Illustration of forest animals waking up with the sun
Art by Jesus Lopez

The Great Contest to Stay Awake

An Aniyunwiya (Cherokee) folktale

By Retold by Joseph Bruchac | Art by Jesus Lopez
From the October/November 2024 Issue

Learning Objective: Children will understand what a pourquoi tale is by reading a Native American folktale. 

Lexiles: 470L
Topic: SEL, Science,

Long ago, the birds, animals, and trees had a great contest. They wanted to see who could stay awake the longest. Whoever won would be able to go without sleeping every night.

Rabbit began to brag.

“I will win this,” Rabbit said.  “I will not close my eyes. I will stay awake the longest.” 

Rabbit went to sleep first.

Rabbit kept talking and talking. But when it started to get dark, Rabbit was the first to sleep. 

All through the night, one animal after another fell asleep.

All through the night, one bird after another fell asleep. Even Hawk and Eagle slept. 

One tree after another also fell asleep. Most of the trees could not stay awake.

When the sun rose, only three animals had not slept. They are the animals who can stay awake at night.

The only bird still awake was Owl. So, to this day, owls are the only birds who go all night without sleeping.

Among the trees, just a few were still awake at sunrise.

So it is that they are the only trees who do not sleep. They do not lose their leaves during the winter when the other trees are asleep.

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Activities (2)
Answer Key (1)
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Answer Key (1)

About the Story

English Language Arts Focus

Genres of fiction

Science Focus

Animal behavior/plant adaptations

Step-by-Step Lesson Plan

Implementation

  • Whole group

Pairings and Text Connections

  • From the Storyworks 1 archive: “Early Reader Fiction: Turtle’s Race With Bear” (October/November 2023)

Before-Reading Resources

  • Video: Can You Be a Good Friend? (5 minutes) Build background knowledge about the folktale genre.

Suggested Reading Focus

Comprehension/folktales (30 minutes)

  • Tell children that you will be reading a special kind of folktale called a pourqoui tale. These are stories people have been telling for a long time that explain how something in nature came to be.
  • Preview the story by looking at the illustrations on the first two pages. Ask children what they think the story is about and what it might explain.
  • Read the story aloud while students follow along in their magazines. Model summarizing the section and asking comprehension questions at each Pause and Think. Point out the labels of the animals and trees.
  • Finally, focus on the main idea of the story. Which trees and animals stayed awake? Which trees and animals fell asleep? What does the story explain about the trees and animals?

After-Reading Resources

  • Video: Meet Joseph Bruchac (5 minutes) Learn more about the author who retold this story! 

After-Reading Skills Practice

  • Skills: Main idea (15 minutes)

Text-to-Speech