Pack Your Bags for a Literacy Field Trip

Last Updated on September 1, 2020 by Ginny Kochis

Books can certainly take you places in your imagination, but how about letting them take you to real places, too?  Combine your family read-alouds with hands on activities by going on a literacy field trip.

Literacyfieldtrip - Pack Your Bags For A Literacy Field Trip - Gifted/2e Education

 

Literacy field trips start with discussion:

Talk about the setting.  What do you imagine this place looks like?  What things would you hear?  See?  Smell?

Talk about the time period.  When does the story take place?  What is that time period like?  How would it affect the setting?  The characters?

Talk about the characters.  What might they eat?  What do they do?  Where do they go?  What do they like?  What do they look like?  How do they dress?

Once you’ve explored these ideas, take action:

Map it out.  Create your own version of the setting on paper.  Find similar locations close by if you can, or determine what you need to recreate it close to home.  Take a picnic, plan a hike, or stage some book-based photos.  Use your answers to the questions above as a guide for finding your perfect location.

Take a trip.  In some cases, books are set in locations you can actually visit.  If that’s the case, go!  Visit a Civil War battlefield or colonial site.  Take a trip to a relevant museum.  Plan a daytrip or a weekend away.

Be creative. In other cases, a place to visit might not be immediately obvious.  You might not live anywhere near the Eastern shore of Maryland if you’re reading Misty of Chincoteague, is there a horse farm close by? A trip to Oz is impossible, but what about a local science center to learn about tornadoes?  If you’ve read the Boxcar Children, why not visit a train station?  The only limit is your ingenuity.

Let Your Imagination Take You Places In Real Life Too With A Literacy Family Field Trip - Pack Your Bags For A Literacy Field Trip - Gifted/2e Education

 

Suggested titles and possible activities:

Frog and Toad series – expedition to a local creek or nature center

Number the Stars – trip to a local holocaust or World War II history museum

Alice in Wonderland – visit a local tea room for tea

The View at the Zoo – visit the zoo or nature center

 

 

 

12 Comments

  1. My son and I so did this! We both read the same book (his choice) and then we went to the place where the climax took place, which is only a 2 hour drive from us. It was a great day to strengthen our relationship and while I don’t think it was a fantastic book it was a great idea all together. Definitely I’ll do it again! Thanks for the ideas.

  2. Great idea, Ginny! I wrote a post called “94 Field Trips from A to Z” using the alphabet (https://classicalscholar.com/homeschool-field-trips/), but now you’ve got my brain ticking off all the literary field trips (literal and imagined) we could go on! For some reason, the first fantasy trip that comes to mind is Gwyntystorm in The Princess and Curdie (George MacDonald). Thanks for inspiring me!

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