The Giving Tree
Written and Illustrated by Shel Silverstein
Harper & Row, 1964
Poetry
This classic book is about a little boy that has a very close relationship with a tree. He visits the tree every day and eats the apples from the tree. He would climb the tree and swing from the tree's branches. As the boy grew older, he began to take even more away from the tree. Check this book out to see what happens at the end of the story. Throughout this book, Shel Silverstein implements many different aspects of poetry. This free verse poem allows the author to express and explain the boys life through various ways. As the boy develops, his relationship with the tree changes. Silverstein uses free verse poetry to tell this story.
The illustrations in this book are very simple. Every picture is in black and white and done with pen and ink. In every illustration, the giving tree is pictured. As the years pass by in the story, the tree begins to look different. After the boy takes from the tree, the tree changes. Also, the boy changes as he gets older. The boy and the tree are drawn throughout the story. These drawings would be great to use in the classroom to talk about prediction. The students could try to predict what was going to happen next by evaluating the illustrations.
I would use this book in a first grade classroom for an English lesson. The students could work on predictions and cause and effect. They could discuss the effects that the boy has on the tree because of everything that he takes from it. The students could also find the causes of some of the things that happen to the boy and the tree. The students could also make predictions by discussing the illustrations. Overall, this is a great book to read to your students because of the meaning and purpose behind it. This is a great way to introduce poetry to your students.
Check out The Giving Tree to read to your students!
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