At Storyboard That, we have come up with lots of fun ways to incorporate storyboarding into the classroom after reading. However, teachers emailed and asked for activities that students can take part in while reading. So, we are proud to present a chapter summary activity, the Chapter Recap. It's great to watch a story unfold, and now students can create a storyboard that shows what happened in each chapter, as they are reading. It's like a comic strip version of the novel!
Summaries play a crucial role in helping students understand important plot points and development. With a chapter recap, students will recognize important characters, along with their traits and motivations, note important details of setting, and track rising action through events of high tension. When students depict these items for their chapter recap, they will understand the plot line and often make critical reading discoveries that will lead to deeper understanding.
Although this lesson can be used for multiple grade levels, below are Common Core State Standards for Grades 9-10. Please see your Common Core State Standards for the correct, grade-appropriate strands.
Introduction: 10 minutes. The activity is continued for the duration of the novel. We approximate that each cell should take 10-25 minutes to complete. The time ranges by age, reading level, and complexity of the text.
Students will be able to read, take away, and recall important events, characters, and action of a chapter in a novel. Students will then be able to assess what was most important for the chapter and depict it visually.
When completing a chapter recap, students may need an explanation from the teacher on what a “recap” consists of. Students should be expected to summarize the most important part of the chapter, but not in a detailed chapter summary. The main idea is to get students to create one cell for each chapter; therefore, they must keep the information brief.
Before students create their chapter recap, it is a good idea to model what is expected. Using the Silas Marner example, show students what a finished product looks like. Teachers may also want to do Chapter 1 of the recap for students, on the worksheet provided. Alternatively, teachers may decide to do the first chapter in class together.
While reading, students will continue to create recaps after each chapter, or after every five chapters, as instructed by the teacher. Using Storyboard That’s slideshow feature, it is easy to share and show off chapter recaps as students are creating them. Using this to review before a test or quiz is also a great way to reinforce events in a novel.
After reading, have students compare their completed work with a classmate. This makes for an excellent study guide for a test, or ask students to complete a writing assignment based on an event from the novel!
To couple this assignment with a presentation, see our article on how to present a storyboard.
Check out these chapter summary activities below! One is the example above of Silas Marner. The others are from our Novel Study from the book, As Brave as You and from our guides on Stuart Little, The Watsons Go To Birmingham - 1963, The Stories Julian Tells and Cowgirl Kate and Cocoa.
The Chapter Recap activity is a way for students to create a storyboard that shows what happened in each chapter of a novel they are reading. It helps students recognize important characters, along with their traits and motivations, note important details of the setting, and track rising action through events of high tension.
The Chapter Recap activity can be used for students in grades 3-12. However, the complexity of the text and the time it takes to complete each cell may vary depending on the reading level and age of the students.
Teachers can use the Chapter Recap to assess student learning by reviewing the completed storyboards and evaluating how well students have understood and depicted the most important events, characters, and themes of the novel. Additionally, teachers can use the completed storyboards as a study guide for tests or as a basis for writing assignments.