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Johnny AppleseedFact or Fiction
Tracie AmbroseEducation 357
Fall 2009First Grade Standard
Inquiry
Standard 1.1.10
Chronological Thinking, Historical Analysis and Interpretation, Research: Distinguish between historical fact and fiction in American folktales and legends that are a part of American culture.
Purpose
This is a week long lesson plan using the idea of Johnny Appleseed to introduce the words “fiction” and “non-fiction.”
It uses a cross curricular format that will reinforce the idea of fact and fiction.
Objectives
After instruction, students will be able to give true and false statements about the life of Johnny Appleseed as evidenced by students providing verbal answers for chart.
After instruction, students will be able to tell who Johnny Appleseed was and what he did as evidenced by students acting out the life of Johnny Appleseed.
After instruction, students will distiguish between the words “fiction” and “non-fiction” as evidenced by students writing the words on their apple tree project.
Definitions
Orchard—a place where fruit is grown in large quantities
Legend—a story about a person or place that may not be completely true.
Sauce pan—a cooking pan used to make soup or sauce.
Fiction—a story that is not trueNon-fiction—a writing that is true.
Activities Day One
Ask students if they know what a true statement and a false statement is. Have students tell a true statement about themselves and a false
statement about themselves. Put their statements on a T chart that shows “true” and “false” at the top.
(see next slide) Read the book: Johnny Appleseed: The Legend and the Truth by Jane Yolan. Ask students to name some true and false things about Johnny Appleseed. Have students draw a picture of apple trees and write a short sentence
about an apple. Example: I like apples. During science time, have each student plant an apple seed. Put the
seeds on a window sill. Have apple slices for a snack.
True Statements False Statements
Example: I ate pizza for lunch today.
I once fought a big green monster that lived under my bed.
Day Two
Ask students to review the things they learned yesterday about fact or fiction. Ask them to name some true and false things about Johnny Appleseed.
Ask them if they have ever been to an apple orchard. Have them tell about it if they have.
Read the book: Apple Picking Time by Michelle Slawson. Ask students if they think the story is true or false. Ask
them to explain why they think so. If they have never been to an orchard, have them write a
false story about going to an apple orchard and display their “stories” on the bulletin board. (It would be fun to use apple shaped papers for the students to write on.)
Day Three
Ask the students who Johnny Appleseed was. Look for true statements about Johnny Appleseed.
Read How Do Apples Grow by Betsy Maestro. Have students decide if the story is true or false.
Introduce the word “fiction” for not true and “non-fiction” for true.
Have students make a fuzzy pipe cleaner worm and glue it to a small apple shape. Have the write, “fiction” means not true. “Non-fiction” means true on the front of the apple.
During science, have students check their apple seeds.
Day Four
Review the words “fiction” and “non-fiction”. Ask students to remember back to the first day when you read,
Johnny Appleseed: The Legend and the Truth. Re-read the story. Ask students to listen for the fiction and non-fiction in the story and see if they hear anything new that they may not have heard the first time.
Add any new information to the chart that was made previously. Have students use props (sauce pan, bag, seed packets, etc.) to
act out the story of Johnny Appleseed. Later that day, transition to math time with the book: Apple
Countdown by Joan Halub. Give students a math worksheet and have students complete it by
counting apple seeds and using them to add or subtract. (math standards 1.2.1, 1.2.2)
Day Five
Review the words: Fiction and Non-fiction. Ask students about Johnny Appleseed and tell one true
thing about him. Create a large “tree” in the classroom. Give students
construction paper apples. Have them write true things on the apples about Johnny Apple seed and about apples. Hang the paper apples on the tree as a visual reminder of the week’s activities.
Give spelling test on apple words such as: apple, seed, go, pot etc.
Check on apple seeds and draw what they look like if they have grown. Continue allowing seedlings to grow.
Resources
Holub, Joan. Apple Countdown. Morton Grove: Albert Whitman & Company, 2009.
Lindbergh, Reeve. Johnny Appleseed. New York: Little, Brown Young Readers, 1993.
Maestro, Betsy;, and Giulio Maestro. How Do Apples Grow? C. New York: Harpercollins, Scranton, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., 1992.
Slawson, Michele B.. Apple Picking Time. New York: Knopf Books For Young Readers, 1994.
Yolen, Jane. Johnny Appleseed: The Legend and the Truth. New York: HarperCollins, 2008.