Folktale Unit: Paul Bunyan and the Big Blue Ox

Learning Through Folktales: Paul Bunyan

Grade Levels: 1–2, 3–5 Focus: Folktales • Vocabulary • Critical Thinking • Writing

Objectives

Students will:

  • Read and discuss the folktale Paul Bunyan

  • Explore exaggeration and tall-tale elements

  • Learn new vocabulary and use context clues

  • Build comprehension through questioning

  • Reflect on personal preferences in writing

Materials

  • Paul Bunyan by Steven Kellogg

  • Student journals

  • Chart paper / whiteboard

  • Vocabulary cards (optional)

Lesson Plan

1. Shared Reading

Read Paul Bunyan aloud.
As you read, pause to ask:

  • How do the pictures help tell the story?

  • What makes this story a tall tale?

  • What clues show that this story is exaggerated?

2. Class Discussion

Use these questions to deepen comprehension:

  • Do we chop down trees the same way today as in Paul’s time?
    → What tools do people use today to cut wood? (chainsaws, machinery)

  • What tall-tale exaggerations did you notice?
    → (Paul’s size, Babe turning cold ground into ice, giant pancakes, etc.)

  • What big or unfamiliar words did you hear? What do you think they mean?
    → Model using context clues from the text.

  • How did Babe the Blue Ox help Paul throughout the story?

  • How did Paul and his crew remove the tree stumps?
    → Discuss the humorous exaggerations (e.g., using special oversized tools).

  • Who were Paul’s helpers or friends in the story?
    → Sourdough Sam, Babe, the crew, etc.

  • How did you feel about Paul cutting down so many trees?
    → Prompt a discussion about conservation vs. storytelling exaggeration.

Vocabulary Focus

Introduce or review:

Pioneer

  • Definition: A person who is among the first to explore or settle a new place.

  • Kid-friendly explanation: Someone who moves to a new area and builds homes, farms, and towns before cities are built.

  • Activity: Students draw or describe something a pioneer might do.

You can also add optional vocabulary: logging, timber, exaggerated, lumberjack, frontier.

✏️ Journal Writing

Prompt:
“We have read several folktales this year. Which one is your favorite and why?”

Encourage students to include:

  • The title of the folktale

  • A description of the characters

  • What made it interesting or funny

  • A personal connection or feeling

Optional challenge:
Have students include one new vocabulary word in their response.

Optional Extensions

  • Create a class anchor chart: “Traits of a Folktale / Tall Tale”

  • Students illustrate Paul and Babe with their favorite part of the story

  • Compare tall tales: Paul Bunyan vs. Pecos Bill vs. Johnny Appleseed

  • Build a “GIANT footprints” hallway display for Paul Bunyan

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