Lesson Exemplar in English 6

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 4

LESSON EXEMPLAR IN ENGLISH 6

4TH QUARTER, WEEK 3, DAY 3


JANUARY 31, 2018

READING COMPREHENSION

Content Standard: The learner demonstrates understanding of the research process to


write a variety of texts.

Performance Standard: The learner uses a variety of research strategies to effectively


write a variety of texts for various audiences and purposes.

I. Learning Competencies/ Objectives:


1. List primary and secondary sources of information.(EN6SS-IVc-5)
2. Show openness to criticism.(EN6A-IVc-18)
3. Cooperates actively in the discussion.

II. Content: Primary and Secondary Sources


III. Learning Resources:

References:
https://library.ithaca.edu/sp/subjects/primary
http://lib1.bmcc.cuny.edu/help/sources/

Materials: chart or power point presentation, pictures

IV. Procedure
A. Before the Lesson
1. Drill:
Read the paragraph properly with correct phrasing.

The words in this drill/ are written in phrases.// This phrased material/
will help you understand/ an important reading skill.// Most people/
learn to read/ one word at a time/, which results in slow/ and inefficient
reading.// Now, you must/ discipline the muscles/ that move the eyes/
from left to right.// Make your eyes/ go across the page/ in smooth
progression/ from one phrase/ to the next.//

2. Review:
Read the passage and show problem and solution by using a graphic
organizer.

When a river receives a lot of extra water it may flood. During a flood,
there is plenty of water, and most people wouldn’t think that
dehydration was a serious risk, but flood waters are mostly polluted
and not safe to drink. People who drink the contaminated water may
suffer from illnesses or diseases such as typhoid. You can prepare for
flooding by filling many containers with fresh clean drinking water. You
can also use sandbags to protect your house and soak up the water.
Be prepared and be safe.

3. Motivation:
Have you been to a library? What can you see there? Why do students
go to the library?

4. Presentation:
Study these pictures.
What are these sources?
Can you see these in the library?
What information can you get from them?

B. During the Lesson


1. Discussion:
We can get information from different sources, it can be from primary or
secondary sources.

Primary sources are original sources which provide direct or firsthand


evidences about an event, object, person or work of art. These include
historical and legal documents, eyewitness accounts, results of
experiments, statistical data, pieces of creative writing, audio and video
recordings, speeches, art objects, interviews, surveys, fieldworks, and
Internet communications via email, blogs, listservs, and newsgroups.

Examples:

Secondary sources describe, discuss, interpret, comment upon,


analyze, evaluate, summarize and process primary sources. These can
be articles in newspapers or popular magazines, book or movie
reviews, or articles found in scholarly journals, that discuss or evaluate
someone else’s original research.

Examples:
Key types of secondary source material on which you can conduct
some form of documentary or content analysis.

2. Guided Practice:
Game Contest:
Teacher flashes a situation and let pupils answer the question correctly.
The team who gets the most number of corrects points be the winner.

A. Primary or Secondary?

1. Primary 2. Secondary 3. Secondary

4.Primary 5. Secondary

B. Yes or No?
1. A girl found a box of letter written by a soldier to his wife and
children during the civil war. Are those letters primary
documents?(yes)
2. A grand mother found a diary written by a daughter of a civil war
soldier dated from 1863-1865. She talked about what the war was
like in South Carolina. Is that a primary document? (yes)
3. I went to visit grandmother. She gave me a chest. The chest was
filled with her childhood items. She told me that she loved her
things. When I opened it, I found her toys, some photographs and
her birth certificate. Are those things primary documents? (yes)
4. I went to the library and found a newspaper written in 2005 about
the first Native American tribes. Is that newspaper a primary
document? (no)
5. My sister and I went to the museum in town. We saw posters and
buttons for the Governor’s race from 1980. Are those primary
documents? (yes)
3. Independent Practice:
List down 5 primary sources and 5 secondary sources that you know
basing from what you have learned.

C. After the Lesson


1. Generalization:
What is the difference between a primary source and a secondary
source? What are some of the examples?
Primary Sources Secondary Sources
These are original documents or These are works that synthesize,
original research. summarize, and/or interpret
primary sources.
Examples: Examples:
 Diaries  Encyclopedias
 Interviews  Histories
 Speeches  Reviews
 Academic research- often  Textbooks
printed in scholarly  Magazine articles
journals  Biograqphies
 Fiction (novels, poetry,
short stories)

2. Evaluation:
Read and understand the questions carefully. Then choose and write
the letter of the best answer.
1. _____ is the activity of looking for information about a particular
topic. (a)
a. Research b. Newspaper c. Dairy
2. _____ sources are considered original materials.(c)
a. Tertiary b. Secondary c. Primary
3. _____ sources are evaluations and interpretations of primary
sources.(b)
a. Primary b. Secondary c. Tertiary
4. A commentary and a biography are examples of ________. (b)
a. Tertiary Sources b. Secondary Sources c. Primary Sources
5. Which of the following is a primary source?(a)
a. Anne Frank’s diary describing her experiences during the World
War II.
b. A textbook giving information about the Civil War.
c. A short story about how Benjamin Franklin discovered
electricity.

V. Assignment:
In your English notebook, cut 5 pictures of primary and secondary
sources and label them.

You might also like