102 pages • 3 hours read
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Use this activity to engage all types of learners, while requiring that they refer to and incorporate details from the text over the course of the activity.
“The Body in the Woods Evidence Board”
In this activity, students will demonstrate their ability to follow Ruby’s inferences and deductions as the plot unfolds by creating an “evidence board” presentation that gradually reveals the solution to the mystery.
Ruby is the most analytical and observant team member. What does she observe, what inferences does she make, and how does she gradually deduce the solution to the mystery? In this activity, you will create a presentation that uses an “evidence board” format to follow Ruby’s thought process as she considers who is responsible for the murders.
Do Some Background Research
Gather Your Clues
Create Your Evidence Board
Teaching Suggestion: After students complete their presentations, you may wish to give them time to present their work in class or to a small group or offer them an online space to post their presentations for others to see. You might elicit peer feedback, such as answering a brief set of questions about a few peers’ presentations. If your students are ready for an additional challenge, you might also ask them to discuss or write about how Alexis’s perspective differs from Ruby’s—at which points in these presentations would Alexis disagree with Ruby’s thoughts about the case, and why would she disagree?
Differentiation Suggestion: English learners, students with dyslexia, and those with attentional and executive function differences may struggle to gather together the clues, inferences, and deductions needed to create their evidence boards. These students may benefit from a chart or list with pertinent chapters identified for guidance. Students who have difficulty with abstract ideas and those with executive function issues may not immediately understand how to show relationships among ideas in this particular format. You might offer these students some coaching on various ways to position and connect elements to show their relationships.
Paired Text Extension:
This activity can also be completed with April Henry’s Blood Will Tell: A Point Last Seen Mystery or with Maureen Johnson’s The Box in the Woods.
Teaching Suggestion: Should you choose to use this activity with one of the Paired Texts, you will need to change the character whose perspective you are asking students to focus on.
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