Sample Guide
Sample Guide
Sample Guide
Summarizer
Name: Circle:
Meeting Date: Reading Assignment:
Book:
Summary:
Key Points:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Literature Circle Role Sheet
Questioner/Discussion Director
Name: Circle:
Meeting Date: Reading Assignment:
Book:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Tips: Consider
Connector
Connector: Your job is to find connections between the book and you, and between
the book and the wider world. Consider the list below when you make your
connections.
Illustrator
Name: Circle:
Meeting Date: Reading Assignment:
Book:
Illustrator: Good readers make pictures in their minds as they read. This is a chance to
share some of your own images and visions. Draw some kind of picture related to the
reading you have just done. It can be a sketch, cartoon, diagram, flowchart, or stick
figure scene. You can draw a picture of something that happened in your book, or
something that the reading reminded you of, or a picture that conveys any idea or feeling
you got from the reading. Any kind of drawing or graphic is okay – you can even label
things with words if that helps. Make your drawing(s) on any remaining space on this
side and on the other side of this sheet. If you use a separate sheet of paper, be sure to
staple it to this role sheet.
Presentation Plan: Whenever it fits in the conversation, show your drawing to your
group. You don’t have to explain it immediately. You can let people speculate what your
picture means, so they can connect your drawing to their own ideas about the reading.
After everyone has had a say, you can always have the last word: tell them what your
picture means, refer to the parts in the text that you used, and/or convey what it
represents to you.
Literature Circle Roles
Travel Tracer
Name: Circle:
Meeting Date: Reading Assignment:
Book:
Travel Tracer: When you are reading a book in which characters move around often
and the scene changes frequently, it is important for everyone in your group to know
where things are happening and how the setting may have changed. That’s your job:
carefully track where the action takes place during today’s reading. Describe each setting
in detail, either in words or with an action map or diagram. While you may use this
sheet, you may find that you need to use an additional sheet. If that is the case, be sure to
staple any additional sheets to this role sheet. Also, always give the page locations where
the scene is described.
Name Circle
Book
• Jot down puzzling or unfamiliar words while you are reading. Later, look up
the definitions in either a dictionary or some other source.
• You may also run across words that stand out somehow in the reading – words
that are repeated a lot, used in an unusual way, or are crucial to the meaning
of the text. Mark these special words, too, and be ready to share your ideas on
their usage to the group.
Note: When discussing vocabulary, you should always refer back to the text in order to
examine the word in context.
Word Pg. # & Paragraph Definition Reason/Plan
for
Discussion
Literature Circle Roles
Literary Luminary
Name: Circle:
Meeting Date: Reading Assignment:
Book:
Literary Luminary: Your job is to locate a few special sections or quotations in the text
for your group to talk over. The idea is to help people go back to some especially
interesting, powerful, funny, puzzling, or important sections of the reading and think
about them more carefully. Also, look for literary devices and make connections to the
six elements of fiction. As you decide which passages or paragraphs are worth going
back to, make a note of why you picked each one and consider some plans for how they
should be shared. You can read passages aloud yourself, ask someone else to read them
or have people read them silently and then discuss them. Remember, the purpose is to
suggest material for discussion.
Researcher
Name: Circle:
Meeting Date: Reading Assignment:
Book:
Researcher: Your job is to dig up some background information on any relevant topic
related to your book. This might include