Pre-reading Activity Lesson Plan
Name: Shirlley Kelly Cordeiro.
Content Objectives: Students will be able to make comparisons in a
funny way: doing similes and understand
the idea of the best way to get something.
Language Objective: Students will be able to re-tell the story
using comparative forms: like, as.
Learning Strategy Objective:
Students will create a list of the most used
similes our they can invent.
Activate Background Knowledge: Show students some pictures of
different kinds of behavior: sleep a lot or snoring, run fast, tiptoe behind
somebody, get angry, swim across a river, climb into a cave. Create a large possibilities using as and like: Sleep like a stone,
run as a bird; as loud as a plane, as quick as a fox. Show the differences
between these two structures.
Introduce new vocabulary: snore, still, snug, log, chain saw, busy,
shooting star, buck, zip, meadow, wink, sneak, tricky, lamb, roar, mean. Show
pictures of the vocabulary words, say them without the picture and have the
students do the motion for the word.
Picture Walk: go through the pages observing what is in the
pictures aloud, and asking students questions as the story unfolds: Oh, look,
here is a fox on a forest. What is going on? It is sleeping. Look the rats. What`s the problem? They are
worried. What`s the problem? The fox is snoring aloud. Why the fox is running
so fast? Is it going to eat the sheep? Why the sheep is chasing after fox? Have
you ever done or receive that from someone? Why the fox did it? What would you
do at her place? Is that a smart way to calls somebody attention or do a plane?
Did it work? Would you do the same?
Similes are fun and challenging at the same time, because sometimes it is hard to understand what they mean. Here is a useful compilation of children's books that might be good for teaching similes: http://www.teachingkidsbooks.com/uncategorized/simile-in-picture-books
ReplyDeleteNatalia