9th, 10th Grades  Lesson 60 minutes

Instinct vs. Intellect: Escape Showdown

Amanda D
Updated
Effective Communication
Critical Thinking & Problem Solving
Content Expertise
1-pager

Purpose

Students investigate how people survive danger by comparing “A Sound of Thunder” and “Being Prey,” focusing on when intellect, instinct, or both shape survival and reveal limits to human control over nature. In one 60-minute lesson, they launch with a rapid-choice movement challenge, analyze plot and character choices, learn from a park ranger or wildlife biologist, and turn their thinking into a partner infographic, poster or slide, and a short CER exit video. The work builds critical thinking, communication, and content expertise through discussion, critique, revision, and reflection during a gallery walk. It prepares students to share their final thinking at Wild Wisdom Night through a mixed-media presentation of their survival analysis and real-world safety insights.

Learning goals

Students will analyze how theme develops across both texts by comparing how plot events and character choices reveal survival, danger, and the limits of human control over nature. Students will use discussion, a rapid-choice launch, and questions from a park ranger or wildlife biologist to evaluate when intellect, instinct, or both are most effective in dangerous situations. Students will communicate their thinking through a partner poster or digital slide, a claim-evidence-reasoning exit video, and feedback during gallery walks that strengthen reasoning and revision. Students will apply ideas from literature and real-world safety guidance to create a two-story infographic and prepare for a public presentation at Wild Wisdom Night.

Competencies
  • Effective Communication - Students practice listening to understand, communicating with empathy, and share their learning through exhibiting, presenting and reflecting on their work.
  • Critical Thinking & Problem Solving - Students consider a variety of innovative approaches to address and understand complex questions that are authentic and important to their communities.
  • Content Expertise - Students develop key competencies, skills, and dispositions with ample opportunities to apply knowledge and engage in work that matters to them.

Products

Students create a partner poster or digital slide comparing the two stories, showing key plot choices, survival responses, one text-based example, and a sentence explaining how their thinking changed during discussion. They also record a short claim-evidence-reasoning exit video explaining whether intellect, instinct, or both help people survive, using evidence from both texts and the community partner’s talk. As a culminating product, students produce a two-story infographic with one section for each text that highlights theme development, human control of nature, and one real-world safety tip from the park ranger or wildlife biologist. For Wild Wisdom Night, they combine the video, poster or slide, infographic, and selected discussion notes into a mixed-media presentation for classmates and the community partner.

Launch

Start with a rapid-choice survival challenge: read 4–5 danger scenarios aloud and have students move to different sides of the room to show whether the best response is intellect, instinct, or both, then defend their choice in a quick partner talk. Introduce the essential question and tell students they will test their thinking by comparing how characters in both stories survive and by learning from a park ranger or wildlife biologist about real human-wildlife encounters. Follow with a brief image or audio hook from a wilderness encounter and ask students to jot one prediction about whether humans can truly control nature. Close the launch by naming the final infographic, poster/slide, and exit video so students know they are building toward sharing their thinking publicly at Wild Wisdom Night.

Exhibition

Host a Wild Wisdom Night where pairs present their two-story infographic, claim-evidence-reasoning exit video, and discussion notes to classmates, families, and the park ranger or wildlife biologist. Set up the room as a gallery with one station per pair, and invite visitors to leave feedback on how clearly each group explained survival through intellect, instinct, or both across the two texts. Include a short live share-out where a few students explain how their thinking about human control of nature changed after reading, discussion, and the community partner talk. End with a celebration board where guests post one real-world survival strategy they learned from students’ work.