原版英语RAZ 教案Up From Slavery_DS.pdf
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1、Up From SlaveryA Reading AZ Level X Leveled BookWord Count:1,886Visit www.readinga- for thousands of books and materials.www.readinga-A Selection from the Autobiography of Booker T.WashingtonIllustrated by Tad ButlerLEVELED BOOK XUp From SlaveryLevel X Leveled Book Learning AZA Selection from the Au
2、tobiography of Booker T.WashingtonIllustrated by Tad ButlerAll rights reserved.www.readinga-CorrelationLEVEL XS4040Fountas&PinnellReading RecoveryDRAA Selection from the Autobiography of Booker T.WashingtonIllustrated by Tad ButlerThis autobiography was originally published by Doubleday,Page,and Com
3、pany 1901.Some of the text has been reordered to create a more chronological narrative.www.readinga-12What Has This Tail?Written by Kira Freed www.readinga-20Up From SlaveryLevel X Leveled Book Learning AZA Selection from the Autobiography of Booker T.WashingtonIllustrated by Tad ButlerAll rights re
4、served.www.readinga-CorrelationLEVEL XS4040Fountas&PinnellReading RecoveryDRAA Selection from the Autobiography of Booker T.WashingtonIllustrated by Tad ButlerThis autobiography was originally published by Doubleday,Page,and Company 1901.Some of the text has been reordered to create a more chronolog
5、ical narrative.www.readinga-12What Has This Tail?Written by Kira Freed www.readinga-19Up From Slavery Level X1718Explore MoreAt the LibraryAsk your librarian to help you find the book Up From Slavery.Booker T.Washington writes much more about his life during and after slavery in his autobiography.As
6、k your librarian to help you find other biographies and autobiographies of African Americans who lived as slaves.Many slaves wrote about their stories,including Frederick Douglass,Harriet Jacobs,and Henry“Box”Brown.Other freed slaves,such as Harriet Tubman,told other writers about their lives.You ca
7、n often find these books in the“African-American History”section of your library.On the InternetA.In the address window,type .B.Type Booker T.Washington or Up From Slavery in the search window.Click on“Google Search.”C.Read the colored links and click on one that looks interesting.When you want to e
8、xplore more links,click on the“back”arrow at the top left.D.You can also try different searches,such as Emancipation Proclamation,Tuskegee Institute,or African-American autobiography.Glossarybig house(n.)the name many slaves used for their masters houses(p.11)Emancipation a law passed by President L
9、incolnProclamation(n.)in 1862 that freed all the slaves under Confederate authority (p.13)entangled(adj.)trapped in;tangled up in(p.14)flax(n.)a plant with stringy stems that are made into fabric;also,the fabric from the flax plant(p.6)manual labor(n.)work that is done with the body;physical work(p.
10、15)overseer(n.)a plantation worker who watched the slaves and made sure they worked(p.11)paradise(n.)a perfect,beautiful place where you can be happy forever(p.9)plantation(n.)a large farm,owned by a single person or family,where slaves or laborers do the work(p.5)quarters(n.)a group of buildings wh
11、ere people,especially workers,live(p.5)scolding(n.)getting yelled at as a punishment(p.9)self-reliance(n.)the ability to take care of yourself(p.15)trade(n.)job or skill(p.15)woe(n.)bad luck;pain and sorrow(p.11)Up From Slavery Level X34Table of ContentsHome Life.5The Work of a Slave Boy .8Talk of F
12、reedom.10Free at Last.12The Effects of Slavery.14Explore More .17Glossary .18This book is the first chapter of the autobiography of Booker T.Washington.An autobiography is a life story told by the person who lived it.Booker T.Washington was born a slave in Virginia.After the Civil War,he worked in a
13、 salt mine,even though he was only nine years old.Washington was determined to get an education,and he paid for college by working as a janitor at the college he attended.He became a well-known teacher,speaker,and writer.In 1881,he founded the Tuskegee Institute,an African-American college in Alabam
14、a.This chapter of his autobiography talks about his life as a slave and how the slaves were freed.Up From Slavery Level X34Table of ContentsHome Life.5The Work of a Slave Boy .8Talk of Freedom.10Free at Last.12The Effects of Slavery.14Explore More .17Glossary .18This book is the first chapter of the
15、 autobiography of Booker T.Washington.An autobiography is a life story told by the person who lived it.Booker T.Washington was born a slave in Virginia.After the Civil War,he worked in a salt mine,even though he was only nine years old.Washington was determined to get an education,and he paid for co
16、llege by working as a janitor at the college he attended.He became a well-known teacher,speaker,and writer.In 1881,he founded the Tuskegee Institute,an African-American college in Alabama.This chapter of his autobiography talks about his life as a slave and how the slaves were freed.Up From Slavery
17、Level X1718Explore MoreAt the LibraryAsk your librarian to help you find the book Up From Slavery.Booker T.Washington writes much more about his life during and after slavery in his autobiography.Ask your librarian to help you find other biographies and autobiographies of African Americans who lived
18、 as slaves.Many slaves wrote about their stories,including Frederick Douglass,Harriet Jacobs,and Henry“Box”Brown.Other freed slaves,such as Harriet Tubman,told other writers about their lives.You can often find these books in the“African-American History”section of your library.On the InternetA.In t
19、he address window,type .B.Type Booker T.Washington or Up From Slavery in the search window.Click on“Google Search.”C.Read the colored links and click on one that looks interesting.When you want to explore more links,click on the“back”arrow at the top left.D.You can also try different searches,such a
20、s Emancipation Proclamation,Tuskegee Institute,or African-American autobiography.Glossarybig house(n.)the name many slaves used for their masters houses(p.11)Emancipation a law passed by President LincolnProclamation(n.)in 1862 that freed all the slaves under Confederate authority (p.13)entangled(ad
21、j.)trapped in;tangled up in(p.14)flax(n.)a plant with stringy stems that are made into fabric;also,the fabric from the flax plant(p.6)manual labor(n.)work that is done with the body;physical work(p.15)overseer(n.)a plantation worker who watched the slaves and made sure they worked(p.11)paradise(n.)a
22、 perfect,beautiful place where you can be happy forever(p.9)plantation(n.)a large farm,owned by a single person or family,where slaves or laborers do the work(p.5)quarters(n.)a group of buildings where people,especially workers,live(p.5)scolding(n.)getting yelled at as a punishment(p.9)self-reliance
23、(n.)the ability to take care of yourself(p.15)trade(n.)job or skill(p.15)woe(n.)bad luck;pain and sorrow(p.11)Up From Slavery Level X1516On the other hand,the former slaves pitied our former owners.After years of slavery,the whites looked upon labor and work as bad and inferior.Slavery took the spir
24、it of self-reliance out of the white people.My old owner had many sons and daughters,but not one knew a single trade or work skill.The girls had never been taught to cook or sew or take care of the house.The sons had the feeling that manual labor was not the proper thing for them.On the other hand,t
25、he slaves had learned valuable skills,and none of them were ashamed to work.There are many instances of blacks caring for their former owners who became poor after the war.Not long ago,I met an ex-slave from Virginia.This man had made a deal with his master two or three years before the Emancipation
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