

"Barrio Boy" The First Read
Presentation
•
English
•
6th - 8th Grade
•
Practice Problem
•
Medium
+21
Standards-aligned
Toshia Manning
Used 60+ times
FREE Resource
12 Slides • 11 Questions
1
"Barrio Boy" The First Read
This is a review of the First Read, to be sure everyone understands the selection.

2
Open Ended
List four main events that happen in "Barrio Boy".
3
Multiple Select
Which event happened first?
Miss Ryan takes the narrator to a seat in front of the class
The narrator maneuvers himself behind his mother in Miss Hopley’s office.
The narrator notices that the interpreter is “brown like us.”
The narrator learns to pronounce butterfly.
4
Multiple Choice
Which event happened second?
Miss Ryan takes the narrator to a seat in front of the class
The narrator maneuvers himself behind his mother in Miss Hopley’s office.
The narrator notices that the interpreter is “brown like us.”
The narrator learns to pronounce butterfly.
5
Multiple Choice
Which event happened third?
Miss Ryan takes the narrator to a seat in front of the class
The narrator maneuvers himself behind his mother in Miss Hopley’s office.
The narrator notices that the interpreter is “brown like us.”
The narrator learns to pronounce butterfly.
6
Multiple Choice
Which event happened last?
Miss Ryan takes the narrator to a seat in front of the class
The narrator maneuvers himself behind his mother in Miss Hopley’s office.
The narrator notices that the interpreter is “brown like us.”
The narrator learns to pronounce butterfly.
7
What is most closely the meaning of formidable as it is used below?
Then Miss Hopley did a formidable thing. She stood up. Had she been standing when we entered she would have seemed tall. But rising from her chair she soared. And what she carried up and up with her was a buxom superstructure, firm shoulders, a straight sharp nose, full cheeks slightly molded by a curved line along the nostrils, thin lips that moved like steel springs, and a high forehead topped by hair gathered in a bun. Miss Hopley was not a giant in body but when she mobilized it to a standing position she seemed a match for giants. I decided I liked her.
8
Multiple Choice
What is most closely the meaning of formidable as it is used in the following paragraph?
Then Miss Hopley did a formidable thing. She stood up. Had she been standing when we entered she would have seemed tall. But rising from her chair she soared. And what she carried up and up with her was a buxom superstructure, firm shoulders, a straight sharp nose, full cheeks slightly molded by a curved line along the nostrils, thin lips that moved like steel springs, and a high forehead topped by hair gathered in a bun. Miss Hopley was not a giant in body but when she mobilized it to a standing position she seemed a match for giants. I decided I liked her.
frightening
impressive
unexpected
aggressive
9
The author most likely included the following sentence to . Almost tiptoeing across the office, I maneuvered myself to keep my mother between
me and the gringo lady.
What is the narrator doing? Why does he do this? What does it remind you of? How does he feel about Ms. Hopley?
10
Multiple Choice
'Almost tiptoeing across the office, I maneuvered myself to keep my mother between
me and the gringo lady.' The author most likely included this sentence to_____:
show that Miss Hopley, the gringo lady, is tall and frightening in appearance
offer readers an example of the narrator’s quick reflexes
remind the reader that the narrator is young and nervous
to suggest to the reader the narrator’s fear of authority
11
What information mainly does the following passage convey (paragraph 12)?
Miss Ryan took me to a seat at the front of the room, into which I shrank—the better to survey her. She was, to skinny, somewhat runty me, of a withering height when she patrolled the class. And when I least expected it, there she was, crouching by my desk, her blond radiant face level with mine, her voice patiently maneuvering me over the awful idiocies of the English language.
12
Multiple Choice
What information mainly does the following passage convey (paragraph 12)?
Miss Ryan took me to a seat at the front of the room, into which I shrank—the better to survey her. She was, to skinny, somewhat runty me, of a withering height when she patrolled the class. And when I least expected it, there she was, crouching by my desk, her blond radiant face level with mine, her voice patiently maneuvering me over the awful idiocies of the English language.
The narrator is anxious in Miss Ryan’s presence.
Miss Ryan thinks the narrator is an exceptional student.
Miss Ryan is more than six feet tall.
The narrator dislikes Miss Ryan trying to explain the “idiocies” of English.
13
What is the main idea?
At Lincoln, making us into Americans did not mean scrubbing away what made us originally foreign. The teachers called us as our parents did, or as close as they could pronounce our names in Spanish or Japanese. No one was ever scolded or punished for speaking in his native tongue on the playground. Matti told the class about his mother’s down quilt, which she had made in Italy with the fine feathers of a thousand geese. Encarnación acted out how boys learned to fish in the Philippines. I astounded the third grade with the story of my travels on a stagecoach, which nobody else in the class had seen except in the museum at Sutter’s Fort. After a visit to the Crocker Art Gallery and its collection of heroic paintings of the golden age of California, someone showed a silk scroll with a Chinese painting.
14
What is the main idea?
Miss Hopley herself had a way of expressing wonder over these matters before a class, her eyes wide open until they popped slightly. It was easy for me to feel that becoming a proud American, as she said we should, did not mean feeling ashamed of being a Mexican.
15
Multiple Choice
What is the main idea? At Lincoln, making us into Americans did not mean scrubbing away what made us originally foreign. The teachers called us as our parents did, or as close as they could pronounce our names in Spanish or Japanese. No one was ever scolded or punished for speaking in his native tongue on the playground. Matti told the class about his mother’s down quilt, which she had made in Italy with the fine feathers of a thousand geese. Encarnación acted out how boys learned to fish in the Philippines. I astounded the third grade with the story of my travels on a stagecoach, which nobody else in the class had seen except in the museum at Sutter’s Fort. After a visit to the Crocker Art Gallery and its collection of heroic paintings of the golden age of California, someone showed a silk scroll with a Chinese painting. Miss Hopley herself had a way of expressing wonder over these matters before a class, her eyes wide open until they popped slightly. It was easy for me to feel that becoming a proud American, as she said we should, did not mean feeling ashamed of being a Mexican.
Students in classes at Lincoln School were allowed to speak in their native tongue.
There were quite a few field trips at the Lincoln School to museums and art galleries.
The Lincoln School encouraged each of the students to embrace his or her individual identity.
The students’ different cultures were fascinating to Miss Hopley.
16
What can you infer about the narrator?
The two of us walked south on Fifth Street one morning to the corner of Q Street and turned right. Half of the block was occupied by the Lincoln School. It was a three-story wooden building, with two wings that gave it the shape of a double-T connected by a central hall. It was a new building, painted yellow, with a shingled roof that was not like the red tile of the school in Mazatlán. I noticed other differences, none of them very reassuring.
17
Multiple Choice
Which of the following inferences about the narrator is best supported by the first paragraph of the excerpt?
The two of us walked south on Fifth Street one morning to the corner of Q Street and turned right. Half of the block was occupied by the Lincoln School. It was a three-story wooden building, with two wings that gave it the shape of a double-T connected by a central hall. It was a new building, painted yellow, with a shingled roof that was not like the red tile of the school in Mazatlán. I noticed other differences, none of them very reassuring.
The narrator and his mother had to walk a long way to get to the school.
The narrator has just started noticing the architecture of the United States.
he narrator is apprehensive at first about his new school due to its unfamiliarity.
The narrator is excited by the look of the school, with its new, yellow building.
18
Why does the narrator interrupt Miss Ryan in the following passage? What didn't work?
When we came to know each other better, I tried interrupting to tell Miss Ryan how we said it in Spanish. It didn’t work
19
Multiple Choice
Which is most likely the narrator’s reason for interrupting Miss Ryan in the following passage?
When we came to know each other better, I tried interrupting to tell Miss Ryan how we said it in Spanish. It didn’t work
The narrator would like to teach Miss Ryan to speak Spanish.
The narrator prefers Spanish words to English, and would like to show Miss Ryan why.
The narrator wants to impress Miss Ryan with words he knows that she does not.
Miss Ryan is overwhelming the narrator with so many new English words.
20
What is the most important idea in the first paragraph? Cite specific evidence from the selection or make inferences drawn from the text to support your answer.
The most important idea of the first paragraph is that entering a new school, especially one in a foreign country, can be very intimidating for a young child. In the first paragraph, Ernesto, a young Mexican immigrant, appears to be nervous as he is about to enter the Lincoln School in California for the first time. He contrasts the " shingled roof" of the Lincoln School to the "red tile" of his old "school in Mazatlán." He looks for similarities but notices only differences, "none of them very reassuring."
21
How do Miss Hopley's actions in paragraphs 7 and 8 help Ernesto decide whether the principal is a possible "friend or a menace"? What does he decide about her? Cite specific evidence from the text to support your answer.
Ernesto decides that he likes Miss Hopley. In paragraph 7, he catches the "friendliness of her voice and the sparkle in her eyes," although she speaks words that he does not understand. When she stands up, in paragraph 8, he decides that he likes her, for her statuesque body "seemed a match for giants."
22
How does the author's word choice in paragraph 12 that begins, "Miss Ryan took me to a seat at the front of the room," help readers understand how Ernesto was feeling on his first day in Miss Ryan's class? Cite three examples from the text to support your response.
The author's choice of the word "shrank" helps the reader understand that Ernesto was feeling fearful, and perhaps didn't want to be noticed. "Withering" indicates that he felt intimidated by Miss Ryan's height since his stature was small and "somewhat runty." The phrase "awful idiocies" indicates that Ernesto was very confused by the English language.
23
Homework: find your class, copy/paste your invite url, complete 2 assignments
Manning Core 1--> http://vocab.com/join/34VZ11T
Manning Core 2--> http://vocab.com/join/47Q0JTS
Manning Core 3--> http://vocab.com/join/31RDQXW
Manning Core 4--> http://vocab.com/join/26RGKDX
Rhynehardt Core 1 & 3--> http://vocab.com/join/26GY25N
"Barrio Boy" The First Read
This is a review of the First Read, to be sure everyone understands the selection.

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