Eggs Common Core Educator Guide
Eggs Common Core Educator Guide
Eggs Common Core Educator Guide
978-0-316-16647-8
Every book can meet most if not all Common Core State Standards.
However, we have found that some books speak directly to a few Standards
with strength. These applications seek to make the connections between a
particular text and the Common Core Standards as written for fifth graders
leaning on this texts literary strengths.
5.RL.3
This standard asks students to compare and contrast two (or more) characters, settings, or
events in the story. This text has two main characters, each with a unique story of mothering,
specifically, and parenting, in general. Students may compare (and contrast) Primroses and
Davids stories; Davids mom has died recently as we enter the story and Primroses mom,
although alive, is not particularly present. The characters feelings regarding their situations are
evident in their actions and words, thus students can draw on details from the book (including
how the characters interact), as 5.RL.3 encourages. Refrigerator John and Davids grandmother
make intriguing characters to consider as well, as each attempts to support the younger
characters. Spinelli also provides well-described events in Eggs that could make fodder for this
comparative analysis.
5.RL.2
Death, friendship, loss, grieving, fear, and family are a few of the themes that are taken up in
this digestible text. Encourage students to determine a theme of the story; within this work,
students should consider details from the story and how characters respond to challenges.
Because Spinelli has created characters that are dealing with life challenges, students have
opportunities to see and document these themes with evidence from the text. Model one of the
thematic ideas (in support of a book group), as a means of introducing students to the work of
documenting how they came to their ideas.
5.RL.1
The first standard requires that students quote accurately from their texts: both explaining what
the text says explicitly as well as drawing inferences from the text. The preceding two standards
are supported by this work of referencing the text. Eggs although rich, is not too complex and
is an excellent text for starting to hold students more accountable for referencing details in the
book that support their thinking on comparative analyses as well as thematic considerations
(5.RL.3 and 5.RL.2).
Page Number
Start
Purpose
14-15
70-71
85
Top of page
114
203-204
Top of page
This guide was prepared by Mollie Welsh Kruger, Ed.D., Bank Street College of Education.