Red Riding Hood

I read the book Red Riding Hood retold and illustrated by James Marshall. This is always a fun story to tell specifically because of the voice changes the wolf uses as he mimics the Granny and Red Riding Hood. The story is about how the wolf meets Red Riding Hood on her way to Granny's house, and he devises the plan to eat both of them. In the end, the hunter kills the wolf and saves Granny and Red Riding Hood from the wolf's stomach, and Red Riding Hood learned her lesson about talking to strangers.

The appropriate grade level for this book would be Pre-K to 2nd grade. The story is kind of silly, and the overall lesson being "don't talk to strangers" applies more to the younger audiences. This would be a fun book to read in the classroom, and I can see the potential of using it as a future teacher. One activity that I think would be fun with this book would be to do a story analysis, but in the form of a police report. They would have to describe what happened, but it's more fun than just writing a paragraph. A STEM activity that would be fun from this book would be to allow the students to create a way for Red Riding Hood to get the basket of Granny's favorite custard to her house using science. (i.e. a zip line)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Among the Hidden

Blog Post #1 (Childhood Reading)

The War That Saved My Life