Kettles Reading Comprehension Passage - Cored Ed Encyclopedia

About This Product

This kettles reading comprehension contains the following:

Visualize on the Cover (Teacher Read Aloud Script)

Start your lesson by taking a few moments to visualize the topic and share thoughts or feelings about it.

Pre-Reading Trivia

Students will write down one thing they already know about the subject and then read five more facts and discuss. These facts are fun, and the students will enjoy learning about the subject before reading more.

Reading Passage

The text is a high-interest reading passage with set paragraphs, roughly three to four paragraphs long. It contains a variety of themes about the topic, anywhere from history to technology. The passage is between 250 and 350 words in length.

Mixed Questions

The first question page contains four multiple-choice questions, each with a choice of four answers, and three written response questions that require a sentence or two from the student.

Vocabulary Questions

Practice seven key words from the text in this section across two activities. First section is scrambled words where students will unscramble three words given a clue for each. The second section is a word to meaning matching activity.

Creative Writing

In this question, the student will be required to write a five to eight sentence paragraph on a question related to the topic.

Extension Activities

This page is optional for fast finishers or to take home. There are several activities, each one requiring a different skill. Do some, do none, do all, completely optional - but you will feel reassured knowing every possibility is planned for. Includes summary writting question.

Answer Key

There are answers for the multiple-choice questions, written response questions have sample answers, vocabulary answers and if there is a summary question then a sample summary will be provided as well.

FULL CATALOG OF DOWNLOAD LINKS AND ENCYCLOPEDIA INDEX HERE


Lesson Snapshot

  • Title: Kettles

  • Genre: Nonfiction (informational text)

  • Subject: Science (Physical Science: heat/boiling) / Reading (Informational Text)

  • Primary Topic: How kettles boil water, convection, and safety

  • Estimated Guided Reading Level (A–Z): O

What This Lesson Teaches Best

  • What a kettle is and what it’s used for (a vessel for boiling water for foods/drinks like tea, cocoa, soup, or oatmeal).

  • How stovetop and electric kettles heat water (burner heat vs. a heating element; some shut off automatically).

  • Why boiling water “swirls” (convection: warmer, less dense water rises while cooler water sinks).

  • Key science facts connected to boiling (about 212°F at sea level; lower boiling temperature on high mountains).

  • Safe habits around hot water and steam (steam can sting, spilled hot water can scald, and careful pouring/spout direction helps).

Learning Goals

  • Students will identify the main purpose of a kettle using details from the passage.

  • Students will describe how a stovetop kettle and an electric kettle heat water, based on the text.

  • Students will explain convection in boiling water using the passage’s description of rising and sinking water.

  • Students will state what the text says about boiling temperature at sea level and on high mountains.

  • Students will list safety rules mentioned in the passage for handling steam and hot water.

Key Vocabulary From the Text

  • vessel — a container that holds something.

  • cauldron — a large pot.

  • convection — heat moving as warm water rises and cool sinks.

  • dense — packed tightly; not light.

  • scald — burn skin with very hot liquid.


Cored Ed Encyclopedia Overview

The Cored Ed Encyclopedia is a weekly series of lessons that you can pick up and use right away. These short readings fit into whatever time you have available. Each one includes a warm-up, a reading, and a set of questions, but it’s flexible — you can do just the reading, the full lesson, or skip the writing section if you need to. Each lesson focuses on a single topic so students don’t get lost. The writing is clear but never childish, making it perfect for grades two through five. Topics range from animals and science to history, inventions, and everyday things. No matter the level of the student, everyone should take away at least one new idea or fact from each lesson. The materials are easy to print, easy to explain, and require no setup. They work well for whole-class teaching, partner work, or independent study.

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