The Little Red Hen
About the Story
'The Little Red Hen' is an old FOLK TALE that has been told to children for hundreds of years. It is a simple story with a BIG lesson about HARD WORK and SHARING the rewards of that work.
The Story
Finding the Wheat
A LITTLE RED HEN was scratching in the farmyard one day when she found some grains of WHEAT. 'These grains can grow into wheat, and the wheat can be made into bread!' she thought. But it would be a lot of work, so she went to ask her friends for help.
'Not I'
'Who will help me PLANT the wheat?' she asked.
- 'Not I,' said the DOG.
- 'Not I,' said the CAT.
- 'Not I,' said the DUCK.
'Then I will do it MYSELF,' said the Little Red Hen. And she DID.
She asked the same question at every stage, and every time her friends answered 'Not I':
- 'Who will help me CUT the wheat?' — 'Not I.'
- 'Who will help me THRESH the wheat?' — 'Not I.'
- 'Who will help me GRIND the wheat into FLOUR?' — 'Not I.'
- 'Who will help me BAKE the BREAD?' — 'Not I.'
Each time, the Little Red Hen did the work HERSELF.
The Reward
At last the BREAD was ready — warm, golden, and smelling delicious. Now the Little Red Hen asked: 'Who will help me EAT the bread?'
- 'I will!' said the Dog.
- 'I will!' said the Cat.
- 'I will!' said the Duck.
'NO,' said the Little Red Hen. 'You would not help me plant, cut, thresh, grind, or bake. I did ALL the work, so I will eat the bread MYSELF.' And she DID — every last crumb.
What We Learn
- You reap what you sow. If you do not help with the work, you cannot expect to share the reward.
- Hard work pays off. The Little Red Hen worked alone, but in the end she enjoyed all the bread.
- Be willing to help others. The dog, cat, and duck learned that being lazy left them with nothing.
New Words
| Word | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Thresh | To beat the wheat to separate the grain |
| Grind | To crush grain into flour |
| Reward | Something you get for your effort |
| Lazy | Not wanting to work |
Fun Activity
Draw the FIVE steps the Little Red Hen took to make bread, from PLANTING the wheat to EATING the loaf. Label each step.
Self-Test
Q1: What did the Little Red Hen find in the farmyard?
Q2: What did her friends say every time she asked for help?
Q3: Name the steps the hen took to turn wheat into bread.
Q4: Why did the Little Red Hen eat the bread by herself?
Q5: What lesson does this story teach?
Answers
A1: Some grains of WHEAT. A2: 'Not I.' A3: Plant, cut, thresh, grind into flour, and bake. A4: Because she did all the work and her friends refused to help. A5: If you do not share the work, you do not share the reward; hard work pays off.
