Oct. 15, 2008: Happy Birthday, Noah Webster!
The Mini Page is a syndicated,
four-page tabloid written for young children found each Wednesday in the
Rocky Mountain News. This issue of The Mini Page is available through
the eEdition Archive to registered eEdition subscribers. Click here to learn about subscribing to the eEdition at no cost to you (for Colorado teachers).
Activities:
1. Use words to show family
members and friends that you like them. Fold a piece of paper in half
to make a card for each person. Inside, paste newspaper words that describe
the person. Give your cards to the people they describe.
2. The sports section is a
great place to look for exciting words; writers have to say "won"
or "lost" in almost every story. Look at the headlines in the
sports section of your newspaper. Circle every word that means "won"
in red and every word that means "lost" in blue. See if you
can add other words that mean "won."
3. Find at least three long
words in the newspaper that look interesting. Look up the meanings in
the dictionary.
4. Find five words in the newspaper
that did not exist in Noah Webster's time. List the words on a piece of
paper. Write a sentence telling why Webster did not have the words in
his dictionary.
5. The editorial and opinion
pages of the newspaper are places to find clever uses of language. In
opinion columns, people use words to emphasize their position on an issue.
Read an opinion column or letter to the editor. List the words that reflect
the writer's opinion. Now rewrite the letter or parts of the column to
reflect the opposite point of view.
This week's standards:
- Students understand that history relates to events and people of other times and places by identifying examples of interesting Americans. (Social Studies: History)
- Students explore
factors that contribute to one¹s personal identity, such as interests,
capabilities and perceptions. (Social Studies: Individual Development)
(standards by Dr. Sherrye D. Garrett, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi)
