bird By Angela Johnson
Pre-reading:
Have you ever wanted to run away from home? Why do you
think many children share this daydream?
Look at the cover: Who do you think is on the cover? Why is
she in a tree?
Prediction Guide
Great readers keep themselves involved in the story while
they’re reading by making predictions about what might happen next. These
guesses are based on evidence that the author gives you and what you know about
stories (like things usually get worse before they get better). The important
thing is not whether you answer the questions correctly but that you think about
them. After answering each question at the end of a section make a reasonable
question that you’d like to see answered. This prediction will help keep you
tuned-in when your brain tries to take a commercial break!
Chapter 1
- What do you think Bird will say to her mom if she calls?
What will her mom answer?
- What will the family do if Bird presents herself to them
the following Sunday?
- Will Bird find out what she’s looking for in Alabama?
Chapter 2
- Will Ethan show himself to Bird? Will Bird let Ethan
find her? What will happen between them?
- What would Ethan’s Mom do if she found out about Bird?
Will she?
Chapter 3
- Who will clean up Derek’s side of the room? When?
- What would Mrs. Pritchard say to Jay about taking her
husband’s car for the joyride?
Chapter 4
- How will things change now that Ethan and Bird have met?
- Do you think Bird’s mom is “fine just like me”? Why or
why not?
Chapter 5
- Will Bird show herself to Cecil? What will he say and
do? What will Ethan say when he finds out they know each other?
- Will Bird come back to Ethan’s shed? Will Ethan try to
find her?
Chapter 6
- Will Jay figure out who Bird is and tell on her? Who
would he tell?
- What will Jay do next to get out of house arrest? Will
he get caught?
Chapter 7
- Will Bird confront Cecil about his other life without
her? What will he say?
- Will Mrs. Pritchard contact the authorities about Bird?
What makes you think so or not?
- What will Bird decide to do?
Chapter 8
- Will Uncle Cecil stay with Ethan’s family or go back to
Bird’s mom? What makes you think so?
- Will all Ethan’s wishes come true? Which ones?
Chapter 9
- Will Jay or Bird be found out? How or why?
- What will change for Jay now? What makes you think so?
Chapter 10
- Will Cecil go back to Ohio with Bird?
- Will Ethan find out who Bird is? Will he feel betrayed?
Chapter 11
- Did Bird miss her chance to see Cecil? What will happen
next?
- Will Ethan start to make new friends and use his gift?
How?
Chapter 12
- Will Jay forgive himself for how he had taken Derek’s
trust? Why?
- Will Mrs. Pritchard forgive Jay for what he did to her
husband’s car? What makes you think so?
Chapter 13
- Do you think Mrs. Pritchard is thinking of finding
Bird’s family? Why?
- Why is Bird up so early in the morning and going for a
run? Will she “catch what you’re running at?”
Chapter 14
- Will Ethan become friends with Paco? What makes you
think so or not?
- Will Uncle C.L. leave Ethan and go home with Bird now?
Chapter 15
- Who is standing at the doorway for Jay?
- What will happen next?
Chapter 16
- What happens back in Ohio after the close of the book?
- What do you think happens to Ethan and Jay and Cecil?
Comprehension Check:
- Why did Bird take a bus to Acorn, Alabama?
- How has Ethan been different from other kids until just
recently?
- Ethan has something that is not his own. What is it and
whose was it?
- Why do you think Ethan doesn’t tell his mom about Bird?
- What does Jay do with his friend Googy? Why do you think
he does it?
- Who allows Bird a chance to get clean and full? What
connection does she have with another character?
- Why can’t Ethan tell his Uncle Cecil or anyone else
about Bird disappearing?
- Describe Jay’s approach to his house arrest.
- Why does Bird tell Ethan she loves him? To whom is she
really speaking?
- What does Bird realize out on the early morning run?
What does that help her to do?

www.TracieVaughnZimmer.com
You support this site when you buy Tracie's latest book! Thank you!
Discussion Guide:
- “That’s what made me leave. Those ants. Everything,
nothing, and those red ants.” Bird reveals about leaving home. What do you
think she means by this? Have you ever had something seemingly unconnected
change everything?
- How does Ethan feel about his mother? How does he
describe her? Why do you think he makes a connection between Bird and his mom?
- Jay says, “I’ve heard my folks say that if people took
the time to think about the dumb things they might do when they’re about to do
them, they wouldn’t. My folks are wrong.” (p. 31) Do you agree with Jay or his
parents? Why?
- Bird doesn’t want people to know who she is, and yet
she’s terribly lonely. How does this conflict affect her behavior and how she
interacts with people? She says, “You can be almost anybody in the summer.”
Why is this so important to her?
- Ethan was always afraid of heights and people never made
him try anything he was scared of when he was so sick. Discuss how an illness
in the family can change everything. How will they change again now that he’s
better?
- Why do you think Jay is able to admit to Bird his
brother’s death when he hasn’t been able to say it before? Is this an
important moment for Ethan? Why? How does it affect Bird’s decision?
- Bird asks Ethan, “you think somebody can love a person
if they don’t tell that person things about themselves?” What do you think of
Bird’s question? Can people? Why or why not?
- Ethan’s family plants roses in Jay’s yard as a symbol of
their gratitude. Why does it make Jay angry at first? How do you think his
parent’s feel? How would you feel if you were Jay? or Ethan? Or either set of
parents?
- How does this runaway stranger, Bird, change the lives
of both Ethan and Jay? Is it for the better? How? How can strangers change
lives for both good and bad?
- Bird doesn’t have to talk to Cecil to come to her own
conclusions about him. What does she realize? Why is this so important?
Projects Across the Curriculum:
Language Arts:
Write the news stories that might appear in a local paper
based off the events in this story. For example: Local teen goes missing, last
seen at Greyhound Bus Depot.
Mathematics:
Make a character chart with the following characteristics:
Name, description, home, relationship to Bird, and a quote about them or by them
that best represents their character. Use it to study for a quiz.
Art:
Create a sculpture inspired by the events in Bird. Your
media and technique is completely your own, but describe your process and what
you hoped to accomplish in a brief paragraph about it.
Music:
Bird spent a great deal of her time outside during this
novel. Go outside with a journal and record all the sounds that you hear and
their source. You may even want to make a recording of it. What did you learn
from this experience?
bird By Angela Johnson
Pre-reading:
Have you ever wanted to run away from home? Why do you
think many children share this daydream?
Look at the cover: Who do you think is on the cover? Why is
she in a tree?
Prediction Guide
Great readers keep themselves involved in the story while
they’re reading by making predictions about what might happen next. These
guesses are based on evidence that the author gives you and what you know about
stories (like things usually get worse before they get better). The important
thing is not whether you answer the questions correctly but that you think about
them. After answering each question at the end of a section make a reasonable
question that you’d like to see answered. This prediction will help keep you
tuned-in when your brain tries to take a commercial break!
Chapter 1
- What do you think Bird will say to her mom if she calls?
What will her mom answer?
- What will the family do if Bird presents herself to them
the following Sunday?
- Will Bird find out what she’s looking for in Alabama?
Chapter 2
- Will Ethan show himself to Bird? Will Bird let Ethan
find her? What will happen between them?
- What would Ethan’s Mom do if she found out about Bird?
Will she?
Chapter 3
- Who will clean up Derek’s side of the room? When?
- What would Mrs. Pritchard say to Jay about taking her
husband’s car for the joyride?
Chapter 4
- How will things change now that Ethan and Bird have met?
- Do you think Bird’s mom is “fine just like me”? Why or
why not?
Chapter 5
- Will Bird show herself to Cecil? What will he say and
do? What will Ethan say when he finds out they know each other?
- Will Bird come back to Ethan’s shed? Will Ethan try to
find her?
Chapter 6
- Will Jay figure out who Bird is and tell on her? Who
would he tell?
- What will Jay do next to get out of house arrest? Will
he get caught?
Chapter 7
- Will Bird confront Cecil about his other life without
her? What will he say?
- Will Mrs. Pritchard contact the authorities about Bird?
What makes you think so or not?
- What will Bird decide to do?
Chapter 8
- Will Uncle Cecil stay with Ethan’s family or go back to
Bird’s mom? What makes you think so?
- Will all Ethan’s wishes come true? Which ones?
Chapter 9
- Will Jay or Bird be found out? How or why?
- What will change for Jay now? What makes you think so?
Chapter 10
- Will Cecil go back to Ohio with Bird?
- Will Ethan find out who Bird is? Will he feel betrayed?
Chapter 11
- Did Bird miss her chance to see Cecil? What will happen
next?
- Will Ethan start to make new friends and use his gift?
How?
Chapter 12
- Will Jay forgive himself for how he had taken Derek’s
trust? Why?
- Will Mrs. Pritchard forgive Jay for what he did to her
husband’s car? What makes you think so?
Chapter 13
- Do you think Mrs. Pritchard is thinking of finding
Bird’s family? Why?
- Why is Bird up so early in the morning and going for a
run? Will she “catch what you’re running at?”
Chapter 14
- Will Ethan become friends with Paco? What makes you
think so or not?
- Will Uncle C.L. leave Ethan and go home with Bird now?
Chapter 15
- Who is standing at the doorway for Jay?
- What will happen next?
Chapter 16
- What happens back in Ohio after the close of the book?
- What do you think happens to Ethan and Jay and Cecil?
Comprehension Check:
- Why did Bird take a bus to Acorn, Alabama?
- How has Ethan been different from other kids until just
recently?
- Ethan has something that is not his own. What is it and
whose was it?
- Why do you think Ethan doesn’t tell his mom about Bird?
- What does Jay do with his friend Googy? Why do you think
he does it?
- Who allows Bird a chance to get clean and full? What
connection does she have with another character?
- Why can’t Ethan tell his Uncle Cecil or anyone else
about Bird disappearing?
- Describe Jay’s approach to his house arrest.
- Why does Bird tell Ethan she loves him? To whom is she
really speaking?
- What does Bird realize out on the early morning run?
What does that help her to do?
Discussion Guide:
- “That’s what made me leave. Those ants. Everything,
nothing, and those red ants.” Bird reveals about leaving home. What do you
think she means by this? Have you ever had something seemingly unconnected
change everything?
- How does Ethan feel about his mother? How does he
describe her? Why do you think he makes a connection between Bird and his mom?
- Jay says, “I’ve heard my folks say that if people took
the time to think about the dumb things they might do when they’re about to do
them, they wouldn’t. My folks are wrong.” (p. 31) Do you agree with Jay or his
parents? Why?
- Bird doesn’t want people to know who she is, and yet
she’s terribly lonely. How does this conflict affect her behavior and how she
interacts with people? She says, “You can be almost anybody in the summer.”
Why is this so important to her?
- Ethan was always afraid of heights and people never made
him try anything he was scared of when he was so sick. Discuss how an illness
in the family can change everything. How will they change again now that he’s
better?
- Why do you think Jay is able to admit to Bird his
brother’s death when he hasn’t been able to say it before? Is this an
important moment for Ethan? Why? How does it affect Bird’s decision?
- Bird asks Ethan, “you think somebody can love a person
if they don’t tell that person things about themselves?” What do you think of
Bird’s question? Can people? Why or why not?
- Ethan’s family plants roses in Jay’s yard as a symbol of
their gratitude. Why does it make Jay angry at first? How do you think his
parent’s feel? How would you feel if you were Jay? or Ethan? Or either set of
parents?
- How does this runaway stranger, Bird, change the lives
of both Ethan and Jay? Is it for the better? How? How can strangers change
lives for both good and bad?
- Bird doesn’t have to talk to Cecil to come to her own
conclusions about him. What does she realize? Why is this so important?
Projects Across the Curriculum:
Language Arts:
Write the news stories that might appear in a local paper
based off the events in this story. For example: Local teen goes missing, last
seen at Greyhound Bus Depot.
Mathematics:
Make a character chart with the following characteristics:
Name, description, home, relationship to Bird, and a quote about them or by them
that best represents their character. Use it to study for a quiz.
Art:
Create a sculpture inspired by the events in Bird. Your
media and technique is completely your own, but describe your process and what
you hoped to accomplish in a brief paragraph about it.
Music:
Bird spent a great deal of her time outside during this
novel. Go outside with a journal and record all the sounds that you hear and
their source. You may even want to make a recording of it. What did you learn
from this experience?
bird By Angela Johnson
Pre-reading:
Have you ever wanted to run away from home? Why do you
think many children share this daydream?
Look at the cover: Who do you think is on the cover? Why is
she in a tree?
Prediction Guide
Great readers keep themselves involved in the story while
they’re reading by making predictions about what might happen next. These
guesses are based on evidence that the author gives you and what you know about
stories (like things usually get worse before they get better). The important
thing is not whether you answer the questions correctly but that you think about
them. After answering each question at the end of a section make a reasonable
question that you’d like to see answered. This prediction will help keep you
tuned-in when your brain tries to take a commercial break!
Chapter 1
- What do you think Bird will say to her mom if she calls?
What will her mom answer?
- What will the family do if Bird presents herself to them
the following Sunday?
- Will Bird find out what she’s looking for in Alabama?
Chapter 2
- Will Ethan show himself to Bird? Will Bird let Ethan
find her? What will happen between them?
- What would Ethan’s Mom do if she found out about Bird?
Will she?
Chapter 3
- Who will clean up Derek’s side of the room? When?
- What would Mrs. Pritchard say to Jay about taking her
husband’s car for the joyride?
Chapter 4
- How will things change now that Ethan and Bird have met?
- Do you think Bird’s mom is “fine just like me”? Why or
why not?
Chapter 5
- Will Bird show herself to Cecil? What will he say and
do? What will Ethan say when he finds out they know each other?
- Will Bird come back to Ethan’s shed? Will Ethan try to
find her?
Chapter 6
- Will Jay figure out who Bird is and tell on her? Who
would he tell?
- What will Jay do next to get out of house arrest? Will
he get caught?
Chapter 7
- Will Bird confront Cecil about his other life without
her? What will he say?
- Will Mrs. Pritchard contact the authorities about Bird?
What makes you think so or not?
- What will Bird decide to do?
Chapter 8
- Will Uncle Cecil stay with Ethan’s family or go back to
Bird’s mom? What makes you think so?
- Will all Ethan’s wishes come true? Which ones?
Chapter 9
- Will Jay or Bird be found out? How or why?
- What will change for Jay now? What makes you think so?
Chapter 10
- Will Cecil go back to Ohio with Bird?
- Will Ethan find out who Bird is? Will he feel betrayed?
Chapter 11
- Did Bird miss her chance to see Cecil? What will happen
next?
- Will Ethan start to make new friends and use his gift?
How?
Chapter 12
- Will Jay forgive himself for how he had taken Derek’s
trust? Why?
- Will Mrs. Pritchard forgive Jay for what he did to her
husband’s car? What makes you think so?
Chapter 13
- Do you think Mrs. Pritchard is thinking of finding
Bird’s family? Why?
- Why is Bird up so early in the morning and going for a
run? Will she “catch what you’re running at?”
Chapter 14
- Will Ethan become friends with Paco? What makes you
think so or not?
- Will Uncle C.L. leave Ethan and go home with Bird now?
Chapter 15
- Who is standing at the doorway for Jay?
- What will happen next?
Chapter 16
- What happens back in Ohio after the close of the book?
- What do you think happens to Ethan and Jay and Cecil?
Comprehension Check:
- Why did Bird take a bus to Acorn, Alabama?
- How has Ethan been different from other kids until just
recently?
- Ethan has something that is not his own. What is it and
whose was it?
- Why do you think Ethan doesn’t tell his mom about Bird?
- What does Jay do with his friend Googy? Why do you think
he does it?
- Who allows Bird a chance to get clean and full? What
connection does she have with another character?
- Why can’t Ethan tell his Uncle Cecil or anyone else
about Bird disappearing?
- Describe Jay’s approach to his house arrest.
- Why does Bird tell Ethan she loves him? To whom is she
really speaking?
- What does Bird realize out on the early morning run?
What does that help her to do?
Discussion Guide:
- “That’s what made me leave. Those ants. Everything,
nothing, and those red ants.” Bird reveals about leaving home. What do you
think she means by this? Have you ever had something seemingly unconnected
change everything?
- How does Ethan feel about his mother? How does he
describe her? Why do you think he makes a connection between Bird and his mom?
- Jay says, “I’ve heard my folks say that if people took
the time to think about the dumb things they might do when they’re about to do
them, they wouldn’t. My folks are wrong.” (p. 31) Do you agree with Jay or his
parents? Why?
- Bird doesn’t want people to know who she is, and yet
she’s terribly lonely. How does this conflict affect her behavior and how she
interacts with people? She says, “You can be almost anybody in the summer.”
Why is this so important to her?
- Ethan was always afraid of heights and people never made
him try anything he was scared of when he was so sick. Discuss how an illness
in the family can change everything. How will they change again now that he’s
better?
- Why do you think Jay is able to admit to Bird his
brother’s death when he hasn’t been able to say it before? Is this an
important moment for Ethan? Why? How does it affect Bird’s decision?
- Bird asks Ethan, “you think somebody can love a person
if they don’t tell that person things about themselves?” What do you think of
Bird’s question? Can people? Why or why not?
- Ethan’s family plants roses in Jay’s yard as a symbol of
their gratitude. Why does it make Jay angry at first? How do you think his
parent’s feel? How would you feel if you were Jay? or Ethan? Or either set of
parents?
- How does this runaway stranger, Bird, change the lives
of both Ethan and Jay? Is it for the better? How? How can strangers change
lives for both good and bad?
- Bird doesn’t have to talk to Cecil to come to her own
conclusions about him. What does she realize? Why is this so important?
Projects Across the Curriculum:
Language Arts:
Write the news stories that might appear in a local paper
based off the events in this story. For example: Local teen goes missing, last
seen at Greyhound Bus Depot.
Mathematics:
Make a character chart with the following characteristics:
Name, description, home, relationship to Bird, and a quote about them or by them
that best represents their character. Use it to study for a quiz.
Art:
Create a sculpture inspired by the events in Bird. Your
media and technique is completely your own, but describe your process and what
you hoped to accomplish in a brief paragraph about it.
Music:
Bird spent a great deal of her time outside during this
novel. Go outside with a journal and record all the sounds that you hear and
their source. You may even want to make a recording of it. What did you learn
from this experience?

www.TracieVaughnZimmer.com
You support this site when you buy Tracie's latest book! Thank you!