Illustration of the gingerbread man jumping out of the oven and an older shocked woman watching
Shutterstock.Com (Background); Entertainment Pictures/Alamy Stock Photo (Spider-Man); Scott Linstead (Jumping Spider)

The Gingerbread Man/Real Gingerbread

Can anyone catch the gingerbread man? Read this folktale to find out!

By Laine Falk
Lexiles: 450L
Guided Reading Level: K
DRA Level: 16-18
Vocabulary: cottage, darted, gasped, crafty, sly, glimmered, devoured, root
Think and Read

As you read, think about how the gingerbread man and real gingerbread are the same and different.

The Gingerbread Man

Alex Patrick

He’s so fast! Who will catch him? 

There was an old woman who lived in a cottage. One day, she made a gingerbread man. She put him in the oven to bake. When she opened the oven, he jumped out! 

The tricky gingerbread man ran out the door. The old woman darted after him.  

“Wait!” she gasped. 

“Ha ha! Run, run, as fast as you can! You can’t catch me. I’m the gingerbread man!” he sang. 

They ran past a cow. 

“Moo! I want to eat youuu!” the cow said. 

“Run, run, as fast as you can! You can’t catch me. 

I’m the gingerbread man!” the crafty cookie sang. 

He stuck his tongue out at the cow and kept on running. 

The old woman and the cow ran after the gingerbread man. They ran past a duck. 

“Quack! What a yummy snack!” the duck said. 

“You’re too slow, Duck! Run, run, as fast as you can! You can’t catch me. I’m the gingerbread man!” the gingerbread man sang. 

Spider-Man shoots webs from his wrists. He traps enemies in his webs. 

Alex Patrick

The old woman and the cow and the duck ran after the gingerbread man. They came to a river. 

“How will I get across?” the gingerbread man said. 

There was a fox by the river. 

“I’ll help you,” the sly fox said. “Climb on my back.” 

“Don’t you want to eat me?” the gingerbread man said. “Everyone else does, but I’m too tricky!” 

“No, I don’t like gingerbread at all,” the fox said with a sneaky smile. “Yuck!”

The gingerbread man walked toward the fox. But then the fox opened his mouth. His sharp teeth glimmered in the sun. He devoured the gingerbread man until there was nothing left. CRUNCH. 

And that was the end of the gingerbread man.


Alex Patrick

The End

Real Gingerbread

Zoonar GmbH/Alamy Stock Photo

Real gingerbread cookies can’t talk or run.

But they are delicious! Get ready to learn some facts about gingerbread.


Niday Picture Library/Alamy Stock Photo

Queen Elizabeth I was the queen of England long ago.

The First Gingerbread Men

A queen invented gingerbread men 500 years ago. Her name was Queen Elizabeth. She made gingerbread cookies that looked like her friends!


Spicy, Sweet Gingerbread 

Leonid Nyshko/Alamy Stock Photo

ginger

Gingerbread is spicy and sweet. The spicy taste comes from a plant called ginger. It’s a root that grows under the ground.


Made of Gingerbread

Shutterstock.com

Gingerbread isn’t just for cookies. Some people build gingerbread houses. They use frosting to stick the walls together. They use candy to make doors, windows, and more. Scrumptious! 

Some spiders leap down from the tops of trees. They climb up walls.

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More About the Article

Science Focus

Animal adaptations, diversity of animals

Vocabulary

wrists, suit, skyscraper, silk

Step-by-Step Lesson Plan

Essential Question

The big question of this issue of Storyworks 2 is, what can we learn from the foods we eat?

  • Reading and discussing “The Gingerbread Man” and “Real Gingerbread” along with the other themed texts in the magazine (the Mini Read, “The Pokémon Café”; the past to present feature, “The History of Tacos”; the fiction piece, “Stone Soup”; and the poetry kit, “A Lot Dog”) will help kids think critically about this question.

1. BEFORE READING

Show “The Big Question” Video (10 minutes)

Watch “The Big Question: What Can We Learn From the Foods We Eat?” (This video also goes with other stories in this month’s Storyworks 2.)

  • Before your students watch, ask them to think about the question “What can we learn from the foods we eat?”
  • Watch the video.
  • After watching, ask the question again. Write students’ ideas on chart paper.

Preview Vocabulary (2 minutes)

  • Play the online vocabulary slideshow. This article’s featured words are cottage, darted, gasped, crafty, sly, glimmered, devoured, and root.

Text Preview Bookmarks (5-10 minutes)

  • Students can use these evergreen bookmarks to help them preview the text. Our skills page has both fiction and nonfiction options for kids to cut out. They can use the nonfiction bookmark for this story.

2. READ THE PAIRED TEXTS (10 MINUTES)

  • Now tell students they are going to read two texts. One is a folktale about a gingerbread man and the other is about real gingerbread.

3. AFTER READING

ELA Focus: Quiz (10 minutes)

  • Pass out the quiz for a quick comprehension check.
  • The quiz is available in multiple-choice and written-answer formats.

Mix and Match Activity: Lost Gingerbread People! (1 hour)

  • In this whole-class activity, students will decorate gingerbread people printables, write descriptions of their people, and mix up the gingerbread people and descriptions. Then the class will match them again!
  • First, pass out the “Whose Gingerbread Person Is This?” printable. Students can decorate their gingerbread people with markers or crayons. Tell them NOT to write their names on these sheets.
  • Next, pass out the “Lost Gingerbread Person” printable and have students complete the sentences describing their cookies.
  • Create a display with the “Lost Gingerbread Person” printables on one side of the classroom and the decorated “Whose Gingerbread Person Is This?” printables on the other side. Then have students match the gingerbread people with their owners!

ELA Focus: Sequencing (15 minutes)

  • Students practice sequencing with the “What’s the Order of the Story?” printable. They’ll cut out pictures from the story and paste them in the correct order.

ELA Focus: Compare Fiction and Nonfiction (15 minutes)

  • Using the “Compare Fiction and Nonfiction” printable, students can compare and contrast the features of fiction and nonfiction.

ELA Focus: Parts of Speech (15 minutes)

  • Using the “My Yummy Day” printable, students can fill in the blanks with different parts of speech to create a silly story about cooking a meal.

Enrich the Learning: Paired Text Opportunities (time amount varies)

  • Making text-to-text connections builds knowledge and comprehension. We layer Storyworks 2 with many ways for your students to make connections.

Whole Issue Scavenger Hunt (15 minutes)

We created a scavenger hunt for several stories in this month’s Storyworks 2, including the paired texts. The scavenger hunt can be done by students independently at home or during class time.

This is a self-contained group of slides that guide your students on a scavenger hunt through the whole issue. It’s not only fun, it also helps them make text-to-text connections. 

To find it, look in your Resources section. Scroll down to Activities. You will see it there.

Text-to-Speech