Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
Period 8 1:50-3:10
Grade 4
Poetry Terms Scavenger Hunt
Subject/Topic/Activity: Writing
1. Standards:
W.4.3.D Use concrete words and phrases and sensory details to
convey experiences and events precisely.
W.4.4 Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development
and organization are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience.
(Grade-specific expectations for writing types are defined in
standards 1-3 above.)
RL.4.10 By the end of the year, read and comprehend literature,
including stories, dramas, and poetry, in the grades 4-5 text
complexity band proficiently, with scaffolding as needed at the high
end of the range.
SL.4.1 Engage effectively in a range of collaborative discussions
(one-on-one, in groups, and teacher-led) with diverse partners on
grade 4 topics and texts, building on others' ideas and expressing
their own clearly.
2. Objectives: SWBAT identify examples of specific poetry terms
within poems that are placed around a room through a scavenger
hunt.
3. Materials: Anchor chart on poetry terms, marker, scavenger hunt
worksheet, pencils, clipboards
4. Procedure
Introduction:
Connection: Call students to the rug with a pencil and a
clipboard. (Good morning/afternoon) writers! So we have
recently started our poetry unit. After reading all of the poems
that you wrote the other day, I noticed that many of you are
doing some really great things in your poems, like using rhymes
and descriptive language. Today I am going to introduce you to
some poetry terms. Some you may already know, but some will
probably be new to you.
Body:
Go over Poetry Terms anchor chart. Read each and give an
example: Alliteration, rhyme, onomatopoeia, personification,
metaphor, simile, repetition.
Closing:
Call students back to the rug and go over the scavenger hunt.
Allow students to share.
So, we will all be creating a collection of poems. As you write,
you can actually use all (or some) of these things in your own
poems. I know a lot of you are good with using rhymes, so for
those students, I challenge you to try using some other
technique to write your poems. This will make your poems so
much more interesting! So, who thinks that they are willing/able
to try a new technique in writing their poems? Thumbs Up.
Awesome! Cant wait to read them. Send them off to write
poems if there is extra time. Then have them pack up to go
home.
5. Assessment
I will be listening to the examples of the poetry terms that are given
during the closing assessing whether they are actually examples of
that term. I will also be assessing the poems that they will write for
the use of the new poetic techniques they learned through this
scavenger hunt.
6. Management Issues, Transitions, and Differentiation:
I will be calling the students to come to the rug by tables to bring
a pencil and a clipboard to the rug.
Once on the rug I will use the attention grabbing techniques:
Clap once if you can hear me. Clap twice if you can hear me.
And/or 1-2-3, eyes on me. (and these will be used during the
lesson also, if need be)
Hand signal: 2 fingers up, if students get too loud on the rug