English and Drama. Three consecutive lessons culminating in script writing in Lesson 3.
Structured drama and role play with opportunity for pupils to work collaboratively in small groups to develop vocabulary, learn Chinese rituals and practise talk fro writing.
KS2 English/Drama 36 slide power-point lesson about the Willow Pattern story which includes pupil resources and a lesson plan (slides 29-36). This lesson can be used as a follow up to Lesson 1 (also for sale!) or as a discrete lesson. The lesson start focuses on the poem, vocabulary and meaning of the story linked to corresponding images. The main body of the lesson concentrates on developing key words to describe characters, learning and practising Chinese rituals and greetings for use in the small group drama activity and using drama freeze frames or frozen pictures to depict scenes from the story. There is opportunity for the groups to develop dialogue and use the rituals in their own role play scenarios. At the end of the lesson pupils are encouraged to perform their role play scenario and receive feedback against specific criteria.
Lesson Objectives: Speaking & Listening: Increase contextual subject vocabulary. Ask relevant questions to extend subject knowledge. Explore ideas and participate in collaborative conversations. Reading: Recognising poetry (narrative, cultural), discuss words & phrases which capture imagination, develop prediction from images and inference. Summarise main ideas. Writing: Compose and rehearse sentences orally, build vocabulary and noun phrases through drama and role play.Key Question: Why is it important to know how to pick out (identify) and explain simply (summarise) the main parts of a story?
KS2 English/Drama 25 slide power-point lesson about the Willow Pattern story which includes pupil resources and a lesson. This is the third lesson in a series of three. It can be used as a follow up to Lessons 1 & 2 (also for sale!) or as a discrete lesson. The lesson start recaps the poem and Chinese rituals and greetings The main part of the lesson focuses on writing a script for a section of the story. Included are opportunities for pupils to assess their work using a script features checklist and give feedback . At the end of the lesson each group is encouraged to perform their scripted scene as part of the whole drama/story.
Speaking & Listening: Increase contextual subject vocabulary. Ask relevant questions to extend subject knowledge. Use drama to create conversations for a short play. Reading: Use a short poem to summarise a story into five parts. Identify a clear start, middle and end in each part of the story. Writing: use drama composition to rehearse sentences orally, build vocabulary and noun phrases to write a short playscript /scene (one of the five parts of the story)
Key Question: What is the best way of writing our ‘still photo’ drama scenes?