Little Women Teacher Sample
Little Women Teacher Sample
Little Women Teacher Sample
3
How to Use This Study Guide
1. Define the words from the Vocabulary section using a dictionary. This will improve your understanding
and comprehension of the text when you begin reading.
2. Now, read thoroughly and well the chapter from Little Women, marking the text in key places according
to the method taught in “How to Mark a Book” (Appendix).
3. Return to the Study Guide and answer the Comprehension Questions and Quotations, stopping to
discuss, referring back to the text when necessary.
4. Complete the Enrichment activities as time and interest allow.
5. Repeat steps 1-4 for each lesson.
Note: For this study guide, we will be using the Sterling edition of Little Women (ISBN 978-1-4027-1458-0).
1. If you mean libel I'd say so, and not talk (p. 5)
a false statement about someone that causes a bad opinion
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2. you'll grow up an affected little goose if you don't take care (p. 6)
faking personality traits in order to impress others
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3. I think it was so splendid in father to go as a chaplain (p. 10)
a priest or pastor who performs services for those in the military
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4. This cave was made with a clothes-horse for a roof (p. 19)
a frame for drying clothes
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5. A stout little retainer came in with chains, and led them away (p. 21)
a loyal servant of a noble person
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6. in a spasm of rapture he tears off his chains (p. 22)
overwhelming happiness/love to an extreme extent
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7. cried Meg, at the foot of the garret stairs (p. 25)
the top floor or attic, usually unfinished
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8. here she loved to retire with half a dozen russets and a nice book (p. 25)
sweet apples with rough, reddish-brownish skin
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9. Oh dear! what a blunderbuss I am! (p. 33)
someone who is clumsy, lacking subtlety or precision
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10. as Jo bound up her foot with arnica (p. 35)
a dried, yellow flower head used medicinally for bruises and sprains
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Quotations
1. "We can't do much, but we can make our little sacrifices, and ought to do it gladly. But I am afraid I
don't;" (p. 4)
Meg March
Speaker: ________________________________ Jo, Amy, and Beth
To: _______________________________________
The girls are all sad that there will be no presents that Christmas because they are
Situation: ____________________________________________________________________________
sacrificing for the war.
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2. "I'm the man of the family now papa is away, and I shall provide the slippers, for he told me to take
special care of mother while he was gone." (p. 7)
Jo March
Speaker: ________________________________ Meg, Amy, and Beth
To: _______________________________________
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About what?_ Jo wants to spend her dollar getting new slippers for her mother.
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Who is "he"? Mr. March
Comprehension Questions
1. What are the ages of the four March girls? What kind of work is each person in their family assigned?
__Meg is 16, Jo is 15, Beth is 13, and Amy is 12. The March family is poor, and their mother
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__works while their father is off at war. Each of the four girls also has some sort of assigned
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__work. Meg teaches young children, Jo watches over an elderly lady, Beth does housework,
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__and Amy is in school.
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2. Why do Amy and Jo fight? Compare their personalities.
__Amy reproaches Jo for using slang words. Jo immediately begins acting even more boyish
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__to aggravate Amy. They have such opposite personalities that their opinion of how a person
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__should act causes conflict between them, and their actions get on each others' nerves. Jo wants
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__to be wild and boyish, while Amy is very concerned with what is proper.
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3. What do the girls decide to do with their Christmas money? Why do they do this?
__The girls decide to spend their Christmas money getting nice things for their mother. Meg says
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__she will get their mother a nice pair of gloves, Jo says she will buy their mother army shoes,
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__Beth says she will buy handkerchiefs, and Amy says she will get her a little bottle of cologne.
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__They decide to do this because they realize that their mother's slippers are worn-out, and they
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__want to take care of her the way she takes care of them.
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4. Where is Mr. March, and what does his letter say? What does it remind the girls to do?
__Mr. March is serving in the Civil War as a chaplain. The letter says that Mr. March loves and
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__misses his girls, and that he is praying for them every day. It also reminds the girls to continue
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__to work diligently while he is away, so that when he returns, he will be even prouder and
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__fonder of them than he is now.
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5. What book is referenced at the end of Chapter 1? What are the burdens of each of the girls?
__The Pilgrim's Progress. Meg's burden is that she is too fond of her looks (p. 11) and hates to
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__work. Jo's burden is that she is too rough and wild and often wishes she were down South
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__instead of doing her duty at home. Beth's burden is that she dislikes housework and is afraid of
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__people. Amy's burden is that she is selfish.
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2. Write descriptions of each of the March girls from their mother's perspective. Be sure to describe their
personalities as we have learned from these first few chapters.
__Mrs. March sees Meg as being very maternal but still young and naive in many ways. She sees
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__Jo as being very adventurous, while Beth is soft-spoken and mild and considers nothing to be a
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__burden—even though she does have burdens. Mrs. March knows Amy is still very young and
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__must be reminded not to grow up too fast.
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The above passage is taken from Jaques' monologue in As You Like It. How does this quote compare
to Mrs. March's quote on page 12: "We never are too old for this, my dear, because it is a play we are
playing all the time in one way or another." Why does she say this? What do you think this means? What
kind of play are you playing in?
__She says this as a reminder to Amy that the journey they were play-acting, the Pilgrim's
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__Progress, is a story that represents a journey we all take through difficulties in order to reach
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__something worthwhile. (Other answers will vary.)
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4. What is a play, and what does it require? Choose ONE of the following options:
1) On the next page or on a separate sheet of paper, write a play of your own that includes at least 5
characters. Be sure to include stage directions and a brief set design in your description.
2) Draw a picture of the set of the Marches' play, including two characters on stage, and provide a
description of the scene they are acting out.