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Week 3. DO NOW: Monday: If you could choose any memory to transmit to someone, what would it be and why? Tuesday: In chapter 11, we learn how the title relates to the story. Explain. Wednesday: How are Jonas’s relationships affected by his job assignment?
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Week 3 DO NOW: Monday: If you could choose any memory to transmit to someone, what would it be and why? Tuesday: In chapter 11, we learn how the title relates to the story. Explain. Wednesday: How are Jonas’s relationships affected by his job assignment? Thursday: What kind of life does the Giver live? How do you know? Give examples.
Objectives: • To support your answers with details from the story when answering questions • To describe foreshadowing and relate it to the story
Foreshadowing • when an author mentions or hints at something that will happen later in the story.
Hint • Break the Word Apart • FORE means ahead. • A SHADOW is a glimpse of something without the complete details. • Therefore, FORESHADOW means getting a glimpse of something before it happens.
An example using Little Red Riding Hood Once upon a time, there was a little girl who lived with her mother. Her mother asked her to take her old and lonely grandmother some food one day."Don't stop along the way. Go straight to your Grandma's house and back. Don't talk to any strangers and watch out for the wolf in the woods! Now get along!"
An example using Little Red Riding Hood The underlined words provide an example of foreshadowing. Little Red Riding Hood’s mother is warning her about the wolf in the woods, which hints at what may happen next. Once upon a time, there was a little girl who lived with her mother. Her mother asked her to take her old and lonely grandmother some food one day."Don't stop along the way. Go straight to your Grandma's house and back. Don't talk to any strangers and watch out for the wolf in the woods!Now get along!"