Q24 - One Book, One Camel

Last updated 9 months ago
3 questions
Note from the author:

6.5F - The student is expected to make inferences and use evidence to support understanding.

  • Make Inferences: You should make reasonable connections within and beyond a text to draw conclusions about information or ideas not explicitly stated in the text. For example, you might recognize that a poem titled “Eating Vegetables” lists activities a person might find unpleasant (e.g., having cavities filled, cleaning the bottom of the trash can with bare hands, and so on). Even if none of the lines ever mentions anything about vegetables, you could reasonably infer that the speaker of the poem finds vegetables undesirable. You should use context presented in the text, prior knowledge or experience, text features, and/or other comprehension tools to make logical assumptions about the intended meaning in a text.
  • Use Evidence: You should use information presented in a text to make reasonable, logical assumptions about the intended meaning. Evidence that corroborates understanding can be any relevant details, facts, or information that helps you understand what you are reading.

6.5F - The student is expected to make inferences and use evidence to support understanding.

  • Make Inferences: You should make reasonable connections within and beyond a text to draw conclusions about information or ideas not explicitly stated in the text. For example, you might recognize that a poem titled “Eating Vegetables” lists activities a person might find unpleasant (e.g., having cavities filled, cleaning the bottom of the trash can with bare hands, and so on). Even if none of the lines ever mentions anything about vegetables, you could reasonably infer that the speaker of the poem finds vegetables undesirable. You should use context presented in the text, prior knowledge or experience, text features, and/or other comprehension tools to make logical assumptions about the intended meaning in a text.
  • Use Evidence: You should use information presented in a text to make reasonable, logical assumptions about the intended meaning. Evidence that corroborates understanding can be any relevant details, facts, or information that helps you understand what you are reading.

A Source of Inspiration

The schoolchildren aren't the only ones inspired by the camel library. Alfred Muchilwa is an illustrator of children's books. Muchilwa is always looking for stories that are meaningful to children in his country. He has traveled about 250 miles to the Garissa region from Nairobi, the country's capital. He sits quietly, sketching scenes for his story. Muchilwa hopes to bring this place to life on the page.

The Camel Mobile Library is the subject of his newest book. He has chosen to focus on one charming camel named Gellow. In the story, Gellow is delivering books for the first time and becomes frightened by a lion. Gellow loses his load of books, but children come to the rescue to save them from ruin.
1

Which answer did you pick for the question?

24. Based on the section titled "A Source of Inspiration," what is the most likely way that children in Garissa will read Muchilwa's story about Gellow when it is published?

1

Why did you chose that answer?

1

What will you do differently next time?