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Tea Party Strategy Overview
One of the possible strategies that teachers may use for the purpose of involving students into work and improving their reading skills is called tea party. This name means that one can behave as if they were at a tea party: talk, discuss various subjects, share ones opinion, and listen to other people. A teacher may implement this strategy with descriptive as well as expository texts. Students become familiar with phrasing and content words and learn how to work with texts and their contents. A teacher is to distribute cards with significant words, phrases, or sentences. Students should discuss them with their mates and after that create I/We think statements which later will be compared with the actual text.
Lesson Plan
Text used: The Ant and The Grasshopper (Maugham, 2015).
Literacy strategy used: tea party strategy.
Lesson aim/objective: by the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
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identify a central idea of a text, objectively reconstitute a plot, and analyze its narrative arc;
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react to literature making use of facts and details from the text to justify their opinion and arrive at a certain conclusion;
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show how previous literary works may be interpreted later;
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estimate a literary selection from different points of view.
Lesson Opening: the name of Aesop is written on the blackboard, and his picture is shown. At the beginning of the lesson, a teacher asks students what they know about Aesop and his fables. Students share their knowledge and listen to their peers in groups. The Do Now task is to create a brainstorming web-based on what students recollect.
Teaching:
Assessment/ Checks for Understanding: to assess students understanding, two main methods might be used: observation and questions. First of all, the level of participation in discussions may serve as one of the indexes. If a student shares their ideas and actively takes part in discussions, they are likely to learn something and develop their skills. Besides, a teacher may ask questions, explain a particular idea, and so on and evaluate the answers taking into account the value of different opinions.
Reference List
Maugham, W. C. (2015). Collected works of W. Somerset Maugham. New York, NY: E-artnow.
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