“Door het product te gebruiken, waren ze zo enthousiast en leerden ze zoveel...”– Bibliothecaris K-5 en docent onderwijstechnologie
In deze activiteit, zullen de studenten identificeren van de structurele componenten van het gedicht, met inbegrip van strofen en lijnen. Studenten zullen ook de rijmschema in elke strofe bepalen door het labelen van de lijnen met de letters van het alfabet. Het belangrijkste is, zullen de studenten te analyseren en beschrijven de belangrijkste idee van de strofe.
Het voorbeeld voorwaarde is voor de eerste strofe.
(Deze instructies kunnen volledig worden aangepast. Nadat u op "Activiteit kopiëren" hebt geklikt, werkt u de instructies bij op het tabblad Bewerken van de opdracht.)
Student Instructions
Identify the structural components of the poem including stanzas and lines.
Grade Level 4-5
Moeilijkheidsgraad 3 (Het ontwikkelen tot Mastery)
Soort Opdracht Individueel of Partner
Type Activiteit: Proza Analyse met TWIST
(U kunt ook uw eigen maken op Quick Rubric.)
| Proficient 33 Points | Emerging 25 Points | Beginning 17 Points | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elements | The three common elements of a poem are correctly identified. The explanations give context to the scene, and are accurate and appropriate. | Two elements of a poem are correctly identified. The explanations give some context to the scene, and are somewhat accurate and appropriate. | One or none of the elements of a poem are correctly identified. The explanations give little context to the scene, and are somewhat or are inaccurate or inappropriate. |
| Illustrations | The art chosen to depict the scenes are accurate to the work of literature. Time and care is taken to ensure that the scenes are neat, eye-catching, and creative. | The art chosen to depict the scenes should be accurate, but there may be some liberties taken that distract from the assignment. Scene constructions are neat, and meet basic expectations. | The art chosen to depict the scenes is inappropriate. Scene constructions are messy and may create some confusion, or may be too limited. |
| English Conventions | Ideas are organized. There are few or no grammatical, mechanical, or spelling errors. | Ideas are mostly organized. There are some grammatical, mechanical, or spelling errors. | Ideas may be disorganized or misplaced. Lack of control over grammar, mechanics, and spelling reflect a lack of proofreading. |
In deze activiteit, zullen de studenten identificeren van de structurele componenten van het gedicht, met inbegrip van strofen en lijnen. Studenten zullen ook de rijmschema in elke strofe bepalen door het labelen van de lijnen met de letters van het alfabet. Het belangrijkste is, zullen de studenten te analyseren en beschrijven de belangrijkste idee van de strofe.
Het voorbeeld voorwaarde is voor de eerste strofe.
(Deze instructies kunnen volledig worden aangepast. Nadat u op "Activiteit kopiëren" hebt geklikt, werkt u de instructies bij op het tabblad Bewerken van de opdracht.)
Student Instructions
Identify the structural components of the poem including stanzas and lines.
Grade Level 4-5
Moeilijkheidsgraad 3 (Het ontwikkelen tot Mastery)
Soort Opdracht Individueel of Partner
Type Activiteit: Proza Analyse met TWIST
(U kunt ook uw eigen maken op Quick Rubric.)
| Proficient 33 Points | Emerging 25 Points | Beginning 17 Points | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elements | The three common elements of a poem are correctly identified. The explanations give context to the scene, and are accurate and appropriate. | Two elements of a poem are correctly identified. The explanations give some context to the scene, and are somewhat accurate and appropriate. | One or none of the elements of a poem are correctly identified. The explanations give little context to the scene, and are somewhat or are inaccurate or inappropriate. |
| Illustrations | The art chosen to depict the scenes are accurate to the work of literature. Time and care is taken to ensure that the scenes are neat, eye-catching, and creative. | The art chosen to depict the scenes should be accurate, but there may be some liberties taken that distract from the assignment. Scene constructions are neat, and meet basic expectations. | The art chosen to depict the scenes is inappropriate. Scene constructions are messy and may create some confusion, or may be too limited. |
| English Conventions | Ideas are organized. There are few or no grammatical, mechanical, or spelling errors. | Ideas are mostly organized. There are some grammatical, mechanical, or spelling errors. | Ideas may be disorganized or misplaced. Lack of control over grammar, mechanics, and spelling reflect a lack of proofreading. |
Encourage creativity by having students compose a four-line stanza that follows a chosen rhyme scheme, such as ABCB. This hands-on activity helps students apply their understanding of rhyme patterns and poem structure.
Ask students to think about a simple event in nature, like a bird or an animal doing something interesting. Jot down a few words or phrases as a class to help spark ideas and make the writing process easier.
Draw four lines on the board and label them with letters for your chosen rhyme scheme (for example, A B C B). Remind students to match the end words in the second and fourth lines to follow the pattern.
Have students write their stanza, then review the rhyme scheme and meaning together. Encourage them to adjust their lines so the rhyme fits and the ideas make sense.
Let students read their stanzas aloud and talk about which lines rhyme. Highlight how using a rhyme scheme helps create rhythm and unity, just like in Emily Dickinson's poem.
'A Bird Came Down the Walk' uses structural elements like stanzas (groups of lines) and a specific rhyme scheme (such as ABCB). Each stanza tells a part of the story, and the rhyme scheme creates rhythm and flow in the poem.
To identify a poem's rhyme scheme, label the last word of each line with a letter. If two lines end with words that rhyme, give them the same letter. For example, lines ending with 'walk' and 'chalk' both get 'A'.
The main idea is that the narrator observes a bird splitting a worm in two and eating it, showing a close look at nature's actions.
Students can analyze each stanza by reading carefully, summarizing what happens, and discussing the feelings or images it creates. Writing a brief description helps clarify the stanza's main idea.
Activities like labeling stanzas and lines, identifying rhyme schemes, and creating drawings or scenes based on the poem help elementary students understand poem structure and meaning.
“Door het product te gebruiken, waren ze zo enthousiast en leerden ze zoveel...”– Bibliothecaris K-5 en docent onderwijstechnologie
“Ik maak een Napoleon-tijdlijn en ik laat [studenten] bepalen of Napoleon een goede of een slechte kerel was, of ergens ertussenin.”– Leraar geschiedenis en speciaal onderwijs
“Studenten kunnen creatief zijn met Storyboard That en er zijn zoveel visuele hulpmiddelen waaruit ze kunnen kiezen... Dat maakt het echt toegankelijk voor alle studenten in de klas.”– Leraar derde klas