This is super fun, because who doesn’t like a little bit of shopping and catalog browsing with their schoolwork □ Idea #3: Write their own author’s purpose If you don’t have many catalogs available, you can also just have students cut out the books and then sort them (no gluing), so that the pictures are reusable again and again for otherstudents (just keep all the little book pictures in a Ziploc bag!). ![]() Then, they can glue the book pictures into their notebooks. Students will flip through the catalogs and cut out book pictures for each text (WARNING: it’s really hard to find books for “persuade!”). Or maybe you just have a few extras each month. Or maybe you accidentally ordered the wrong grade level (whoops again… been there done that). We all have those months that we forget to pass out the Scholastic fliers (whoops!). I saw this idea years ago on Pinterest and thought it was the coolest! ( I’m not sure which teacher-author I originally saw it from – let me know if you can remember!!!). They can get as creative as they’d like! Idea #2: Scholastic catalog sort They can also draw pictures of text in each category too (like a book, play script, etc.). In each third, students will write the different types of text that they would find in each category! On each third, they will write: Persuade, Inform, and Entertain. Students will divide the plate into thirds with a marker. Let me tell you how to make these (super simple and absolutely no work involved for you… woohoo!). Since using the acronym “PIE” is a great way to remember all the types of author’s purpose… what better way than to make an author’s purpose activity on a plate?! Sign up below to get this color-by-number freebie sent directly to your inbox! ![]() ![]() Keep reading to learn all about these author’s purpose activities!Īnd don’t forget to leave your name and email below to get a reading comprehension color by number! These activities will get all the author’s purpose concepts to “click” in your students’ minds and get that lightbulb moment to happen. Personally, I think “persuade” is always the most challenging out of the 3 purposes to teach! I have a list of activities that hopefully will be new to you that you may find useful in your 3rd grade classroom! I have 5 author’s purpose activities that your students are going to LOVE!Īuthor’s purpose is a fun topic to teach, but it can be tough to find activities to use to learn and review this reading strategy concept. 5 Author’s Purpose Activities to Learn Persuade, Inform, & Entertain!
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