Common Core Standards
Grade 6
Reading RI.6.9
Compare and contrast one author's presentation of events with that of another (e.g., a memoir written by and a biography on the same person).
It's middle school, and so it's time to show students that things are much more complex than it seems. When it comes to informational text, complexity comes in the form of multiple viewpoints on the same topic, and this standard asks students to start to consider how different authors' viewpoints can get. Or maybe they have the same exact viewpoint. In which case, one author might be a clone of the other, not that Shmoop has anything against clones.
Aligned Resources
- Teaching American Born Chinese: Are You There, God? It's Me, Monkey King
- Teaching Maniac Magee: City Divided
- Teaching Farewell to Manzanar: Every Picture Tells a Story
- Teaching Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry: Integration In Our Nation
- Teaching The View from Saturday: Create Your Own Knowledge Bowl
- Teaching The Voyage of the Dawn Treader: Famous Islands
- Teaching The Voyage of the Dawn Treader: Only in Dreams
- Teaching When You Reach Me: Mysteries of Science
- Teaching Dragonwings: The Real Windrider
- Teaching A Tree Grows in Brooklyn: Nickeled & Dimed
- Teaching A Wrinkle in Time: Right Brain Versus Left Brain
- Teaching Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH: Google Maps: A Modern Tool for a Modern Rat
- Teaching Farewell to Manzanar: Do You See What I See?
- Teaching The View from Saturday: Getting To Know a Turtle (Almost)
- Using and Citing Online Sources: Chicken or the Egg: Primary and Secondary Sources
- Teaching American Born Chinese: Individual Identity
- Teaching Black Beauty: Why a Story?
- Teaching Monster: Prison: Fact or Fiction
- Teaching Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH: The Great Lab Rat Debate
- Teaching Johnny Tremain: Looting
- Teaching A Wrinkle in Time: The Quotable Mrs. Who
- Teaching The Voyage of the Dawn Treader: Sailing Around the World