Ideas for reading

Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle
Fictionary
Reading Aloud
The 1911 Lake Madison Chautauqua

An important part of the Chautauqua was the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle. Reading lists were sent to participants and the books were read over the long winter months.  Discussions about the books were held during the summer Chautauqua.  Participants could earn diplomas by working individually during the winter and with others during the summer.

Young girls enjoyed reading books by Mary Jane Holmes while the boys read the books known as the Horatio Alger series.  Mary Jane Holmes's books were similar to modern series such as the Baby Sitter Club and Sweet Valley High.  Horatio Alger books proved that honesty and hard work are eventually rewarded.  Of course, many books considered classics today were best sellers in the late 1800s and early 1900s.  These stories are as entertaining and spellbinding today as they were then.

Enjoy reading these books with your students.  Many are available online.  Selections also make excellent reader's theater presentations.

 

Note to teachers:  These as well as other authors reflect the culture and mores of their day.  As times change, so do the cultural mores.  For instance, when you are reading Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Fin and come across the word 'nigger' it is a wonderful time to have this discussion with your students.  Encourage students to look for expressions and words that are not appropriate today and to form their own opinion of the appropriateness or inappropriateness of the language. 

Fictionary

Many words were in common use a century ago are no longer popular. Fictionary is a game that encourages vocabulary development and enhances dictionary skills.

Players:  small group or whole class
Materials: paper, pencil online or real dictionary

Players:

  1. Choose a word from the Word Box below

  2. Look up the word in the dictionary

  3. Write down the real definition or the word plus two other definitions that sound correct but are completely wrong!

  4. Read each definition to your group.

  5. As each definition is read, the member of the opposing group (collectively or individually) decide which is the correct definition.

  6. The player or group of players who fools the most people wins.

Word Box

admonished corrugate gingham obliterate stifle
alacrity douse hostelry perturbation stow
astride drayman ignominious pilgrimage teamsters
beau ecstatic imminent rector trundle
cadaverous elocutionist introspection remonstrate unwavering
cantata flaxen inveigle remorse vagaries
caricature furl irreparable sedately verisimilitude
copious gingerly judicious staves zenith
Reading Aloud

We don't think of reading as a form of entertainment, but this program announcement from the 1911 Lake Madison Chautauqua highly recommended her performance.  Have students select something they would like to read to the rest of the class.  Research tells us that students need to read and re-read selections in order to improve fluency and comprehension.    They might choose from one of the following:

Casey at the Bat

The Wizard of Oz

The Mock Turtle's Song

Arithmetic 1
Arithmetic 2