Worksheets and No Prep Teaching Resources
Worksheets and No Prep Teaching Resources
Reading Comprehension Worksheets
Lewis and Clark
(1804-1806)

Sacagawea

Lewis and Clark<BR>(1804-1806)
Lewis and Clark
(1804-1806)


Sacagawea
Print Sacagawea Reading Comprehension with Third Grade Work

Print Sacagawea Reading Comprehension with Fourth Grade Work

Print Sacagawea Reading Comprehension with Fifth Grade Work

Print Sacagawea Reading Comprehension

Reading Level
     edHelper's suggested reading level:   high interest, readability grades 3 to 5
     Flesch-Kincaid grade level:   5.12

Vocabulary
     challenging words:    infant, stranded, westward, member, listed, trader, fell, reservation, supplies, roots, adult, blubber, tribe, journey, stayed, likely
     content words:    Rocky Mountains, Pacific Ocean, In November, Louisiana Territory, United States, Native American, Native Americans, When Shoshone, Shoshone Indians, William Clark


Sacagawea
By Cathy Pearl
  

1     Sacagawea was a member of the Shoshone tribe. Her life was short. She did a lot in that short life though. She helped a small group of men find their way west over the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean. She saw things that most women living in the 1800s would never have a chance to see. What she did is remembered in many ways today.
 
2     Sacagawea was kidnapped from her home by a war party of Hidatsa when she was about 12. The Hidatsa were enemies. She was taken from her home. She had to live with the Hidatsa. It is believed she was later sold as a slave to a fur trader. He called Sacagawea his wife. In November 1804, the group of explorers came to her village. They were exploring the Louisiana Territory. The United States had bought this land. These explorers built a fort near her home.
 
3     In 1805, Sacagawea had a son. He also went on the journey. The explorers thought that Sacagawea and her husband could help them. They could speak many different languages. Sacagawea became they only woman that would go all the way to the Pacific Ocean and back.
 
4     Sacagawea had many jobs on the journey. She would find roots for the men to eat. She would also collect berries and plants that the men could eat. These would also be used as medicine.

Paragraphs 5 to 13:
For the complete story with questions: click here for printable



Weekly Reading Books

          Create Weekly Reading Books

Prepare for an entire week at once!


Feedback on Sacagawea
Leave your feedback on Sacagawea   (use this link if you found an error in the story)



Lewis and Clark
(1804-1806)

             Lewis and Clark
(1804-1806)



More Lessons
             Special Education United States History Materials for Teachers


United States
             United States


    American Government  
 
    Black History and Blacks in U.S. History  
 
    Children in History  
 
    Government Careers  
 
    Hispanic Heritage  
 
    How Can I Help?  
 
 
    Immigration  
 
    National Parks and Monuments  
 
    Native Americans  
 
    Presidents of the United States  
 
    Women's History  
 


United States History
    A Nation Divided
(1840-1861)
 
 
    A New Nation
(1776-1830)
 
 
    After the Civil War
(1865-1870)
 
 
    American Revolution  
 
    Cold War
(1947-1991)
 
 
    Colonial America (1492-1776)  
 
    Lewis and Clark
(1804-1806)
 
 
    Pearl Harbor  
 
    Spanish American War (1898)  
 
    The 1890's  
 
    The 1900's  
 
    The 1910's  
 
    The 1920's  
 
    The 1930's  
 
 
    The 1940's  
 
    The 1950's  
 
    The 1960's  
 
    The 1970's  
 
    The 1980's  
 
    The 1990's  
 
    The 2000's  
 
    The Civil War
(1861-1865)
 
 
    The Great Depression
(1929-1945)
 
 
    The United States Grows
(1865-1900)
 
 
    The War of 1812  
 
    Wild, Wild West  
 
    World War I
(1914-1918)
 
 
    World War II  
 


50 States

             Fifty States Theme Unit


Document Based Activities
      Document Based Activities



Copyright © 2018 edHelper