

Monkey Tales
Presentation
•
English
•
6th Grade
•
Medium
+29
Standards-aligned

Mia Charlton
Used 36+ times
FREE Resource
7 Slides • 14 Questions
1
Monkey Tales Review
Common Assessment 1 Review

2
1 I suppose that everyone who has ever lived in India has some stories to tell about monkeys, and my family is no exception. When we lived in Lucknow, in northern India, we saw monkeys almost every day, because they lived all around us. In fact, I always thought it was a little silly that the Lucknow zoo had a monkey house, there being many more monkeys outside than inside it.
2 Mother kept a large bowl of fruit on the buffet in the dining room of our home. Depending on the season, the bowl held mangoes or sweet limes, pomegranates or guavas, papayas or custard apples, as well as apples, bananas, and oranges (which were really tangerines, but we called them oranges). In short, the bowl held everything monkeys like, except peanuts.
3
Multiple Choice
What POV is this story being told in?
1st Person
3rd Person Limited
3rd Person Omniscient
4
Multiple Choice
Is it common for people in India to have an experience with monkeys?
Yes
No
5
Multiple Choice
2 Mother kept a large bowl of fruit on the buffet in the dining room of our home. Depending on the season, the bowl held mangoes or sweet limes, pomegranates or guavas, papayas or custard apples, as well as apples, bananas, and oranges (which were really tangerines, but we called them oranges). In short, the bowl held everything monkeys like, except peanuts.
The author includes paragraph 2 most likely to show —
why his mother decided to fill a bowl with fruits that monkeys like
why he often encountered monkeys when living in India
what similarities his family had with the family of monkeys
what tempted the monkeys to come into his family’s house
6
3 One morning Mother came walking in from the back garden, through the veranda and past the kitchen. She had just picked several roses and thought they would look nice in a vase placed beside the fruit bowl. But when she walked into the dining room, there they were! Sitting right next to the bowl and helping herself to its contents was a mother monkey. All around her on the buffet, and across the dining room table, were about a dozen baby monkeys. The monkey mother probably had nieces and nephews besides her own children (monkeys tend to share their young), and there they all were, being quite still and orderly, not chattering and fighting as you might expect.
7
Multiple Choice
3 ... All around her on the buffet, and across the dining room table, were about a dozen baby monkeys.
Buffet\buf·fet | \ ˈbə-fət\n 1. a meal consisting of several dishes from which guests serve themselves."a cold buffet lunch" 2. a room or counter in a station, hotel, or other public building selling light meals or snacks. 3. a cabinet with shelves and drawers for keeping dinnerware and table linens; a sideboard.
Which definition of the word buffet is used in paragraph 3?
Definition 1
Definition 2
Definition 3
None of the Above
8
4 The mother monkey looked over each piece of fruit as she took it from the bowl and handed it ever so carefully to the baby monkey in front of her. As that little one moved aside, the entire group moved up a place, and the next baby monkey reached out for the morning’s meal. They all seemed overwhelmed by their good fortune, for they were behaving themselves. Except that they were eating all of our fruit, which my mother didn’t like at all.
9
Multiple Choice
When the author’s mother saw the family of monkeys in her dining room, she most likely felt —
Amused
Cheated
Surprised
Sympathetic
10
5 Mother backed quietly out of the dining room doorway and called Maim Beg, our cook, who had been busy making breakfast in the kitchen. The best thing to do, they decided, was to go around the house to the front door, tiptoe quietly through the living room, and shut the door between living and dining rooms. Then, going from the living room to the bedroom door into the dining room, they could shoo the monkeys out of the dining room by way of the veranda.
11
Multiple Choice
The description of the mother monkey and the young monkeys in the dining room helps the reader —
see why monkeys are common in some areas of India
recognize the similarities between adult monkeys and young monkeys
realize how unusual the monkeys’ behavior was
understand why monkeys like to eat fruit
12
6 The fruit-bowl breakfast wasn’t the last we saw of monkeys, of course. Once, when my sister and some friends and I were parading along the back wall of the college compound where we lived, we met a monkey tribe parading along the same wall, but going in the opposite direction. We saw them coming just about the same time they saw us coming, and the question was, who was going to give up the right of way? We thought we would, because the tribe was led by a great big old warrior of a grandpa who snarled and grunted and made feint attacks at us as he came along the wall, hopping fiercely on all fours. In fact, we fairly fell off the wall trying to get back to the old tree we had used to climb up. And because I was the smallest and at the back of the parade, I was almost run over by everyone else hurrying to get away. Everyone except my sister.
13
Multiple Choice
Read this sentence from paragraph 6.
In fact, we fairly fell off the wall trying to get back to the old tree we had used to climb up.
The author uses this sentence to show —
that the children were not skilled at walking on the wall
how the children’s actions resembled those of the monkeys
that the climbing skills of the monkeys were better than those of the children
how afraid the children were of the grandpa monkey
14
Multiple Choice
compound \ı käm- •paund\ n
1. a word formed by joining other words 2. a grouping of buildings contained inside a bordering structure 3. an object created by combining parts 4. a substance formed by mixing different chemicals
Which definition of the word compound is used in paragraph 6?
Definition 1
Definition 2
Definition 3
Definition 4
15
Multiple Choice
In paragraph 6, what does the word feint mean?
Intense
Wild Like
Deceiving
Quick
16
7 Judy had been leading the parade along the wall and so was closest to the grunting grandpa. There was only one thing to do to give the rest of us time to get away. And Judy did it. She bent over until her curled-up hands touched the top of the wall, and she snarled and grunted and feinted a fierce fight right back at grandpa. So, while the rest of us ran down the wall to the tree, there were Judy and grandpa monkey, hooting and hollering and baring their teeth, daring each other to strike the first blow. The rest of us realized what was happening only after we were safely on the ground, and suddenly we were worried for Judy. How would she get down? But Judy managed to back slowly away from grandpa and his followers until she, too, was able to slide down our tree and run with the rest of us across the back lawn to safety.
17
Multiple Choice
Judy’s encounter with the grandpa monkey suggests that she was —
hoping to get a close look at the monkeys
aware that the monkeys could have been dangerous
concerned about the grandpa monkey’s children
entertained by the grandpa monkey’s actions
18
Multiple Choice
From the information provided in the selection, the reader can tell that monkeys typically —
travel great distances
depend on people for food
live in large family groups
live high in the treetops
19
Multiple Choice
What lesson did the author learn while living in India?
Monkeys can cause problems that require creative solutions.
Food can be used to help calm aggressive monkeys.
It is wise to leave monkeys alone while they are eating.
It helps to befriend people who are familiar with the behavior of monkeys.
20
Multiple Choice
One conclusion that can be made about Monkey Tales is…
Most people know how to handle seeing monkeys in India.
Judy gets into fights with monkeys often.
The narrator loves when monkeys show up at his house.
None of the above
21
Multiple Choice
The author wrote this selection most likely to-
Share a funny story about monkeys that live in India
Inform others about the importance of giving monkey fruit when they don’t live in the zoo
Explain how to get monkeys out of your house
Describe a time where he had a close encounter with monkey’s while back home in India
Monkey Tales Review
Common Assessment 1 Review

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