Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Unit Plan in the Elements of a Short Story by Thatcher Dela Peña

Author Information

First and Last Name:

Thatcher de la Peña

Email Address:

TKdP_27@yahoo.com.ph

Name of School:

Ateneo de Davao University

School where the Unit Plan was Implemented

Davao City National High School

Division:

Social Sciences and Education

Municipality/City, Province, Region:

Davao City, Region XI

Country:

Philippines

Unit Overview

Unit Plan Title:

Arrangement in Focus

Curriculum-Framing Questions


Essential Question

How does order affect our lives?


Unit Questions

  1. How does literary piece affirm, modify or change one’s value system?
  2. Why do we arrange things?
  3. What is the importance of putting things unto order?


Content Questions

  1. What are the different sentence structures?
  2. How do they differ from each other?
  3. Why sentence structure matters?
  4. What are the situation-problem-attempted solution-result patters in fables?

Unit Summary:

Letters are important to form words. Words are important to form sentences. Sentences are used to express ideas and needs. Almost all people used sentences as they go on with their lives.

This unit will guide students on when, why and how to use varied sentence structure in the right time. A fable will be used to benchmark the grammar lessons.

At the end of the unit, students shall have the following knowledge from:

  1. elements of the short story
  2. sentence structures
  3. composition of fable using varied sentence structures
  4. webpage making for the class
  5. multimedia presentation of fable
  6. campaigning about fables by producing and distributing flyers around the campus

Targeted Philippine Basic Education Curriculum Competencies

  1. Point out the (situation-problem-attempted solution-result) discourse pattern in fables
  2. Identify cause-effect relationships in fables.
  3. Produce original composition of fable:

expand ideas in writing using cohesive devices and employing different rhetorical modes.

Use key idea sentences, support sentences, transition devices and restatements in texts.

  1. Show understanding and appreciation of fables

Explain the characteristics of fables

  1. Determine the conflicts presented in the literature and the need to resolve those conflicts in a non-violent way

Student Objectives/Learning Outcomes:

  • Identification of elements of the plot in a story
  • Distinguish sentence structures from other forms
  • Create original composition of fables using varied sentence structures
  • Transfer original composition or classic fable to a multimedia presentation
  • Create webpage
  • Produce flyers
  • Conduct survey and interpret data

Procedures:

2 weeks before the first meeting – Review Implementation Plan

Day 1 – Introduction of the Unit Plan

Groupings

Overview of the unit (students samples and rubrics)

- Discuss Fables

Discussion Questions:

How do you find the story?

Who are you in the story?

How do you feel about it?

What is the lesson?

How does it affirm or modify your value system?

Why do we usually respond to conflicts in violent ways?

2 –Discuss varied sentence structures and conjunctions

Simple sentences

Coordinating conjunctions

Compound sentences

Subordinating conjunctions

Complex sentences

Compound-complex sentences

3 – Varied sentence structures Drills

75-item drills about varied sentence structures and conjunctions

4 – Discuss elements of the short story

Conflict

Plot

Setting

Theme

Characters

5 – Guest Speaker

The guest speaker will give tips on how to create fables

6 – Culminating Activity

Approximate Time Needed:

One hour per meeting everyday

Prerequisite Skills:

Students must have the following background on:

computer skills – word, excel, power point and publication

knowledge on parts of speech

basic skills on figures of speech




Resource Student:

The students can also go to the library to have an inventory of book (fables) and how many times it was borrowed per year. Library personnel can actually be of help to their project by promoting/encouraging students who visit the library to check out and read fables. In the end, the library personnel can request students to give them the result of their study to display it in the library.


Gifted Student:

Students who are computer literate and technologically advance can be the head of webpage making and reservation of AVR equipments necessary for the culminating activity.

Students will be grouped with five to six members each. Each group will have different task to focus. In a fish bowl, they will draw what they will focus whether they will do power point presentation, flyers or webpage.


Student Assessment:

Students will be evaluated individually and by group.

Individual: Peer evaluation

By group: Rubrics –

Power point presentation

Publication

Webpage

1 comment:

flack_13 said...

In behalf of our group, we would like to comment to your plans, assessment and the likes. We would just like to say that they are effective mostly. For your plans, good luck and just continue to be a good mentor to us and for the incoming students. Godspeed