3rd QUARTER English 10
3rd QUARTER English 10
3rd QUARTER English 10
MODULE 3 LESSON 1
Activity No. 1
Activity Title: What A Wonderful World!
Learning Target: Identify sensory images
Reference: Celebrating Diversity Through World Literature, pp. 274-27
To live in Gods wondrous creation is not only a blessing but an opportunity to
be thankful for. Oftentimes, we tend to ignore the magic it brings us but let us
not forget that what it offers generate a great change. A change that
surely makes a difference on our very own existence.
Activity:
A. Listen to the song What a Wonderful World sung by Louis Armstrong.
B. Answer the questions in the smiley card.
What a
Wonderful
World
C. Draw a big circle then write words from the song that appeal to your senses.
( Students are provided a copy of the song by the teacher. )
ENGLISH 10
MODULE 3 LESSON 1
Activity No. 2
( Day 2 )
Activity 2 Use the chart below to analyze the short story A Day in the
Country. Use the questions provided as your guide.
Title:__________________________________
Genre:______________________
Element
1.Character(s): Who
2.Setting: Where
Place/time, environment,
atmosphere of the story
Description
ENGLISH 10
MODULE 3 LESSON 1
Activity No. 3
Activity Title: Cases of Pronouns
Learning Target: Identify cases of pronouns
Reference: Celebrating Diversity Through World Literature, pp. 287-289
Nouns and pronouns in English are said to display case according to their
function in the sentence. They can be subjective or nominative (which means
they act as the subject of independent or dependent clauses), possessive
(which means they show possession of something else), or objective (which
means they function as the recipient of action or are the object of a
preposition).
The table below illustrates additional samples of personal pronouns in
different cases.
CASES OF PRONOUNS
Personal Pronouns
SINGULAR
First person
Second person
Third person
PLURAL
First person
Second person
Third person
Activity 1
1.
2.
3.
4.
SUBJECTIVE
POSSESSIVE
OBJECTIVE
we
you
they
our, ours
your, yours
their, theirs
us
you
them
I
you
he
she
it
my, mine
your, yours
his
her, hers
its
me
you
him
her
it
Maria and ( her, she ) laughed and talked well into the night.
( Him, He ) and I just dont seem to get along very well these days.
It was ( her, she ) who tied up the computer for three hours.
Cora handed Tom and ( I, me ) the employment applications.
ENGLISH 10
MODULE 3 LESSON 1
Activity No. 4
Activity Title: Eulogy (To be taken for 2 days )
Learning Target: Act out a eulogy for Mother Earth
Reference: Celebrating Diversity Through World Literature, pp. 293-296
Activity( Day 1 )
A. Read the example of eulogy for a pet written by DelmaDiquino.
Observe the tips you learned in delivering a eulogy. ( Copies of the
eulogy will be provided by the teacher ).
B. Group Activity (Students are divided into four groups.)
In your group, choose a representative to pick a number on a
lottery with a corresponding topic for Mother Nature.
( Day 2 )
C. Act out a speech of eulogy on a topic that corresponds to the
number you have chosen.
GROUP I dying river
ENGLISH 10
MODULE 3- LESSON 2
ACTIVITY NO. 1
opportunity, people
tend to
Activity. Listen to a short documentary about Save our Planet. Then distinguish
the important points from the less important ones by completing the table below.
Give
your
reason/s
why
it
is
important
or
less
important.
(http://www.youtube.com/watch)
IMPORTANT POINTS
REASON/S
LESS
IMPORTANT
POINTS
REASON/S
ENGLISH 10
MODULE 3- LESSON 2
ACTIVITY NO. 2
ENGLISH 10
MODULE 3- LESSON 2
ACTIVITY NO. 3
Activity Title: QUICK WRITES I
Learning Target: Using pronouns critique a selection focused on power struggles of
the characters.
Reference: Celebrating MulticulturismThrough World Literature
Page: 309-310
AUTHORS INTENTION
YOUR REACTIONS
LITERARY DEVICES
LITERARY TECHNIQUE
ENGLISH 10
MODULE 3- LESSON 2
ACTIVITY NO. 4
Activity Title: QUICK WRITES II
Learning Target: Write a speech of goodwill.
Reference: Celebrating MulticulturismThrough World Literature
Page: 310-311
Speeches to secure goodwill seek to forge new relationships between
previously unknown, antagonistic, or unfamiliar entities.
Goodwill speeches are both informative and persuasive. You seek to
persuade your audience to consider favourably you and who or what you represent.
It highlight shared values, customs, beliefs and morals. It should not intimidate,
embarrass, or offend the audience.
To write a speech of goodwill, you must identify your purpose. Have two to
three main points directly supporting the purpose of your speech. There should be
a definite opening, body and conclusion of the speech. A good and perfectly
delivered opening and closing creates an impact on the audience. Try to include
some humor since audience are delighted to receive messages sprinkled with subtle
funny words.
In writing, be reminded of the important conventions like sentence fluency
which refers to the rhythm and flow of the language, and the sound of word
patterns. There should also be good choice of words particularly those that create
mental picture for the reader. It should have a unique style to convey the authors
attitude, personality and character. The ideas need to be organized or arranged
with the necessary incidents, evidences or details.
Activity. Writing Fix 2. Write a speech of goodwill for Keesh after he was held
the chief of the tribe in at least 200 words.
ENGLISH 10
MODULE 3- LESSON 2
ACTIVITY NO. 5
Activity Title: STAGE IT!
Learning Target: Employ the appropriate prosodic features of speech through a
dramatic monologue.
Reference: Celebrating MulticulturismThrough World Literature
Page: 311-312
A wide range of feelings and ideas may be conveyed effectively through
speech especially if the speaker properly observes the following: pitch which
refers to the relative highness or lowness of a tone as perceived by the ear;
intonation refers to the music of a certain language (basically the rise and fall of
the voice); and rhythm which is the recurring movement of sound speech.
To have the best dramatic monologue presentation, warm up voice and body
before your performance so you stay in the role. If you make mistake dont stop,
just keep on going. Memorize your lines rather than using cue cards and use
sensible gestures and movements.
Activity. Stage a dramatic monologue to create goodwill using the speech you have
written for Keesh. Act out as Keesh to convey a range of feelings and ideas about
his characters attitude. Your performance is based on your interpretation and
ability to pretend to be a fully developed and convincing character from the text.
Criteria for Judging
Purpose( elaborates thoughts, feelings, and context of the speaker)
Elements ( point of view aand person are integrated;an implied
listener is evident)
- 20%
- 20%
- 20%
- 20%
- 20%
Total
________
100%
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 Lesson 3
Activity No. 1
OBJECTIVE:Point out the feminine side of nature and appreciate its importance
ACTIVITY TITLE: Preamble
REFERENCE: English 10 Learners Material, pp. 315
A preamble is an introductory and expressionary statement in a document
that explains the document's purpose and underlying philosophy. When applied to
the opening paragraphs of a statute, it may recite historical facts pertinent to the
subject of the statute. It is distinct from the long title or enacting formula of a
law.
TASK .Identify the similarities and differences of a mother and nature. Read the
excerpt from the Preamble of the Proposal for Universal Declaration of the
Rights of Mother Earth. Then, complete theVenn diagram below to compare and
contrast the words, Mother and Nature.
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 - Lesson 3
Activity No. 2
OBJECTIVE: Give the expanded definitions of the word
ACTIVITY TITLE: How Do I Define Thee?
REFERENCE: English 10 Learners Material, pp. 318
TASK. Use a dictionary and find the meanings of the following words. Then, give its
extended definition through context clues and by brainstorming ideas about each
word using a word web. Write each of the following words at the center and give at
least 4 words that are related to it.
1. plunge
2. vivid
3. clutter
4. battering
5. dismal
plunge
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 Lesson 3
Activity No. 3
OBJECTIVE: Explain how the elements specific to a selection build its theme
ACTIVITY TITLE: Song of Autumn
REFERENCE: English 10 Learners Material, pp. 317-319
Every author has a basic writing style. Style is not what an author writes,
but the manner in which she writes it. It is an authors unique way of
communicating ideas. One might say that style is the verbal identity of a writer.
The authors style is also revealed in these elements: tone, word choice,
imagery, style and theme (TWIST).
YOUR TEXT. Read the poem Song of Autumn written by a famous French author,
Charles Baudelaire translated to English by William Aggeler.
( Note: Copy of the poem will be provided by the teacher on a separate
sheet)
TASK. In order to understand the poem clearly and explain its theme, study how
the write develop the over-all style of the poem. Form 5 groups and accomplish the
task below.
Group 1 - Tone
What is the attitude of the author or speaker towards the subject?
c. winter
d. cold darkness
e. nailing a coffin
Group 3 Imagery
a. What images are created by the writer? ( Images pertains to touch,
smell, taste, or sight)
b. What objects add detail/s to the images created?
Group 4 Style
a. How did the writer develop the over-all style of the poem?
(figurative language, point of view, literary techniques, punctuation,
shifts, etc.)
b. Cite some examples.
Group 5 Theme
a. What is the theme exemplified in the poem?
b. Give important details to support your answer.
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 - Lesson 3
Activity No. 4
OBJECTIVE: Use quotation marks or hanging indentation for direct quotes
ACTIVITY TITLE: Using Quotation Marks
REFERENCE: English 10 Learners Material, pp. 320-322
TASK . Read a short story A Beautiful Woman I Cannot Forget and highlight
the sentences that used quotation marks. Take note of how quotation marks
were used to add more information to the text.
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 Lesson 3
Activity No. 5
OBJECTIVE: Use pronouns effectively and be able to clearly identify the
antecedent
ACTIVITY TITLE: Pronoun-Antecedent
REFERENCE: English 10 Learners Material, pp. 323-330
An antecedent is a word that comes before a pronoun which the pronoun
refers to. The pronoun must agree with its antecedent in number.
Rules:
1. A phrase or clause between the subject and verb does not change the
number of the antecedent.
2. Some indefinite pronouns that are modified by a prepositional phrase may be
singular or plural.
3. Compound subjects joined by and always take a plural referent.
4. With compound subjects joined by nor/or, the referent pronoun agrees with
the antecedent closer to the pronoun.
5. Collective nouns may be singular or plural, depending on meaning.
6. Titles of single entities (books, organizations, countries) take a singular
referent.
7. Plural form subjects with a singular meaning take a singular referent.
8. Every ormany a before a noun or a series of nouns requires a singular
referent.
9. The number of is singular . A number of is plural.
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 Lesson 4
Activity No. 1
Activity title: Reacting intelligently and creatively to the material
viewed
Learning Target: React intelligently and creatively to the material
viewed
Reference:English Grade 10-Learners Material page 338.
Debate is a formal contest of argumentation between two teams
or individual.
Task:
to
pp.244-245 of
the
Learners
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 Lesson 4
Activity No. 2
Exposition
Rising
action
Falling
action
denouement
Group 2- Complete the graphic organizer below. Identify the positive and negative
traits of the character towards his environment.
Group 3- Make a connection between the story and what is happening now in our
country by composing a rap song. Make it short but meaningful.
Group 4- Imagine that you are in a time machine. Compare and contrast what will
happen in the future if the problems we are experiencing now will prevail
or if it will not change. Prepare a simple illustration on a manila paper and
explain in class.
Group 5- Write a news article comparing the environmental and social conditions
of the country in the past and present. You may add your intuitions on
whatwill happen in the future if this will continue.
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 Lesson 4
Activity No. 3
A bibliography is a list of all the sources you have used (whether reference
or not) in the process of researching your work.
(Note: Refer the steps in writing bibliography using books, periodicals, and web
versions of printed materials (Learners Material pages 343-345.)
Activity
A. Prepare a bibliography for the following references:
1) Imagine you have written an essay. You have used information from a book.
The author is John Smith and he wrote in 2003. The title of the book is
English for Everybody. It was published in Bangkok by Lotus Press.
2) A book published in 2002 in New York. The title is Happy Happy. Publisher is
Zippie Publications. You dont know the author.
3) Magazine article by Susan Johnson in Style for Everyone magazine. Name of
the article is Bangkok: The Fashion Capital of the World. It is on page 28-32
of the 24 Oct.2004 issue.
4) Website. Article by James Hiho and Judy Blume. The address is
http//123456. The article is called Thai Students are the Best. The name of
the Website is Teach in Thailand. You saw the article on Jan.2, 2005. It was
put on the internet on Dec.26, 2004. (Hint: Look at Book with 2 Authors to
see how do something written by 2 people)
B. Alphabetize the list by putting # 1 inthe entry that goes first, #2 in the
next entry, etc.
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 Lesson 4
Activity No. 4
English 10
Module 3 Lesson 4
Activity No. 5
Activity title: Modification
Learning target: Use structures of modification
Reference: English Grade 10, Learners Manual pages 345- 348
Structures of Modification
Modification is the grammatical tie that exists, for example, between an
adjective and its noun, or a verb and its adverb. But structural diagrams can also
indicate clearly what we intuitively feel when we construct sentences: that
adjectives sometimes modify whole phrases which themselves contain other
adjectives, that adverbs sometimes modify whole clauses, that phrases sometimes
modify other phrases or whole clauses, that clauses sometimes modify other
clauses, or that some words we do not normally think of as adjectives sometimes
perform the grammatical function of modification.
(Note: Examples of modification refer to LM pages 346-347).
Task:
From the selected paragraphs in text, identify the sentences that contain
structures of modifications by rewriting it and identify the head, if it is a noun,
verb, or an adjective. Then draw from the modifiers to the word it modifies.
1) The man walked down the trail on a cold, gray day. Pure white snow and ice
covered the Earth for as far as he could see. This was his first winter in
Alaska. He was wearing heavy clothes and fur boots. But he still felt cold and
uncomfortable.
2) A dog behind the man. It was a big gray animal, half dog and half wolf. The
dog did not like the extreme cold. It knew the weather was too cold.
3) The man continued to walk down the trail. He came to a frozen stream called
Indian Creek. He began to walk on the snow - covered ice. It was a trail that
would lead him straight to the Henderson Creek and his friends.
4) He hit his hand against his leg several times until he felt a sharp pain. Then
he quickly put his glove on his hand. He made a fire, beginning with small
pieces of wood and adding larger ones. He sat on a snow-covered log and ate
his lunch. He enjoyed the warm fire a few minutes. Then he stood up and
started walking on a frozen stream again.
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 Lesson 5
Activity No. 1
Activity Title: Nature Talks
Learning Target: Express appreciation from the song listened to
References: English 10 Learners Material page 353
TASKS:
Listen to the music video entitled Mother Natures Son.
Assign a name to your group based on the terms: stream, grass, music, sun,
and mountain.
Be alert in listening as the music stops on a particular nouns mentioned, e.g.
stream, the entire group should shout and act out what people must do with
it. (the stream group will shout with the actions e.g. drink from me.
The process will be repeated until all groups have performed.
The group who accumulated the most number of mistakes or failure in
responding will be given a consequence by illustrating the name of the
winning group on a piece of cartolina. This illustration will be posted in front
of the whole class to inspire everyone to work better.
All other losers will sing the song in chorus in accordance to their groupings.
In response to what the other group did, a representative of each winning
group will recite a simple speech of thanks and appreciation.
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 Lesson 5
Activity No. 2
Activity Title: The World of Words Expansion
Learning Target: Supply expanded definition of words
References: English 10 Learners Material pages 354-355
Expansion is a brainstorming procedure for helping students elaborate on
concepts and words. Students can then use the expanded vocabulary in their speaking
and writing. Word expansion works well as a revision procedure for incorporating more
precise vocabulary in writing. It is also used for helping students untangle difficult
material.
Study the rules in expanding a definition of words, and then do the tasks that follow:
Expanding a Word into a Sentence
Word/s + class + characteristics (differentiates)
Example: Sense of humor is the ability to laugh and make others laugh.
Term
class
distinguishing characteristics
Words taken from the text to be read:
agony
longingly
storm-clouds
enormous
delightedly
stretches
forbidden
summon
distress
obliged
soar
fashioning
manfully
thunderous
sacred
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 Lesson 5
Activity No. 3
Name: ________________________
Year and Section: ______________
Date: _________
Rating: _________
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 Lesson 5
Activity No. 4
Name: ________________________
Year and Section: ______________
Date: _________
Rating: _________
Head
(Adjective/Adverb)
Adjective
Function
Explanation
Adjective
Modifier
ENGLISH 10
Module 3 Lesson 5
Activity No. 4
Name: ________________________
Year and Section: ______________
Date: _________
Rating: _________
English Grade 10
Module 3 Lesson 6
Activity No. 1
Name: ________________________
Year and Section: ______________
Date: _________
Rating: _________
My Past
My Future
My Present
English Grade 10
Module 3 Lesson 6
Activity No. 2
Name: ________________________
Year and Section: ______________
Activity Title
Learning Target
Reference
PSSLC
Date: _________
Rating: _________
Activity:
Answer the following questions:
1. What do you think made Johnsy consider that her possible death would be
simultaneous with the last leaf to fall? What is its connection with her illness?
2. How did Mr. Behrman emphasize the connection of Johnsys faith to be healed
with the vines to hold the leaf (based on Johnsys point of view)?
3. State the differences and similarities of the vine and Johnsy .
Vine vs Johnsy
Differences
4. Complete the phrases below to express to the author how the story which he
wrote gave you wisdom in coming up with realization and learning in life
Dear O. Henry,
After reading the story The Last Leaf I realized
that
_____________________________________________
_____________________________________________
________________________
Ilearnedthat___________________________________
_____________________________________________
_____________________________________________
___
English Grade 10
Module 3 Lesson 6
Activity No. 3
Activity Title: Utilizing Knowledge of the Structures of Modification
Learning Target: Identify the modification structure of function word and preposition as
head
Reference: Learners Material pages 383-384
PSSLC: Teachers Guide pages 327-328
The structures of modification vary in nature and function; they are used to
intensify the impact of a written piece of literature.
Function Word as Head
Functional word can form a structure of modification by using qualifier as
modifier.
Preposition as Head
Preposition can be a Head of Structure of Modification. Modifier of preposition is
qualifiers, adverbs or particular nouns
Adverb that follows the prepositional phrases becomes the modifier of
prepositional phrases while adverb that precedes the prepositional phrases becomes
the modifier of the preposition only.
Activity:
Fill- in the grid with what is asked in each column. Study the given example in the
table, and then proceed to answer the rest of the given words.
Words
head
Qualifier
halfway up
very middle
quite uppermost
most about
onward outside
never yet
away into
over higher