Question

In this section, you’ll navigate how the language of a written work can change based on who is reading and what the purpose of the piece is.

You’ve done an amazing job with your BookTok research and revisions for Grandpa Hank. His viewership has more than doubled!

Sophia thanks you for your help and asks if you could help her cousin, Liam, with his BookTok video, too. Liam is 13, so only approved followers from his age group can access his video. His friends are starting to call a required read, Aesop’s Fables, a childish fairy tale, and Liam disagrees. It’s one of his favorite books, and he wants to convince his friends that it’s worth reading. He wants to concentrate on one story in particular: “The Tortoise and the Hare.”

What aspect of Aesop’s Fables could Liam talk about first as a way of grabbing his friends’ attention?
Question 7 options:

A detailed history of the book and its author because children are captivated by ancient history, which will draw them in


The vocabulary words that they could learn within, as children enjoy learning new words


The moral lesson at the end of his favorite story because children respond positively to simple lessons they can carry with them, like "slow and steady wins the race"


The first paragraph of his favorite story within the book, as a way of setting the scene for what they might miss out on if they don't read it

Answers

GPT-4o mini
The moral lesson at the end of his favorite story because children respond positively to simple lessons they can carry with them, like "slow and steady wins the race."

This approach will resonate with his friends because it highlights a relevant life lesson in a straightforward way, making the story relatable and encouraging them to reconsider Aesop's Fables as more than just childish tales.