Mr. Arable and The Runt Pig: Objectives
Mr. Arable and The Runt Pig: Objectives
DECISION MAKING
Grade 3
OBJECTIVES
CONTENT
THINKING SKILL/PROCESS
Students will learn to think about story characters in terms of their character traits and
actions
THINKING SKILL/PROCESS
LESSON
INTRODUCTION TO CONTENT AND THINKING SKILL/PROCESS
Think about a time when you had to make a decision and you werent sure what to do. Tell
your partner what you were thinking about doing. Give students enough time for both
students in each pair to relate their decisions. If necessary, prompt the class to switch roles in
order to give each partner a chance to relate his or her decision.
Lets hear some of the examples you just discussed. Ask for three or four examples from the
class. Write each decision at the top of a column under the word Decisions.
When thinking about what to do, your thinking is called decision making. The different
choices you were thinking about are called options. Write Decision Making and Options on the board. Under the word options, list the alternatives that students mention.
Now tell your neighbor what you decided to do and how you figured it out. What did you
think about to pick the best thing to do?
When people are trying to decide what to do, they sometimes think about what will happen
as a result of their decision. These results are called the consequences of their options. What
were some of the consequences you were thinking about? Write the word consequences on
the board, and list some of the consequences students mention.
In making decisions, you should have a good reason for expecting particular consequences.
Write the word reason on the board.
Tell your neighbor your reasons for thinking that your decision would have the consequences
you mentioned. Ask the students to mention some reasons, and list these on the board under
reasons.
After you think about which of the consequences are important, you are ready to make the
50
1994 CRITICAL THINKING PRESS & SOFTWARE P.O. BOX 448 PACIFIC GROVE, CA 93950 800-458-4849
DECISION MAKING
As we read stories, we can understand the characters better by thinking about why they made
their decisions. Were going to read part of a story. As we do, were going to think about a
decision that one of the characters is trying to make and what that decision tells us about the
kind of person that character is.
THINKING ACTIVELY
Im going to read the first few pages of the book Charlottes Web by E. B. White. Listen for the
decisions that the characters make in this passage.
Where is Papa going with that ax? said Fern to her mother as they were setting the table for
breakfast.
Out to the hoghouse, replied Mrs. Arable. Some pigs were born last night.
I dont see why he needs an ax, continued Fern, who was only eight.
Well, said her mother, one of the pigs is a runt. Its very small and weak, and it will never
amount to anything. So your father has decided to do away with it.
Do away with it? shrieked Fern. You mean kill it? Just because its smaller than the
others?
Mrs. Arable put a pitcher of cream on the table. Dont yell, Fern! she said. Your father is
right. The pig would probably die anyway.
Fern pushed a chair out of the way and ran outdoors. The grass was wet and the earth smelled
of springtime. Ferns sneakers were sopping by the time she caught up with her father.
Please dont kill it, she sobbed. Its unfair.
Mr. Arable stopped walking.
Fern, he said gently, you will have to learn to control yourself.
Control myself? yelled Fern. This is a matter of life and death, and you talk about
controlling myself. Tears ran down her cheeks and she took hold of the ax and tried to pull
it out of her fathers hand.
Fern, said Mr. Arable, I know more about raising a litter of pigs than you do. A weakling
makes trouble. Now run along!
But its unfair, cried Fern. The pig couldnt help being born small, could it? If I had been
very small at birth, would you have killed me?
Mr. Arable smiled. Certainly not, he said, looking down at his daughter with love. But this
is different. A little girl is one thing, a runty pig is another.
I see no difference, replied Fern, still hanging onto the ax. This is the most terrible case of
injustice I have ever heard of.
1994 CRITICAL THINKING PRESS & SOFTWARE P.O. BOX 448 PACIFIC GROVE, CA 93950 800-458-4849
51
DECISION MAKING
What decisions do the characters make in this passage? POSSIBLE ANSWERS: Mr. Arables
decision to kill the runt pig, Ferns decision to try to get her father to spare the pig, Ferns decision to grab
the ax, Mr. Arables decision to reason with Fern, Ferns decision to try to convince her father, Mrs.
Arables decision to tell Fern what her father plans.
Lets think about Mr. Arables decision to kill the runt pig. Suppose you were Mr. Arable and
that what Fern says makes you think again about what to do about the runt pig. Lets look at
the decision-making map and ask the first question: What makes a decision necessary? Why
do you think Mr. Arable feels he has to make a decision here? POSSIBLE ANSWERS: A litter of
pigs was born last night. One of the pigs was a runt. Mr. Arable remembers how much trouble raising a
runt pig has caused in the past. It may cost a lot of money to care for the runt pig. Fern has raised questions
about whether killing the pig is the best thing to do.
Now lets look at the next question: What
are Mr. Arables options? What else could
he do? We will use a special diagram that
can help us think more carefully about
decision making. It has a box for Options. Work together in groups of three or
four and try to come up with as many options as you can. Try to think of different
kinds of options, including some unusual
ones, and write them on the diagram. POSSIBLE ANSWERS: Take care of the pig himself,
give the pig away, sell the pig, let Fern take care
of the pig, lie to Fern and kill it anyway, do
nothing (let the pig fend for itself), advertise for
someone who can take care of the pig, make it a pet,
kill it anyway, abandon the pig in the woods.
OPTION CONSIDERED
OPTION CONSIDERED
CONSEQUENCES
What will happen if you
take this option?
SUPPORT
Why do you think each
consequence will occur?
VALUE
How important is the
consequence? Why?
52
1994 CRITICAL THINKING PRESS & SOFTWARE P.O. BOX 448 PACIFIC GROVE, CA 93950 800-458-4849
DECISION MAKING
may live and grow normally. Fern will learn about death. Fern will understand the wisdom behind her
fathers decisions. The parents may disagree over the decision. Pig care may come back to the parents. Mr.
Arable may feel guilty about giving Fern the responsibility if the pig dies. The pig may breed other small
pigs.
Remember how important it is to make sure
that you have reasons for thinking the consequences will really happen. Lets think about
the first consequencethat Fern will be relieved. What do we know about Fern from
the story that is a reason for thinking she will
be relieved if her father gives her the pig to
raise? Well write that in the Support column on the diagram. Since we have a reason
that supports it, well put a check mark next
to the consequence. If you cant find a reason
or if there is a reason against thinking the
consequence will happen, well cross out the
consequence. Write what the students suggest on the graphic organizer. As you fill in
student responses, your organizer should resemble the one at the right.
CONSEQUENCES
What will happen if Mr.
Arable takes this option?
Fern will feel relieved.
SUPPORT
Why do you think the
consequence will occur?
VALUE
How important is the
consequence? Why?
In your groups again, think about whether each likely consequence counts in favor of or
against the option you have chosen. Put a plus next to the consequence if it counts in favor of
the option; use a minus if it counts against the consequence; if the consequence is important,
circle it, and explain why it is important in the last column on the diagram.
Now pick what you think is the best thing for Mr. Arable to do. Explain why. Ask each group
to report. After the discussion, ask the class to vote on the best thing to do.
Weve done some decision making by thinking carefully about what Mr. Arable should do.
Lets read the rest of this chapter of Charlottes Web to see what Mr. Arable decides to do.
When you find out, think about what Mr. Arables decision tells us about the kind of person
he is. Write down two words or phrases that describe Mr. Arable. Read the rest of the chapter
aloud. Ask a number of students to report on their descriptions and why they chose these.
POSSIBLE ANSWERS: Fair, thoughtful, listens to Fern, kind, open-minded.
1994 CRITICAL THINKING PRESS & SOFTWARE P.O. BOX 448 PACIFIC GROVE, CA 93950 800-458-4849
53
DECISION MAKING
How did you think about what Mr. Arable should do? What did you think about first,
second, and so on? POSSIBLE ANSWERS: Options first, then consequences, then evidence about how
likely the consequences were, and then what the best thing to do is.
Look at the thinking map of decision making. Is that a good way to describe how you
thought about what Mr. Arable should do? ANSWERS VARY, BUT STUDENTS GENERALLY
AGREE THAT IT IS.
Is this a good way to make a decision when youre not sure what to do? Is it good to do this
even when you feel pretty confident about your choice? Is it better than the way you think
about your decisions now? Why? ANSWERS VARY.
Can you write down a plan for your decisions to help you remember what you should think
about? Draw your own thinking map and use some words that you learned in this lesson.
APPLYING THINKING
Immediate Transfer
Later in the chapter, we found out that Ferns younger brother saw the runt pig at breakfast
the next morning and asked for a pig to raise, too. Use your plan for decision making and
decide what is the best thing for Mr. Arable to do.
Think about the decision you discussed with your partner before we talked about Mr.
Arable. Think through that decision using your decision-making plan. Would your
decision now be the same as the one you made earlier? Why or why not?
Reinforcement Later
To assess student thinking about decisions, ask students to consider the school littering
problem, or ask them to think through a personal decision. Ask your students to make their
thinking explicit as they consider the best option. Determine whether they are attending to each
of the steps in the thinking map for decision making.
54
1994 CRITICAL THINKING PRESS & SOFTWARE P.O. BOX 448 PACIFIC GROVE, CA 93950 800-458-4849
DECISION MAKING
OPTION CONSIDERED
Give the pig to Fern to raise.
CONSEQUENCES
What will happen if Mr.
Arable takes this option?
SUPPORT
Why do you think the
consequence will occur?
VALUE
How important is the
consequence? Why?
Fern will learn that Mr. Arable was right: it takes time
and effort to raise a runt pig.
1994 CRITICAL THINKING PRESS & SOFTWARE P.O. BOX 448 PACIFIC GROVE, CA 93950 800-458-4849
55
DECISION MAKING
56
SUPPORT
Why do you think the
consequence will occur?
VALUE
How important is the
consequence? Why?
Very Important. Fern's
relationship with her father is lifelong and very important for her
development.
1994 CRITICAL THINKING PRESS & SOFTWARE P.O. BOX 448 PACIFIC GROVE, CA 93950 800-458-4849