Game Play Open 2 nd Slide, let the sound play. Click to 3 rd Slide, let the sound play. Click to 4 th Slide and show students the Game Board As you play the game, click on the YELLOW DOLLAR AMOUNT that the contestant calls, not the surrounding box. When the student answers, click anywhere on the screen to see the correct answer. Keep track of which questions have already been picked by printing out the game board screen (Slide 4) and checking off as you go. Click on the “House / Home Icon” box to return to the main scoreboard. Final Jeopardy – Go to Slide 3 and click “Final Jeopardy” button in the bottom right corner, click again for the Question, click again for final jeopardy sound, When that is finished playing click again for the answer slide.
Final 100 ???
Literature Story Structure Standard 6 Genre Elements Genre
Physical or emotional attributes of a character described with adjectives
Character Traits
The difference between right and wrong; what was learned from the story
Moral or Lesson
Persons represented in plays, stories, or poems
Characters
A book or other printed work
Text
Support the main idea
Details
The story line or plan of the novel, text, or play
Plot
The main idea
Theme
The theme or central idea of a story
Central Message
Show how stories are similar
Compare
Show how stories are different
Contrast
Telling a story from the point of view of “I” or “we”
First Person
Telling a story without using “I” or “We”
Third Person
DAILY DOUBLE
Who is telling the story? Usually it is the main character
Point of View
Person who writes a story for others to read
Author
Someone who tells a story
Narrator
Rhythmic structure of a verse of poetry
Meter
How the syllables are stressed or unstressed in a poem
Rhythm
The actors in a performing arts piece
Casts
Actions or movements on stage
Stage Directions
Words spoken by characters in a story
Dialogue
A short tale that teaches a lesson or moral, often with animals
Folktale
Similar to poetry but it does not have rhythm or rhymes
Prose
A situation or event that creates an emotional effect
Drama
A belief or person that may not be able to be proven as real or true
Myth
A story told in a few words or lines that use figurative language, emotions and rhythm to explain the meaning
Poem
The acronyms used to compare fiction paired passages
STEPSA