🍎 Great Cape o' Colors, and
  
  
  
    Grow! taught us about the
    fruit, vegetables, herbs, and edible flowers we can get from our
    gardens.  Great Cape taught us about color words in
    English and Spanish.  Highchair was a funny story
    about a food monster who lurks around the house.  In this post, we are
    going to take a look at Ida's Witness... a beautiful story about
    Karl Beckstrand's great-grandmother.  Keep reading to learn about Ida,
    the amazing woman she was, and to find out how you can use Ida's Witness in your classroom.
    
    
    
    
      
    
    
    
      
      
      
      
      
        
      
      
        
      
      
      
      
      
        
      
      
      
    
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
        
      
      
      
    
    
    
    
      
      
      
      
      
        
      
    
    
    
    
    
  
      Disclosure:
        Affiliate links
        to Amazon are included in this post.
    
    Author's Summary
        When young Ida contracts scarlet fever in 1880s Sweden, she almost loses
        her sight. After another brush with death, Ida learns that there is more
        than this life, disease has an end, and small miracles happen every day.
        With a new faith, Ida leaves her mother and brother and sails with her
        sister to America for a better life... free from poverty and
        persecution. But she knows no English. How will she share what she’s
        learned in a strange country? The prequel to Anna’s Prayer, Ida’s Witness is a delightful, inspiring story for
        all ages and cultures. Get this hybrid picture book about immigration,
        religious freedom, courageous women, and family history.
      
      
        🍎 Title: Ida's Witness
        
        
          
            
          
        
        
          
          
      
      🍎 Author: Karl Beckstrand
        🍎 Date: November 15, 2014
        🍎 Publisher: self-published
        🍎 Pages: 36
        
          Language Arts
        Ida's Witness is a biography of Karl Beckstrand's
        great-grandmother, Ida Anderson. Before reading Ida's Witness with your class, take the time to explain what a biography
        is: 
      
      
        A biography is a true story about a person's life. Biographies tell
          about famous people or ordinary people who have done extraordinary
          things. They usually center on one person's life and how they have
          contributed to the world.
      
      
        Set the purpose for the language arts lesson... Ida's Witness is the true story of Karl Beckstrand's great-grandmother... what
        can we learn about Ida from reading this book?  What were some of
        the extraordinary things she accomplished?  How has she contributed
        to the world?  (example: She has inspired others to stay true to
        themselves and to never give up when facing adversity.)
      
      
      Geography
        We learned from reading Ida's Witness that Ida was born
        and raised in Sweden and immigrated to Idaho in the United States in the
        1880s.  Pull out a world map.  Where is Sweden on the
        map?  Where is the United States?  Can you find Idaho on the
        United States map?  Airplanes and automobiles were still in their
        experimental phases in the 1880s.  How do you think Ida got from
        Sweden to Idaho?  (walking, horse and wagon, locomotive, and
        steamship)  What route do you think she might have used?
      
      
        (map of the Americas from that time period)
      
      
      Culture and Religion
As your students read Ida's Witness, a couple of questions will surely pop up. Students will want to know who the Latter-day Saints are and what testimonies and witnesses are. I asked Karl Beckstrand about this and this is what he told me:- Latter-day Saints are Christians who believe that God continues to speak through prophets just like He did in the past.
 - Latter-day Saints are also known as Mormons. The name Mormon comes from one of the religious texts they read... the Book of Mormon. Latter-day Saints also read the Bible like other Christians.
 - Witnesses and testimonies are synonyms for one another. A testimony or a witness is a profound religious experience people have and the stories surrounding them.
 
        Depending on the age and maturity levels of your students, you can
        extend the class discussion further.  To learn more about the
        Latter-day Saints and better inform your class discussions, you can
        visit
        The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 
      
      Family History
        Family is one of the main themes in Ida's Witness, if not
        the main theme.  Karl Beckstrand shared the story of his ancestors:
        his great-grandmother Ida, Ida's mother (his great-great-grandmother),
        and Ida's siblings, auntie, and cousin.  He also told the story of
        how they loved and took care of each other.  When talking
        about Ida's Witness, you may need to explain what the word
        ancestor means:
      
      
        An ancestor is a person from whom one is descended. Usually, ancestor
          refers to a remote person, rather than the immediate parents or
          grandparents.  Ancestors are the people in our family who have
          come before us.
      
      
        Have a class discussion with your students about their own
        families.  Do they know their parents' names?  Their
        grandparents' names?  Their great-grandparents' names?  Do
        they know where their ancestors came from?  Do they have any family
        stories they'd like to share?
      
      
      Family Trees
        After reading and talking about Ida's Witness and
        learning everything you can from it, having your students make mini
        family trees would be a meaningful culminating activity.  A family
        tree is a chart that tells the story of our ancestors.  Family
        trees show the names, birthdates, places of birth, etc. of the people
        who came before us.  
      
    To make mini family trees you will need:
    - blue, green, and brown construction paper or cardstock
 - scissors
 - glue
 - markers
 - precut apples or other fruit shapes (I found my pears at a dollar store.)
 
        There really aren't any specific directions to making this type of
        family tree.  You can look at the photo and pretty much know what
        you need to do.  There is one thing you need to think about
        though.  What do you want your students to write on their
        fruits?  Depending on your students' ages, you can vary what they
        write on each one.  Do you want them to write the full names of
        their family members or is the first name only OK?  Do you want
        them to record their birthdates?  Where places of birth?  At
        the very minimum, your students should write the first names and
        relationships.  
      
      
        When I made my example, I purposely kept it simple: only parents,
        siblings, and grandparents.  No aunties and uncles.  No
        cousins.  No family pets.  (Trust me... your students will ask
        you if they can add their pets to their trees!)  Feel free to make
        your family trees as elaborate and detailed as you like.
      
      
      
      (Ida's portrait, circa 1900)
    
    
      If you could write a biography about anyone in your family, who would it
      be?  What if someone wanted to write a biography about you? 
      What would you want them to say?  Share your thoughts in the comments
      below!
    
    
      (Next Article:
      Dorktales Storytime Podcast by Jonathan Cormur)
    
    




Thank you, Kelly, for your lovely commentary (and lesson ideas) on my family story.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Karl. Ida's Witness is a beautiful story and I wanted to write something to honor and respect you and your family. I'm looking forward to reading and writing about Anna's Prayer soon too!
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