The document discusses themes in literature. It defines a theme as a life lesson, meaning, or message about life that is communicated through a literary work. Themes are not explicit but rather implied and apply to the "big world" rather than just the small world of the story. Examples of themes include "money can't buy happiness" and "don't judge people based on surface appearances." The document provides guidance on identifying themes, noting they should convey advice applicable to the real world and be inferred from analyzing what happens in a story rather than being directly stated.
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Theme - The Search for Meaning (ereadingworksheets.com)
2. What is a Theme?
Theme: Life lesson, meaning, moral, or
message about life or human nature that
is communicated by a literary work.
In other words…
Theme is what the story teaches readers.
3. Themes
A theme is not a word, it is a sentence.
You don’t have to agree with the theme to
identify it.
Examples
Money can’t buy happiness.
Don’t judge people based on the surface.
It is better to die free than live under
tyranny.
4. What is the theme?
Jenny Puchovier was so excited. She had a
pack of Starburst in her lunch and she had been
looking forward to eating them all morning. Lunch
finally came and Jenny sat down to eat her
Starbursts when her friend Yudy sat next to her. “Let
me get the pink ones,” asked Yudy. Jenny liked the
pink ones best, but she thought Yudy was funny and
Jenny wanted Yudy to like her, so Jenny gave Yudy
all of her pink Starbursts. Before Jenny was done
giving Yudy the pink ones, Carrie sat on the other
side of Jenny. “Let me get the red and the orange
ones, Jenny. Remember when I gave you that
Snickers?” Jenny didn’t remember that, though she
did remember when Carrie ate a whole Snickers in
front of her, but Jenny thought Carrie was cool, so
she gave her the red and the orange Starbursts.
Now that she only had the yellow ones, Jenny wasn’t
so excited about eating starbursts anymore.
5. Example Answers
You can’t buy friends.
You have to take care of yourself.
Not everybody is your friend.
6. Big World of the Theme.
Applies to the “Real” World.
Identifying Themes
Themes are not explicit (clearly stated).
Themes are implied.
Themes are bigger than the story.
Small
World
of the
Story
7. Themes are about the big picture.
Not “Yellow Starbursts taste bad”
Not “Yudy and Carrie are bad friends.”
Think BIGGER.
Find “Real” World advice.
Big World of the Theme.
Applies to the “Real” World.
Small
World
of the
Story
8. Review
1. Theme is what we can learn from a
story.
2. Themes must be inferred.
3. Themes are about the BIG world.
9. Practice
1. We’ll read each story.
2. Write what you think the theme is.
3. Write another sentence explaining what
happens in the story that leads you to
believe this.
How does the small world of the story
connect to the big world theme?
10. Once there was a mean little boy who lived in a
small village. This mean little boy loved to mess
with people, so one day he ran up to a sheep
herder and shouted, “WOLF! WOLF! A wolf is
attacking the town!” The sheep herder grabbed his
staff and ran to defend the town, but realized he
had been fooled when the boy started pointing and
laughing at him. “Ha ha! I made you jump,” said
the boy. Then the boy ran up to a farmer and
shouted, “WOLF! WOLF! A wolf is attacking the
town!” The farmer grabbed his pitchfork and ran to
defend the town, but when the boy started pointing
and laughing at him, he realized he had been
tricked. As the boy went back to his family’s farm
laughing about the funny trick he played, he saw a
real wolf in his father’s chicken coop. As the wolf
ate all of his father’s chickens, the boy screamed
over and over again, “WOLF! WOLF! Please help
us!” But nobody came to help him.
11. Example Answers
Don’t ask for help unless you really need it.
Don’t play tricks on the people around you.
12. Angie loved to draw. She made colorful designs
of people’s names with bright hearts & flowers, but
she lost own markers, so she borrowed her
teacher’s. The school day was ending, but Angie
wanted to keep coloring, so she took the teacher’s
markers home and lost them in her messy room.
She came back to school the next day and wanted to
color again, so she asked the teacher for more
markers. The teacher replied, “Sure, Angie, but this
is my last pack.” Angie said she would be careful,
but by the end of the day the markers were scattered
all over the floor and the custodian swept them up
and disposed of them. When Angie came in the next
day, she asked the teacher for more markers, but
she was disappointed to find that there weren’t any
more. “I don’t know where all of my markers went,”
said the teacher, “but I don’t have them.” Angie had
to draw her pictures with drab pencils.
13. Example Answers
Take care of shared resources.
Some things will not replenish after they are
exhausted.
14. Jenny hated reading class. She didn’t
understand point of view or figurative language, and
not knowing how to do the work frustrated her. She
asked the teacher for help, but he spoke so fast and
used such big words that she still couldn’t
understand. The teacher asked if she understood,
and she nodded her head, but she didn’t. Jenny’s
friend Katie knew that Jenny was having trouble,
and, rather than just giving Jenny all of the answers,
Katie explained to Jenny how to solve the problems.
Katie spoke clearly and at Jenny’s level, and Jenny
was happy that she finally learned how to do the
work. Later in the week, Katie was having trouble in
math class. She didn’t understand coordinates and
was really frustrated. Seeing that Katie was having
problems, Jenny, who understood math very well,
taught Katie coordinates. Both girls made honor roll
that quarter.