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The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster

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The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster A Literary Quest for 6 Grade Collaboration, Exploration and Imagination A Literary Adventure I first read The Phantom Tollbooth ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster


1
The Phantom Tollboothby Norton Juster
  • A Literary Quest for 6 Grade Collaboration,
    Exploration and Imagination

2
A Literary Adventure
  • I first read The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton
    Juster, as an adult. I became enamored with the
    book, its figurative language, wordplay, and the
    sheer creativity of making language come alive
    and represent something completely unique. While
    reading the book, it is almost impossible NOT to
    think of the immense educational opportunities
    for students. As with any good book, every time
    I re-read The Phantom Tollbooth, I discover
    something new or interpret a familiar passage in
    a completely new way! Join me as we take a quick
    journey along with Milo, to see how to
    incorporate The Phantom Tollbooth into an amazing
    learning adventure!

3
Meet MiloIt seems to me that almost everything
is a waste of time, he remarked one day as he
walked dejectedly home from school. And, since
no one bothered to explain otherwise, he regarded
the process of seeking knowledge as the greatest
waste of time of all. (9)
  • Like many of our students, Milo would rather be
    somewhere else, doing something else. Nothing
    captures his attention for long, for hes
    perpetually bored and restless.
  • In the story, Milo returns home after a typical
    non-eventful school day, to discover a large box
    in his room. With its contents, Milo constructs
    a magical tollbooth which transports him to the
    Kingdom of Wisdom. He is given a map, some coins
    to pay the toll, precautionary road signs, and a
    book of rules and traffic regulations.

4
The TollboothOne genuine turnpike
tollbootheasily assembled at home, and for use
by those who have never traveled in lands
beyond. (12) Results are not guaranteed, but
if not perfectly satisfied, your wasted time will
be refunded. Tollbooth directions (13)
  • In the world of education, our tollbooth is the
    school door The map, our curriculum Our
    kingdom, the school building Our traveling
    companions, the other faculty and staff The
    traveler, our students. As educators, how can we
    ensure that our students get the most out of
    their educational travels?
  • Media specialists have the advantage of working
    with the entire faculty and student body, knowing
    the entire curriculum, and having the skills to
    incorporate collaboration and information
    literacy into every aspect of education.
  • How can media specialists help teachers integrate
    literature and collaboration into many of their
    lessons? By thinking outside of the box (or
    through the tollbooth), media specialists have a
    unique opportunity to introduce teachers to
    literature that meets a variety of curriculum
    needs, with methods and ideas to peak student
    interest. Danny Callison states, Collaboration
    does not take place because on an educator needs
    the others expertise as much as the
    collaboration is built on shared goals and
    knowledge that are enriched by a partnership for
    instruction. (2001)

5
Instructions for Assembly
  • The following slides are a combination of ideas
    and learning opportunities presented within the
    context of The Phantom Tollbooth, as they could
    be suggested by a media specialist to teachers.
    They can be used to support comprehension of the
    book or to expand upon the books ideas to
    enhance student learning. Ive included an
    occasional standard from the Fourth Grade Indiana
    Academic Standards, to demonstrate how these
    activities meet additional educational standards
    as well. The slides follow the plot, as Milo
    makes his way through the Kingdom of Wisdom.
    Throughout the slides, Ive added a few
    cautionary road signs of my own, to aid in our
    exploration. Be sure to look for the following
    signs
  • Stop Sign Journal or inquiry opportunities
  • Slow Sign Take time to enjoy these fun
    activities
  • Curves Ahead Multiple educational opportunities
    rolled into one concept
  • Detour An idea for extended study
  • The tollbooth has been constructed. Open your
    book and your minds. Its time for our journey
    to begin.

6
ExpectationsExpectations is the place you must
always go before you get to where you are going.
Of course, some people never get beyond
Expectations. the Whether Man (19)
  • Through the tollbooth, the first person Milo
    encounters is the Whether man. The Whether Man
    predicts not the weather, but whether people can
    make their own decisions.
  • Can you define whether?
  • Place whether in a sentence with a clear
    context clue.  
  • We should try to meet them whether it's raining
    or not.

7
The DoldrumsWell, continued the Watchdog,
since you got here by not thinking, it seems
reasonable to expect that, in order to get out,
you must start thinking. Milo began to think as
hard as he couldAnd as he thought, the wheels
began to turn. (31)
  • It is here that Milo meets Tock the Watchdog, a
    dog whose body is made of a large clock. Explore
    compound words (language arts). Explore time
    zones (geography) time as years, months, weeks,
    hours, minutes, etc
  • In the Doldrums, Milo encounters the
    Lethargarians, who promote laziness. What can we
    do to give our bodies energy? Discuss proper
    nutrition and exercise. (health, physical
    education)

8
Dictionopolis
  • In Dictionopolis, the word market is like a
    Scrabble game. In Scrabble, letters are given
    point values according to their use- the more
    frequently a letter is used, the lower the point
    value. In the word market, letters taste
    according to their use, the more frequently the
    letter is used, the sweeter it tastes. Using
    Scrabble tiles, add up the values of this weeks
    spelling words. Which word has the most points?
    Which word has the least? Which word would taste
    the best? Why?
  • In small groups, view one page or paragraph of a
    book. Begin to count Which word occurs most
    frequently? Which letter is used most
    frequently? How many words in a sentence? How
    many sentences in a paragraph? How can we show
    this information in a graph?
  • Spelling Bee- Spell this weeks words or
    frequently used vocabulary.

9
King Azaz the Unabridged- Ruler of Dictionopolis
  • King Azaz the Unabridged is the ruler of
    Dictionopolis. The Media Specialist can review
    or introduce the following literacy skills and
    terminology- abridged vs. unabridged the use of
    dictionary guide words the use of dictionary
    versus a thesaurus.
  • The members of the Dictionopolis Cabinet use as
    many words as possible to explain a situation.
    Explore synonyms- write 8 words to describe you,
    then look them up in thesaurus to find synonyms
    to those words. How can we enrich our writing by
    using synonyms?

10
Faintly Macabretoday people use as many words
as they can and think themselves very wise for
doing so. For always remember that while it is
wrong to use too few words, it is far worse to
use too many. - Faintly Macabre (68).
  • To Faintly Macabre (a which, not a witch),
    Silence is Golden. Explore figurative
    language clichés, metaphors, similes, oxymoron,
    puns, irony, etcWhat kinds of phrases do you
    hear your parents or grandparents say? What
    kinds of phrases do you say? Explore popular
    sayings or phrases from recent decades and
    compare them to current language trends.
    (example groovy vs. sweet)
  • Compare and contrast sentences that essentially
    have the same meaning, but contain a
    significantly different number of words. Which
    sentence sounds better? Which is easiest to
    understand? In what situation is each sentence
    more appropriate?

11
The Princesses Sweet Rhyme and Pure Reason
  • It was the princesses who kept harmony in the
    Kingdom of Wisdom. Discuss why King Azaz and the
    Mathemagician are at war. Why do these two
    kingdoms disagree? What types of characters are
    found in each kingdom? Think of reasons why
    countries go to war today. What, besides rhyme
    and reason, can bring peace to our world?

12
The Royal Feast
  • Milo learns at the Royal Feast that he must eat
    his words. Ask the assistance of the Cafeteria
    Staff to create word pancakes (students write
    words with batter onto a griddle using a ketchup
    bottle). Other options alphabet soup, Alphabets
    cereal. Similar to Milo, students must create a
    three word speech to eat.

13
Chroma the Great and the Colorful Symphony
  • Discuss colors and interpret how they make us
    feel. Look at a variety of paintings and discuss
    how color impacts what the painting/ artist is
    trying to convey.
  • listen to a variety of symphony performances.
    How does the music evoke feeling? If they were
    playing colors, what colors do you hear?
  • Chromas symphony plays the colors of the world,
    without which, the world would look like a blank
    coloring book- a white background with black
    lines. Allow for coloring time while listening
    to symphony pieces. Did the music inspire you to
    color a certain way or use specific colors?

14
Dr. Dischord Dynne
  • Dynne has collected all of the sounds.
  • How do Deaf people function effectively and
    happily in a world without sound? Have small
    groups construct an inquiry about the various
    methods used by the Deaf in a hearing world.
  • (communication sign language, oral
    communication, TTD devices, e-mail everyday
    devices used by the Deaf such as vibrating alarm
    clocks, hearing aids, closed captioning, flashing
    lights connected to doorbells and baby monitors,
    hearing dogs, etc)

15
The Island of ConclusionsNow will you tell me
where we are? asked Tock as he looked around the
desolate island. To be sure, said Canby
youre on the island of Conclusions. But how
did we get here? asked Milo You jumped of
course, explained Canby, every time you decide
something without having a good reason, you jump
to Conclusions (168)
  • With the PE teacher, explore moveable
    figurative language phrases hop to it, jump to
    conclusions, run amok, spring into action, roll
    with the punches, on a roll, walk in someone
    elses shoes, rub elbows, kick the bucket, etc...
  • Explore idioms.
  • Canby is introduced only if Milo can figure out
    the riddle. Explore the jokes, riddles, puns,
    limericks, poetry, plays, etc

16
Stop and Pay Your Toll
  • Journal Now that Milo has encountered
    Dictionopolis, what do you think will happen when
    he visits a place called Digitopolis? What might
    it be like there? Who might be the Ruler? How
    will Milo behave, as you know him from home and
    from his travels thus far?

17
Digitopolis
  • Create your own Digitopolis resident.

18
The Mathemagician- Ruler of Digitopolis
  • The Mathemagicians circular office corresponds
    to the points of a compass. Explore direction,
    using and reading maps and keys, using a compass.
    Map the playground or your own version of the
    Kingdom of Wisdom.

19
The Land of Infinitysort of. Where the
tallest, the shortest, the biggest, the smallest,
and the most and the least of everything are
kept. The Mathemagician (191)
  • Explore the term infinity.
  • Explore averages What is the average amount of
    rainfall in Indiana? The USA? How many times a
    day do we change classrooms on average? How many
    people in the classroom eat hot lunch in a week
    on average?
  • Like The Mathemagicians letter to King Azaz,
    write a letter using numbers only. (each letter
    of the alphabet corresponds to its number within
    the alphabet. A1, B2, etc) Decode a
    classmates letter.

20
Stop and Pay Your Toll
  • King Azaz and the Mathemagician were afraid Milo
    would fail to rescue the princesses if he knew
    the task was impossible. Journal Why do you
    think Milo agreed to the task? In what ways did
    Milo change from the boy he was before
    discovering the tollbooth?
  • How is the Kingdom of Wisdom like your school or
    like your community? In small groups, construct a
    board game to demonstrate your school or
    community.

21
The Castle in the Air
  • Throughout his travels, Milos new friends gave
    him the tools he needed to be successful in
    rescuing the Princesses Sweet Rhyme and Pure
    Reason. As educators, we too, give our students
    the tools to be successful. Milos traveling
    companions helped to remind him of what he had
    and how to use it, and so must we remind students
    of how their prior knowledge and skills continue
    to assist them in new endeavors.
  • As Rhyme reminds Milo, many places that you
    would like to see are just off the map and many
    things you want to know are just out of sight or
    a little beyond your reach. But someday, youll
    reach them all, for what you learn today, for no
    reason at all, will help you discover all the
    wonderful secrets of tomorrow.

22
Avoid the Terrible Trivium!I am the Terrible
Trivium, demon of petty tasks and worthless jobs,
ogre of wasted effort and monster of habit. (213)
  • It is easy to rely on workbooks and texts to
    guide our educational instruction. How much more
    interesting and valuable it can be for both
    students and educators to add inquiry and
    collaboration to our instruction. But, its not
    easy
  • As the Terrible Trivium tells Milo, Think of all
    the trouble it saves If you only do the easy and
    useless jobs, youll never have to worry about
    the important ones which are so difficult.
  • By enriching classroom activities with
    literature, or vice versa, we open new doors of
    discovery for our students. I hope that youve
    been as intrigued by Milos world as I am, and I
    hope that this brief presentation has been like a
    tollbooth to new kingdoms of ideas for you as
    educators. Our ride stops here, but the journey
    continuesin your classroom.

23
Words of Wisdom from Rhyme and Reason
  • You must never feel badly about making
    mistakes, explained Reason quietly, as long as
    you take the trouble to learn from them. For you
    often learn more by being wrong for the right
    reasons, than you do by being right for the wrong
    reasons. (233)
  • but its not just learning things thats
    important. Its learning what to do with what
    you learn and learning why you learn things at
    all that matters. - Rhyme (223)

24
Perhaps a Smaller Kingdom?
  • Though a wide variety of units and areas of study
    have been explored here, one could instead create
    a kingdom within a classroom- set up a variety of
    stations for students to explore some of these
    activities and work their way through Milos
    journey. Students can create a map and journal
    their experiences as they move through the story.
  • Dictionopolis use the dictionary, thesaurus
  • Digitopolis fractions, tangrams, time,
    measurement
  • Valley of Sound using headphones-listen to
    symphony music
  • Conduct with Chroma create your own colorful
    world.
  • The Doldrums relax and read
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