Lesson

Theme and Character Motives in Traditional Stories

Students practice finding the message of a story and explaining why characters make the choices they make.

Theme and Character Motives in Traditional Stories

What students learn

Students learn that theme is the bigger message a story leaves behind, and character motivation is the reason a character acts. Begin with to set up the main idea.

Why it matters

Theme helps readers explain what a story is saying, not just what happened. shows that readers should look for repeated actions and details before they name the message.

Learn the idea

Character motives answer the question, "Why did the character do that?" In a traditional story, the answer is often tied to safety, kindness, pride, or hard work. gives students a familiar example to discuss.

Try it

Ask the student to state the theme of a story in one sentence and then explain one character choice that supports that theme. Have them point to the detail that proves their answer.

Parent guide

If the child gives a broad answer, ask for a scene, a choice, or a repeated detail that supports it. That habit keeps theme and motivation tied to the text instead of guesswork.