Guided Reading Script - All Tutus Should Be Pink
Guided Reading Script - All Tutus Should Be Pink
Courtney Alexander
Guided Reading Script-Narrative
Grade Level: 3rd Grade
Ability Group: LOW
Skill/Concept/Strategy Taught: Identifying homophones- To and too
This book is titled All Tutus Should be Pink. It was written by Sheri
Brownrigg and illustrated by Meredith Johnson.
Do you have a favorite outfit that you like to wear all the time? Or, did you
have a costume that you liked to wear when you were younger?
Have you read any other books that have ballet dancers in them?
Have you read any other books that had a character that loved the color
pink?
What do you think a tutu is? Look at the picture to help you guess.
What do you think the word studio means? Look at the picture to help
you guess. Where does it look like the girls are?
What do you think the word famished means? On the next page the girls
go to get ice cream. If they say they are famished and then they go to get
something to eat, what do you think famished means?
A tutu is a ballet dancers costume that has a top part that kind of looks
like a shirt, which is attached to a skirt. You can see the girls wearing a
tutu on the cover.
Swoosh is actually the sound that the girls tutus make when they dance
around.
Earlier we talked about what the girls are wearing on the cover of the
book. Does anyone remember what their outfits are called?
What kind of relationship do you think the girls have based off of this
illustration?
In the book the girls believe that dance class is so difficult that they think
about quitting.
Have you ever tried something and it was so hard that you wanted to
quit? Did you end up quitting or did you work hard to work through your
struggles?
As we picture walk through the book, I want you to share some things you
notice about what is going to happen in the story.
Explain what these aspects are and how they can help the reader understand the
story more
The illustrations in this book are important, because they help us figure
out what some words mean and they help us understand that the girls in
the story have a very close friendship.
Look at the cover of the book. The girl on the left is our main character.
The girl on the right is Emily, her best friend.
Look at page 10. This is the girls dance teacher, Ms. Yvonne.
Now, we are going to start reading the book. I want you to look closely for
the words to and too in the story.
We are going to take turns reading each page aloud to the rest of the
group.
If needed, the teacher assist students who may be need help reading
The teacher asks students questions about what they read/noticed in story
How did the girls feel when they were wearing their tutus?
5. Teacher explicitly teaches the reading process skill/strategy using the elements
from the story
We are going to take a closer look at the words to and too in the story.
Turn to page 3. Point to the word too. Do you see how it has two os in
the word, instead of one? Too in this sentence means more than it should
be.
Turn to page 5. Find the word too. How many os does it have? What do
you think it means in this sentence? It means also or as well.
Turn to pages 7 and 8. How many times do you see the word to? To in
these sentences means going towards something.
Turn to page 13. In this sentence, do you see both spellings to and too?
What does each word mean in the sentence?
Turn to page 25. Point to the word too. What does too mean in this
sentence?
Lets look at some sentences from the book to find out if the missing word
should be to or too.
I had another pink tutu, but it got _____ small for me. (too)
We wear our pink tutus everywhere. ____ the grocery store. ____ the
movies. Even ____ the beach. (to)
If we drop some on our tutus, it doesnt matter. Theyre pink ____. (too)