Activity 1 - Hums
Activity 1 - Hums
Activity 1 - Hums
From your previous classes in literature, you learned about the main divisions of literature
which are prose and the poetry. Prose is divided into two: the fiction and the non-fiction.
Both have their common and distinct elements and types. Below are information about the
genres (focusing more on non-fiction accounts and the meaning of creative non-fiction) which
will serve as your refresherso you could be able to perform all the exercises and activities in this
module.
What is Non-fiction?
Non-fiction pieces are based on facts and author’s opinions about a subject.
Non-fiction could be biographies, articles from textbooks, newspaper and
magazine articles.
The purpose of non-fiction writing is to inform and sometimes persuade
ACTIVITY 1: Read Me! Analyze Me! Answer Me!
Directions: Read and analyze the “direct statements” below. Identify the style or
technique used through the underlined and italicized portions, phrases or words.
Choose your answer on the pool of words provided. Write your answer in the box at
the right side.
Choose your answer in the box.
Activity 2: Directions: Read and analyze the “direct statements” below. Identify the one-
word idea or message (subject or topic) of the statements by choosing your answer on the
pool of words provided. Write your answer in the box at the right side. Choose your answer in
the box.
How many correct responses did you answer? What have you observed from
the two activities? What do you think is the connection of these activities with the
lesson that we will discover in this module?
1. “We struggled a lot like a stray dog, with no permanent
home, no refuge. We have no food to eat, not even a
single penny. We drink water from the muddy lake,
tastes like a rusting iron.” – Poverty -struggle
4. Point of view (POV) - refers to who is telling a story, or who is narrating it. The narration of a
story or novel can be told in three main ways: first person, second person, and third person.
5.Oxymoron - combines contradictory words with opposing meanings, like “old news,”
“deafening silence,” or “organized chaos.” Oxymorons may seem illogical at first, but in context
they usually make sense.
7. Imagery - uses descriptive words that mean exactly what they say. For example: “The grass
was green, and the flowers were red.” Figurative imagery uses descriptive language that means
something different than or goes beyond the literal definition of the words, often through
exaggeration, comparison, or symbolism.