162 Fairy Tales and Tall Tales: Supplemental Guide 7B | John Henry
Extensions 20 minutes
Multiple Meaning Word Activity
Context Clues: Legend
Note: You may choose to have students hold up one, two, or three fingers
to indicate which image shows the meaning being described, or have a
student walk up to the poster and point to the image being described.
- [Show Poster 3M (Legend).] In today’s tall tale, you heard that John
Henry was a legend among railroad workers. Here legend means a
famous and important person that others remember, even after that
person dies. Which picture shows this? - A legend is also a list of symbols on a map telling you what the
symbols mean. Which picture shows this? - A legend is also a story from a long time ago that some people
believe is true. Which picture shows someone telling others a legend? - I’m going to say some sentences with the word legend. Hold up one
finger if my sentence tells about legend in picture one; hold up two
fingers if my sentence tells about legend in picture two; and hold up
three fingers if my sentences tells about legend in picture three.- We see north, south, east, west on the legend.
- Native Americans have many legends about how things came to
be. - The capital of a state is marked with a star in the legend.
- Paul Bunyan is a legend among lumberjacks.
- Children like to listen to the legends their grandparents tell them.
Create Your Own
Draw an Exaggeration
- Remind students of a few tall tale exaggerations from the three tall
tales you have read so far, referring to images as necessary. Remind
students that some exaggerations can make the character seem
larger than life.
JJohn Henryohn Henry