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Cocoa Text Structure Paragraphs Directions for teachers 1. Decide how many centers you would like. I like to have 4 copies, so that up to 8 students can be working on the activity at once. 2. Print as many copies of the texts and graphic organizers as you would like. 3. In a clear sheet protector, put the text on one side and the graphic organizer on the other. Put the completed graphic organizer between the two sheets so that it is not visible. 4. Put the directions in a sheet protector. 5. Attach everything with a ring clip. 6. Explain the center to students. From “Koehler’s Medicinal Plants”, 1887 Description Chocolate comes from a fruit on a tree! But not just any tree. The cacao (ca-COW) tree grows in tropical areas. Cacao trees are evergreen trees with shiny leaves. They are not the tallest trees in the forest. In fact, they grow best when there are taller trees above them. Cacao trees have a reddish fruit that is shaped like a football. Public domain photo from Wikimedia Commons Sequence Cacao beans go through many steps before they even enter the chocolate factory. First, workers cut the fruit from the cacao tree. Then they scoop out the beans inside. The beans are fermented and dried. Finally, the beans are put into burlap bags. Large ships take them across the ocean to the chocolate factory. Public domain photo from Wikimedia Commons Problem/Solution It’s not easy to harvest cacao pods. The large fruits ripen at different speeds. A machine can’t tell which pod is ripe and which is not. Only a person can! To solve this problem, workers harvest each pod individually. Compare/Contrast The cacao tree is different from apple trees. The flowers don’t grow on the highest branches. Instead, they grow on the low branches, and even on the trunk! The cacao tree can have flowers and ripe pods at the same time. On an apple tree, all of the flowers bloom in spring, and then ripen into fruit in the fall. Apple trees never have ripe fruit and flowers at the same time. But apple trees and cacao trees both have an important similarity—they depend on insects for pollination. Public domain photo from Wikimedia Commons Cause/Effect Not every flower on the cacao tree will turn into a cacao pod. The flowers need to be pollinated by a tiny bug called a midge. Midges like to live near the forest floor, with lots of dead leaves around. When cacao farmers try to clean up the forest floor, the midges don’t have a good place to live. The trees will not produce as many pods. Cocoa Text Structure Paragraphs 1. Choose a paragraph to read with your partner. 2. With your partner, find the text structure clue words for the paragraph. 3. Read the paragraph. 4. Using a wet erase marker, work with your partner to fill in the graphic organizer. 5. Check your work with the answer key (between the paragraph and the graphic organizer). 6. Erase your work.