Lesson
1
:
Learning Courage from Literature
Grade
Grade 5
UNIT
6
•
Courage
In Unit 5, Lesson 1, “Learning Courage from Literature,” students will learn examples of courage from a contemporary work of children’s literature. Additionally, students will create their own sentences that demonstrate their comprehension of the word courage. Finally, students will practice their reading and conversation skills by sharing sentences with classmates.
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SUGGESTED TIME:
30 minutes
RELATED SUBJECT:
English Language Arts
LEARNING OUTCOMES:
- 20 minutes to introduce the book Steal Away Home by Lois Ruby
- 1 month to complete the book Steal Away Home by Lois Ruby (8 pages or about 2 chapters for in class silent reading or homework)
REQUIRED MATERIALS:
- Video: The Underground Railroad: On the Road to Freedom by Untold History (~2 min)
- Book: Steal Away Home by Lois Ruby or
- Video: Read aloud of Steal Away Home (Chapter 1) by Melissa Theune (~5 min)
- Prohuman Grade 5 Unit 5 Worksheet 1: Learning Courage from Literature
VOCABULARY:
- Slavery: The practice of people owning other people. Enslaved people had to work for the owners, doing whatever the owners asked them to do. In the past, many societies had slavery, including America. Now, almost all societies consider slavery to be wrong. Freedom is a basic human right. (Source: Britannica Kids)
- Abolitionism: The movement to end slavery and free enslaved people.
- Underground Railroad: The Underground Railroad was not an actual railway. Instead, it was a secret organization that existed in the United States before the Civil War. The people of the Underground Railroad helped escaped enslaved people from the South to reach places of safety in the North or in Canada. (Source: Britannica Kids)
- Courage: I do what I think is right even when I am afraid.
ELA COMMON CORE STANDARDS MET
CHARACTER AND SOCIAL EMOTIONAL (CSED) NATIONAL STANDARDS MET
LESSON PROCEDURE
- Ask students if they have ever heard of the Underground Railroad.
- Give students the definition: The Underground Railroad was not an actual railway. Instead, it was a secret organization that existed in the United States before the Civil War. The people of the Underground Railroad helped escaped enslaved people from the South to reach places of safety in the North or in Canada. (Source: Britannica Kids)
- Play the video: The Underground Railroad: On the Road to Freedom by Untold History (~2 min)
- Tell students that we will be reading a book about a girl who makes an important discovery about the Underground Railroad.
- Have students read the book Steal Away Home by Lois Ruby, either as a series of in class readings or for homework.
- Have students complete the questions on their worksheets as they read the book.
- Have students read their sentences to a partner.
GRADE 5 UNIT 5 WORKSHEET 1: LEARNING COURAGE FROM LITERATURE
QUESTIONS TO ANSWER WHILE READING THE BOOK Steal Away Homeby Lois Ruby:
- How did Lizbet Charles show courage?
- How did Mrs. Weaver show courage?
- How was the life of the main character, Dana Shannon, changed by learning about Lizbet?
- According to James Weaver’s grandfather, "...a Quaker never raises his hand in wrath against another man...Neither does he roll over and play dead, son. Time comes, thee will know what to do." When does James have to decide how to act on his beliefs? What does he do? Why?
- In Chapter 16, Solomon Jeffrey, a free black man, could have used force against the slave trader who wanted to illegally capture him, but he didn't. Why? Would you have shown the same restraint if you were in Solomon's situation?
- Dana's friend Anh is a refugee from Vietnam, a country that suffered through an especially long and devastating war. Compare Anh’s twentieth-century experience to those of Lizbet Charles's back in the nineteenth-century. What are the important similarities? What are the important differences?
- What did you learn from this book about courage and how can you show courage?
Prohuman K-12 Curriculum © 2025 by Prohuman Foundation is licensed under CC BY-NC 4.0.
To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
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