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Lesson Plan - Ship of Doom
Read the Article
Get the Answer Key
Learning Objective
Students will understand why the sinking of the Titanic continues to fascinate people.
Content-Area Connections
Social Studies, STEM
Standards Correlations
CCSS: RI.3.1, RI.3.2, RI.3.3, RI.3.4, RI.3.5, RI.3.6, RI.3.7, RI.3.8, RI.3.10
NCSS: Science, Technology, and Society
Text Structure
Chronology
1. Preparing to Read
Watch a VideoWatch the video “Searching for the Titanic.” Discuss: Why do you think it took so long for scientists to locate the wreckage?
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 why people find the Titanic so fascinating.
2. Close-Reading Questions
1. What caused interest in the Titanic to rise in 1985? Interest in the Titanic rose in 1985 because that is when explorer Robert Ballard located the shipwreck underwater.(RI.3.3 Cause and Effect)
2. Why does the article state that “there’s not much time left” to study the Titanic? The article says that there is not much time left to study the Titanic because what is left of the ship might be gone in 20 years. The article explains, “Ocean currents and tiny living things called bacteria are eating away at the sunken ship.” (RI.3.1 Text Evidence)
3. What is the purpose of the sidebar “From Ship to Wreck”? The purpose of this sidebar is to show a timeline of what experts think happened to the Titanic from the time it hit the iceberg to the time it landed on the ocean floor.(RI.3.5 Text Features)
3. Skill Building
FEATURED SKILL: SummarizingUse the skill builder “A Super Summary” to have students complete a cloze-style summary of the article. Discuss how nonfiction summaries focus on main ideas and key details and avoid giving personal opinions.(W.3.2 Main Idea and Key Details)
Multilingual Learners Support striving readers and multilingual learners by explaining that shipwreck and underwater are compound words—words made when two or more smaller words are joined together. Help students brainstorm other compound words.
Enrichment Idea Use the sidebar “From Ship to Wreck,” to review telling time. Have students draw analog clock faces showing the times at which the events happened.
Paired Text Extend the lesson by having students read I Survived the Sinking of the Titanic, 1912 by Lauren Tarshis.
Writing Prompt Why do you think people are still so interested in the Titanic more than 100 years after the ship sank?