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Lesson Plan - Hunting Hurricanes
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Learning Objective
Students will be able to explain why some pilots fly into hurricanes and the challenges these pilots face.
Text Structure
Description, Problem/Solution
Content-Area Connections
Earth Science
Standards Correlations
CCSS: RI.4.1, RI.4.2, RI.4.3, RI.4.4, RI.4.5, RI.4.7, RI.4.8, RI.4.10, L.4.4, SL.4.1
NGSS: Earth’s Systems
TEKS: Science 4.7
1. Preparing to Read
Watch a Video: What You Need to Know About Hurricanes
Ask: Which fact about hurricanes do you find most surprising or interesting? Why?
Preview Words to Know
Project the online vocabulary slideshow and introduce the Words to Know.
Set a Purpose for Reading
Read the “As You Read” question. Have students note how hurricane hunters help keep people safe.
2. Close-Reading Questions
1. What contrast does the author draw between hurricane hunters and other pilots? The author notes that most pilots try to avoid dangerous weather. But for hurricane hunters, flying toward powerful storms is part of the job.
(RI.4.3 COMPARISON)
2. Describe the steps hurricane hunters take to keep people safe. Hurricane hunters drop dropsondes into a storm to record temperature, wind speed and direction, and other data. They send the data to the National Hurricane Center, which uses it to predict a storm’s path and decide whether people must evacuate.
(RI.4.5 CHRONOLOGY)
3. Why does the author call the work of Rebecca Waddington and her crew “demanding”? The missions are eight hours long, and they have many tasks to do. The flights are also bumpy.
(RI.4.2 KEY DETAILS)
3. Skill Building
FEATURED SKILL: Text Features
Use the Skill Builder “Use Text Features” to have students evaluate how headings, photos, and other nonfiction text features can help them better understand the article.
(RI.4.7 TEXT FEATURES)
Multilingual Learners
While watching the videos as a class, display the closed captions to help multilingual learners link spoken and written English.
Striving Readers
Have students read or listen to the lower-level version of the article (available online), underlining important details along the way.
Literature Link
Pair this article with a piece of exciting fiction about hurricanes. Read aloud Lauren Tarshis’s I Survived Hurricane Katrina over several days, or share the new graphic novel version of the book.