Worksheets and No Prep Teaching Resources
Worksheets and No Prep Teaching Resources
Reading Comprehension Worksheets
Inventors and Inventions
Inventors of Toys

Inventors and Inventions
Inventors and Inventions


Inventors of Toys
Print Inventors of Toys Reading Comprehension with Sixth Grade Work

Print Inventors of Toys Reading Comprehension


Reading Level
     edHelper's suggested reading level:   grades 6 to 8
     Flesch-Kincaid grade level:   6.52

Vocabulary
     challenging words:    cofounders, showing, standing, editorial, craie, frisbees, lopsided, historical, yo-yos, version, material, bands, archaeological, encounter, glitter, business
     content words:    United States, Donald Duncan, President Teddy Roosevelt, President Roosevelt, Edwin Binney, Harold C., Barbie Dolls, Elliot Handler, Mattel Company, George Parker

Other Languages
     Spanish: Inventores de juguetes


Inventors of Toys
By Sharon Fabian
  

1     Millions, maybe billions, of people have invented toys. Most of these people are kids. Kids invent toys from building sets and from other toys. Kids invent toys from pots and pans. Kids invent toys from old clothes and broken tools. Kids even invent toys from sticks and stones, string and rubber bands, construction paper and glitter glue. Round, square, flat, and lopsided objects are all good for making toys. Any material will do -- plastic, wood, paper, Styrofoam, fuzzy fabric, or nutshells.
 
2     Sometimes adults invent toys too, but, in many cases, they don't actually invent the toy but take a toy that has been invented somewhere before and make it popular. Take, for example, the yo-yo. Yo-yos have been around for thousands of years. We know because yo-yos have been found along with other historical artifacts at archaeological digs. This is how we know that stone yo-yos were used back in ancient Greece. In the 1800s, they became very popular as a children's toy, first in England and then in the United States. Then people got tired of them for a while until, in 1928, Donald Duncan went into the yo-yo business. He hired "yo-yo men" to go door to door demonstrating and selling yo-yos. Today the name Duncan still goes with yo-yo.
 
3     Teddy bears were named after a president of the United States, although he didn't invent them. President Teddy Roosevelt was a hunter, and on one of his hunting trips he had an encounter with a bear. That led to editorial cartoons showing pictures of President Roosevelt and a cute little bear. Somehow that led to cute, fuzzy, sewed bears for little kids to play with.

Paragraphs 4 to 8:
For the complete story with questions: click here for printable



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Inventors and Inventions
             Inventors and Inventions


Social Studies
             Social Studies


    United States History and Theme Units  
 
    American Government  
 
    Ancient America  
 
    Ancient China  
 
    Ancient Egypt  
 
    Ancient Greece  
 
    Ancient India  
 
    Ancient Mesopotamia  
 
    Ancient Rome  
 
    Biographies  
 
    Canadian Theme Unit  
 
    Country Theme Units  
 
    Crime and Terrorism  
 
    Economics  
 
    European History: 1600s-1800s  
 
 
    Explorers  
 
    Famous Educators  
 
    Geography  
 
    Grades 2-3 Social Studies Wendy's World Series  
 
    History of Books and Writing  
 
    History of Mathematics  
 
    How Can I Help?  
 
    Inventors and Inventions  
 
    Middle Ages  
 
    Renaissance  
 
    World Religion  
 
    World War I  
 
    World War II  
 
    World Wonders  
 



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