ELA-Literacy.CCRA.R.9
      Description:
        
          Analyze how two or more texts address similar themes or topics in order to build knowledge or to compare the approaches the authors take.
        
    
    
      
        Maps to Reading Plus skills:
        
          9A
        
      
    
  Exemplars
9A: Comparing/Contrasting
9A: Comparing/Contrasting
              Description:
              Compare, Contrast, and/or Integrate
            
          
          
          
              SeeReader
              
                 ✓ standard met 
              
            
            
              
              
              
              
                
              
              
              
                Selection:
                
                   K-43 
                
                
                  
              
              K-43
 Grade level:  11 
    
                    Word count: 2281 words 
                   Author: Kate Scoville 
                   Synopsis: The hibakusha describe the bomb's aftermath, while communicating their hopes for a more peaceful world.
                
              
                
                  Excerpt:
                  
                     "Boys who remained in the middle of the playground shouted, 'Look, a B-29!' pointing at the sky. (Around that time, U.S. B-29 bombers often flew over the city. Whenever they came, an air-raid alert siren sounded; so a B-29 was a familiar sight to children.) 
                    
 
"I looked up and saw the silver-shining B-29 plane flying high in the blue sky, drawing a white arc with its vapor trail. 'That's pretty,' I thought.
 
                  
                
              
              
              "I looked up and saw the silver-shining B-29 plane flying high in the blue sky, drawing a white arc with its vapor trail. 'That's pretty,' I thought.
                Question:
                Read these two excerpts from the selection. For which two reasons can they be considered ironic?
                
            
          - They show war eventually became a normal fixture in Japanese children's lives.
- They illustrate children's interest in a machine that would seconds later destroy their city.
- They show Japanese children spent most of the school day outside.
- They highlight the lack of preparation for war by the Japanese government.
- They reveal Japanese children lived in constant fear during this time of war.
              Writing
              
                 ✓ standard met 
              
            
            
              
                  Writing prompt:
                  
                    Use a Venn diagram to compare two non-fiction selections on the same topic.
                  
                
              Evaluator
                  Organization:
                  Certica Solutions