5th Grade November Reading Adventure- The Native American Tradition Mystery
The Hacker is claiming that his family started a tradition of a Night Chant Ceremony, but the Learning League knows he stole this from a Native American tribe! This cannot stand! But in order to figure out which tribe this ritual belongs to, the League will need your help. Fortunately, there are clues that will lead you to discover which tribe it is when you answer reading problems. This Reading Adventure will keep your classroom explorers engaged and working hard on English skills, while learning some social studies!
Also available for 3rd and 4th grade.
WHO is this mystery for?
Students on the 5th grade level who are practicing these reading skills:
Poetry Rhyme Scheme
Positive or Negative Connotation
Alliteration vs. Rhyme
Homophones vs. Homographs
Determine Meaning of Metaphors and Similes
Teachers looking for a quick-prep, rigorous but differentiated, interdisciplinary activity that showcases topics that are often ignored or unexplored within social studies and science curriculum.
WHAT is included?
This adventure is an hour-long activity that can be completed in 3 Tracks:
Students read the mystery on a printed booklet, and they solve the clues by answering questions on Google Slides, which they can access with a QR code or link on a computer, tablet, or phone.
Students read the mystery on a printed booklet, and they solve the clues by answering questions on printed task cards.
Students read the mystery in one browser window of Google Slides, and they solve the clues by toggling between another browser window of Google Slides to answer questions. This method works great for laptops, but is not recommended for tablets.
No matter which track you take, the core of the activity is the same. Students always have access to the mystery story, 40 reading problems, 5 Social Studies Exploration posters, a Writing Challenge, and an integral poster about:
Apache, Blackfoot, Cherokee, Comanche, & Navajo
Students will walk away from this lesson knowing these social studies concepts:
- The land inhabited by each tribe and the array of homes they created communities around
- How each tribe has unique traditions and a culture of their own that continues to survive
- The history of this survival, despite colonizing forces of European and American governments, including federal initiatives such as Indian Boarding Schools, reservations, and the Trail of Tears
- and more!!
WHEN is it designed to be completed?
These skills are best practiced sometime around American Indian Heritage Day, which is celebrated annually on November 29th.
WHERE can students solve this mystery?
Students can complete this activity in your classroom with pen and paper or technology, and even from home, thanks to the Digital Track!
HOW can this activity be differentiated?
Using either of these methods, you can scaffold these activities to meet each of your students, exactly where they’re at.
CUSTOMIZATION: great for students above and below grade level
Each math problem can be edited to whatever you please! Hypothetically, you could buy this mystery for the framework it provides, and change every single question.
AUDIO SUPPORTS: great for multilingual students
For the tracks including technology, your students have access to a read-aloud of not just the story, but each word written on Google Slides.
WHY should your students adventure with the Learning League?
Low teacher prep/High student engagement
Anti-racist curriculum that uplifts women and Black and Indigenous people of color
Three activity tracks with DISTANCE LEARNING OPTION
Audio scaffolding and editable problems
TRY OUT A MYSTERY FOR FREE!
Download The Oil Spill Mystery for math and The Case of the Absent Abolitionist for reading.
Adventure also available on TeachersPayTeachers!