MINI LESSON SUMMARIZE POEMS — 5TH GRADE. CONNECTION WE HAVE LEARNED HOW TO ANALYZE TEXT TO DETERMINE THEMES OR LIFE LESSONS. WE HAVE LEARNED HOW TO ANALYZE.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The people Look for some people. Write it down. By the water
Advertisements

Preposition Poetry.
Literary Response.
Holiday Lights! What is the forecast? Could it be snow? Temperatures falling To twenty below. So tonight I will be listning to my weather radio, To see.
A traditional Chinese tale retold by Sparrow Class.
The Red Wheelbarrow
BY WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS
READ SILENTLY e ither your independent SEM-R novel or your Literature book.
Final Review Rhyme Scheme and Figures of Speech. Shakespeare and Poetry Rhyme – The repetition of sounds at the end of words. Examples: cat, bat, rat;
Poetry.
Warm-up: (Quick write) In one minute, write what comes to mind when you think of spring… Ready?... GO!
Shaping Poetry from Prose
What are we going to do? What does determine mean?
The Seasons.
Figurative Language & POV
A Race to the Finish Based on Aesop’s Fable “The Tortoise and the Hare” Sally K. Albrecht and Jay Althouse.
PARAPHRASE It is a restatement – a sort of translation in the same language – of material that may in its original form be somewhat obscure to a reader.
READ ALOUD : “Darkness is My Friend” READ ALOUD : “Darkness is My Friend” n GENRE: Poetry n Poems use rhythm and sound patterns to help express meaning.
Mini lesson Identify a Poem’s Theme — 5th grade
IT’S WHAT YOU SAY AND HOW YOU SAY IT! Tone and Mood in Poetry.
Second Grade English High Frequency Words
Vanessa Chung, Melissa Feriozzo, Sofia Ferreyro-Mazieres
Teaching poetry with the K’s.. The chart for the spring facts.
LESSON THE MEANING OF IMAGERY AND SYMBOLS PURPOSE -TO IDENTIFY THE IMAGERY AND SYMBOLS THAT WRITERS USE AS A WAY TO INFER THE WRITER’S PURPOSE AND.
Bunny Poems. I’m a Little Bunny I am a little bunny, Eyes on the sides of my head. I see to the left and right, Behind me and ahead. Eye.
Glorious Day One day when Heaven was filled with His praises One day when sin was as black as could be Jesus came forth to be born of a virgin Dwelt among.
I can edit sentences for mistakes in punctuation. I can analyze a writer’s choice of figurative language, repetition, and diction and their effects on.
Fragments & Run-on sentences
Created by Verna C. Rentsch and Joyce Cooling Nelson School
Comm Arts-Day 3 (computers are not needed) Bell Ringer: Below are some of the complex sentences you all wrote yesterday. Please write down if each one.
Unit 3: Perseverance “Life is not easy for any of us. But what of that? We must have perseverance and above all confidence in ourselves.” Marie Curie.
JOY.
1 2 Today a special guest Has come to say hello He wears a hat that’s red and white And he’s someone you might know. 3.
….to support the author’s purpose. Tone  Tone is the author’s attitude toward the subject.  You can recognize the tone/attitude by the language/word.
Complete Dolch Sight Word List Preprimer through Third
In Poetry Personification is a type of figurative language. It is when a writer makes an animal or object seem like it is human.
Do Now. Point of View Objective: Students will be able to: define point of view, first person point of view, third person limited point of view, and third.
Let’s Read Our Bedrock One Words! a I saw a girl and a boy.
Tone Voice of the Speaker. What is tone? The attitude with which the speaker or narrator treats his or her subject. Tone is similar to tone of voice.
GOOD MORNING GOOD MORNING Class- III Class- III ENGLISH ENGLISH Prepared By Padma P Prepared By Padma P KV NO.1 Uppal KV NO.1 Uppal.
READ SILENTLY e ither your independent SEM-R novel or your Literature book.
Poetry Elements Forms of Poetry Study Guide & Graphic Organizer.
Dolch Spectrum can girl boy read cat puppy.
English I: MEL-CON/ SUBJECT VERB AGREEMENT DAY. LET’S GO! 20 October 2015.
PERSONIFICATION DorothyDorothy: Dorothy Don't be silly, Toto. Scarecrows don't talk. Nathan Wells Greenfield Elementary 4 th grade.
Main Idea, Mood, and Theme Brought to you by powerpointpros.com.
High Frequency Words August 31 - September 4 around be five help next
So what do you need to know? NO test on this unit speaker--person or object talking in a poem stanza--the sections a poem is divided into (like paragraphs)
Mini lesson Speaker’s Point of View — 5th grade
Mood and Tone.
Tone Voice of the Speaker.
“SKYLINE PIGEON” (Performed by Elton John) Would Like
What is Poetry? What do poets use to expand meaning or to express ideas in a more thoughtful way? How do poets manipulate sound in a poem as compared.
Poetry Analysis Essay. What does it mean to “analyze” a poem?  We are trying to figure out what the theme of the poem is… AND  How the poet uses literary.
Presentation By: Gary Hoehler
I forget what I was taught. I only remember what I have learnt. - Patrick White.
By Charlotte Mew ( ). A Quoi Bon Dire Seventeen years ago you said Something that sounded like Good-bye And everybody thinks that you are dead,
Sequence of Events. Key Words Key Vocabulary FirstNext/Later/Following Finally/Lastly/In addition.
High Frequency words Kindergarten review. red yellow.
Voice of the Speaker. Tone is the attitude with which the speaker or narrator treats his or her subject.  Tone is similar to tone of voice.  The same.
Katelyn Templin.  First Grade Language Arts Standards › 1.W.1.1 and 1.W.2.1.
Shaping Poetry from Prose What makes a poem a poem??
And make happy the skies. The merry bells ring To welcome the spring.
What do you understand by “pastoral”? What is “the pastoral”?
Mini lesson Identify a Poem’s Theme — 5th grade
Joy A Musical Tribute.
Readers understand that author’s word choice affects the mood.
Mini lesson Speaker’s Point of View — 5th grade
Poetry September 18, 2017.
“The Bells” & “Christmas Bells”
Week 8 Language Arts.
Presentation transcript:

MINI LESSON SUMMARIZE POEMS — 5TH GRADE

CONNECTION WE HAVE LEARNED HOW TO ANALYZE TEXT TO DETERMINE THEMES OR LIFE LESSONS. WE HAVE LEARNED HOW TO ANALYZE TEXT TO DETERMINE THEMES OR LIFE LESSONS. WE HAVE ALSO LEARNED HOW TO ANALYZE THE STRUCTURE OF TEXTS TO DETERMINE HOW THE STRUCTURE LEADS TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF A THEME AND WE HAVE COMPARED AUTHORS’ APPROACHES TO SIMILAR THEMES ACROSS TEXTS AND GENRES. WE HAVE ALSO LEARNED HOW TO ANALYZE THE STRUCTURE OF TEXTS TO DETERMINE HOW THE STRUCTURE LEADS TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF A THEME AND WE HAVE COMPARED AUTHORS’ APPROACHES TO SIMILAR THEMES ACROSS TEXTS AND GENRES. TODAY WE WILL LEARN HOW TO ANNOTATE AND SUMMARIZE POETRY. TODAY WE WILL LEARN HOW TO ANNOTATE AND SUMMARIZE POETRY.

TEACHING WHEN READING A POEM IT IS IMPORTANT TO READ THE POEM CLOSELY. WHEN READING A POEM IT IS IMPORTANT TO READ THE POEM CLOSELY. IN ORDER TO DO THAT YOU MUST READ THE POEM SEVERAL TIMES. IN ORDER TO DO THAT YOU MUST READ THE POEM SEVERAL TIMES. THE FIRST TIME YOU READ THE POEM IT IS FOR ENJOYMENT. THE FIRST TIME YOU READ THE POEM IT IS FOR ENJOYMENT. THE SECOND TIME IS TO IDENTIFY AND INTERPRET FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE USING ANNOTATIONS. THE SECOND TIME IS TO IDENTIFY AND INTERPRET FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE USING ANNOTATIONS. THE THIRD TIME IS TO UNDERSTAND THE TONE AND MOOD OF THE POEM. THE THIRD TIME IS TO UNDERSTAND THE TONE AND MOOD OF THE POEM. AFTER READING THE POEM THREE TIMES, YOU ARE THEN ABLE TO SUMMARIZE THE POEM. AFTER READING THE POEM THREE TIMES, YOU ARE THEN ABLE TO SUMMARIZE THE POEM.

LET’S BEGIN WITH THE POEM THE ECHOING GREEN BY WILLIAM BLAKE. LET’S BEGIN WITH THE POEM THE ECHOING GREEN BY WILLIAM BLAKE. I WILL READ THE POEM ALOUD THE FIRST TIME FOR ENJOYMENT. THE SECOND TIME WE READ THE POEM I WANT YOU STOP ME WHEN YOU HEAR FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE. THE THIRD TIME WE READ THE POEM WE ARE GOING TO DETERMINE THE TONE AND MOOD OF THE POEM.

“The Echoing Green” by William Blake The sun does arise, And make happy the skies; The merry bells ring To welcome the Spring; The skylark and thrush, The birds of the bush, Sing louder around To the bells’ cheerful sound; While our sports shall be seen On the echoing green. Old John, with white hair, Does laugh away care, Sitting under the oak, Among the old folk. They laugh at our play, And soon they all say, ‘Such, such were the joys When we all - girls and boys- In our youth-time were seen On the echoing green.’ Summarizing Each Stanza Stanza 1 ________________________________________ _________________________________________ _________________________________________ Stanza 2 ________________________________________ _________________________________________ _________________________________________

Till the little ones weary, No more can be merry: The sun does descend, And our sports have an end. Round the laps of their mothers Many sisters and brothers, Like birds in their nest, Are ready for rest, And sport no more seen On the darkening green. Stanza 3 ________________________________________ _________________________________________ _________________________________________

NOW THAT WE HAVE READ THE POEM THREE TIMES WE ARE ABLE TO LOOK AT THE ANNOTATIONS AND SUMMARIZE THE POEM. WHEN WE SUMMARIZE A TEXT MAKES SURE TO USE YOUR OWN LANGUAGE TO DESCRIBE THE MAIN IDEA OF EACH STANZA. LET’S USE THE RIGHT SIDE OF THE SHEET TO SUMMARIZE THE MAIN IDEA OF EACH STANZA.

“The Echoing Green” by William Blake The sun does arise, And make happy the skies; The merry bells ring To welcome the Spring; The skylark and thrush, The birds of the bush, Sing louder around To the bells’ cheerful sound; While our sports shall be seen On the echoing green. Old John, with white hair, Does laugh away care, Sitting under the oak, Among the old folk. They laugh at our play, And soon they all say, ‘Such, such were the joys When we all - girls and boys- In our youth-time were seen On the echoing green.’ Summarizing Each Stanza Stanza 1 Spring is a cheerful time of year. The sky is bright, birds are cheerfully singing, and people can play sports outside. Stanza 2 The elderly people enjoy watching kids play and remembering the joys of the time when they also played on the green.

Till the little ones weary, No more can be merry: The sun does descend, And our sports have an end. Round the laps of their mothers Many sisters and brothers, Like birds in their nest, Are ready for rest, And sport no more seen On the darkening green. Stanza 3 The sun is setting; kids are tired from playing outside all day. Everyone is ready for bed.

GUIDED PRACTICE YOU WILL WORK ON AN INDEPENDENT PRACTICE SHEET. YOU WILL WORK WITH A PARTNER TO READ A POEM THREE TIMES, IDENTIFY THE FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE, AND THEN SUMMARIZE EACH STANZA.

Suspense by Pat Mora Wind chases itself Around our house, flattens wild grasses with one hot breath. Clouds boil purple and gray, roll and roil. Scorpions dart under stones. Summarize

Rabbit eyes peer From the shelter of mesquite. Thorny silence. My paisano, the road runner paces, dashes into the rumble, races from the plink, plink splatter into his shadow, leaps at the crash flash splash, sky rivers rushing into arroyos and Thirsty roots of prickly pears, greening cactus. Summarize