Readers Theater Worksheets
The Princess and the Frog Movie Guide | Questions | Grades 3–5 (G – 2009)
The Princess and the Frog Movie Guide | Questions | Grades 3–5 (G – 2009)
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The Princess and the Frog Film Quiz (G – 2009) guides students through Tiana’s journey from hard‑working waitress to restaurant owner, exploring how grit, honesty, and caring for others can overcome flashy shortcuts. Students track key moments—meeting the “Shadow Man,” getting advice from Mama Odie, and choosing real love—and practice simple text‑evidence answers and friendly, age‑appropriate reflection.
- Grades: Grades 3–5
- Extra Time: 30 min in addition to movie (discussion/essay can extend)
- Format: PDF; Google Slides; Google Docs; Answer Key; Google Forms
- Standards: CCRA.R.1, CCRA.R.3, CCRA.W.1
- Rating & Year: G — 2009
Best for: close viewing, discussion & writing.
Content Rating | Parents/Teacher Guide
- Mild peril and cartoon magic
- Brief slapstick humor
- Positive messages about effort, honesty, and caring for others
What’s Included:
- Teacher Guide (PDF/Google Doc, editable, ~10 pages)
- Lesson Planning Tips
- Main Ideas & Themes Discussion Prompts
- Answer Keys for Vocabulary, Short‑Answer, Reflection Questions
- Standards Alignment (CCRA)
- Student Worksheet (Google Slides / PPTX, editable, ~20 slides)
- 10 High-level Vocabulary Words in authentic dialogue
- 10 Chronological Short‑Answer Questions for scene analysis
- 5 End‑of‑Film Reflection & Challenge Questions for synthesis
- Bonus! Google Forms 30 Questions Multiple Choice Self-Grading Quiz
Skills Addressed:
- Citing short, exact evidence from a scene
- Explaining cause and effect in simple sentences
- Building academic vocabulary from context and quotes
- Comparing choices and lessons across the story
- Participating in respectful discussion
DISCLAIMER: This product, a worksheet and question set for the movie The Princess and the Frog (2009), is independently compiled for classroom discussion and literacy skill-building. It is not affiliated with or endorsed by the film’s producers, distributors, or rights holders. All film dialogue excerpts are used solely for educational purposes under fair use, and teachers should ensure they have the right to show the film in their classrooms.
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