Simile Personifcation Metaphor Lesson

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February 10, 2009 Ms. Durand Sophomore College Prep Figurative Language Timeline of Lesson: 58 minutes Abstract – the purpose of this lesson is to reinforce knowledge about simile, metaphor and personification. Objectives (at the end of this lesson students will be able to): Create figurative language within a poem. Identify figurative language within a poem or short story. Standards Addressed: ELA Standard 8: Understanding Text Students will identify basic facts and main ideas in a text and use them as the basis for interpretation. ELA Standard 12: Fiction Students will identify, analyze, and apply knowledge of the structure and elements of fiction and provide evidence from the text to support their understanding. ELA Standard 14: Poetry Students will identify, analyze, and apply knowledge of the themes, structure, and elements of poetry and provide evidence from the text to support their understanding. Guiding Questions: Procedure: 7:45 – 7:50 – collect papers. Give back work 7:50 – 8:00 – have students tell you definitions of simile, metaphor and personification. 8:00 – 8:15 – give correct definitions, put examples up on the board and have students tell you which one is which.

Transcript of Simile Personifcation Metaphor Lesson

February 10, 2009Ms. DurandSophomoreCollege Prep

Figurative LanguageTimeline of Lesson: 58 minutes

Abstract – the purpose of this lesson is to reinforce knowledge about simile, metaphor and personification.

Objectives (at the end of this lesson students will be able to): Create figurative language within a poem. Identify figurative language within a poem or short story.

Standards Addressed:ELA Standard 8: Understanding TextStudents will identify basic facts and main ideas in a text and use them as the basis for interpretation.ELA Standard 12: FictionStudents will identify, analyze, and apply knowledge of the structure and elements of fiction and provide evidence from the text to support their understanding.ELA Standard 14: PoetryStudents will identify, analyze, and apply knowledge of the themes, structure, and elements of poetry and provide evidence from the text to support their understanding.

Guiding Questions:

Procedure: 7:45 – 7:50 – collect papers. Give back work7:50 – 8:00 – have students tell you definitions of simile, metaphor and personification.8:00 – 8:15 – give correct definitions, put examples up on the board and have students tell you

which one is which.- Simile – a figure of speech that uses the word like, as, than or resembles to compare

things that seem to have little or nothing in common.Example: I wandered lonely as a cloud

- Metaphor o Direct metaphor – comparisons between unlike things without using like, as,

than or resembles. Ex: I was a lonely cloudo Implied metaphor – comparisons between unlike things without using like,

as, than or resembles. Comparisons are not so obvious but what it is

comparing to is implied. She barked orders at me, implies that she was talking harsh and maybe even rude.

- Personification – when we attribute human qualities to a nonhuman thing or to an abstract idea.

o The water runso Misery loves company

- 8:15 – 8:20 – read “Simile” p. 559 silently. Tell them to tell you where if there is simile metaphor or personification and where it is.

- 8:20 – 8:25 – find simile, metaphor, personification in “Remember” p.608- 8:25 – pass out create poem papers.

Assessment8:25 – 8:43 – have students write down one metaphor, simile, and personification.

- Hand out construction paper while doing this- Collect pieces of paper- Explain to students about an auction, and raising the right color- Teams by row across.- If all students get it right then pick one column and have students answer a

question, fastest one that get it right also has to give another example of a metaphor, simile or personification.

- Game is done by points, whoever gets the most points wins

Materials:- Construction paper