, let us explore a few more facts. Emergent trees like the kapok rise above the canopy of the rainforest and provide a home for plants dependent on sunlight. Their branches provide a habitat for countless epiphytes, which provide food and shelter for many types or animals. Is the kapok tree poisonous? Linda Gamlin and Anuschka de Rohan, MYSTERIES OF THE RAINFOREST (Pleasantville, N.Y.: Reader's Digest Assoc., 1998) p. 79. Tobago's Avatar – 'The tree of life' ". Tobago News. 2012-03-01. Archived from the original on 2013-06-30.



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