November Informational Book Report
The students have 
been preparing just over a month to be able to complete this particular 
book report.  They learned about sequence words (first, next, then, 
after, finally, second, third, fourth, last, etc.) and completed a 
writing project giving detailed instructions about something they were 
already experts on.  The informational book report takes things to the 
next level, by having the students read about something they aren't familiar with and create an information cube.  Below is a brief overview of the instructions, as well as a photo of a sample book report.
1. 
 Students choose an appropriate informational book on their reading 
level related to history/social studies, science, or the arts.  They 
should not choose topics they're already familiar with or that are too 
complex for a third grader to clearly outline in four steps.
2.  The topic they 
choose should include some type of process or sequence they can explain 
to others.  Here are a few simple examples:
                  
History – 
"Ruby Bridges goes to the William Frantz Public School" or "The First 
Flight of the Wright Brothers" or "Man Lands on the Moon"
Science – "The Life Cycle of a Butterfly" or "How a Tornado Forms" or "Mining for Copper"
The Arts
 – "The Beginning Positions of Ballet" or "What to Prepare When You 
Audition for a Play" or "How to Draw Charlie Brown Cartoons like Charles
 Schulz"
3. 
Students then complete the cube according to the rubric in their 
homework folder and prepare to present it to the class.  Students are 
encouraged to practice their keyboarding skills by typing the sequence 
or process on the computer and gluing it onto the cube, as shown 
below:
| Part of a sample cube book report before the cube has been folded. | 

 

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