Today is a 'B' Day. Please use the bathroom & sharpen your pencils. Make sure you have everything you need for your morning classes.
Thank you
Mr. Trumble
Do Now:
- Take out your Reading guide from Ch 2 & 3 and put it on your desk.
- Write down tonight's homework in your agenda
Homework:
- Finish reading Ch 4
- Complete the Figurative language Activity & the Fig Language Reading Guide
Interactive Notebook Notes
Topic: Figurative Language
Topic: Figurative Language
- Figurative Language is when words go beyond their literal meaning
- Simile
- uses the words 'like' or 'as' to compare one thing with another.
- Ex: She was as busy as a bee. He played like a beast during the basketball game.
- Metaphor
- makes a direct comparison between one thing and another.
- Ex: He was a beast during the basketball game.
- Personification
- when human characteristics are given to an animal or nonliving object.
- Ex: my teddy bear gave me a hug. The lightening danced across the sky. The wind howled.
- Hyperbole
- An exaggeration that is so dramatic that no one would believe the statement is true. Often used to make a point.
- Ex: He's got a million video games.
- Redbull - It gives you wings!
- Alliteration
- The repetition of the initial sound in closely connected words
- Ex: Go and gather the green garbage in the gutter
- She sells sea shells down by the sea shore
- Onomatopoeia
- Sound Words
- Ex: The car went boom!
- Ex: Splash, buzz, zip, zoom, etc.
- Idiom
- an expression that cannot be understood by the words alone
- Ex: It's raining cats and dogs
- Ex: Hold your horses
- Ex: I have a frog in my throat
- Allusion:
- A reference made to something that is not directly mentioned
- Kevin calls his mom the "Fair Gwen" - a reference to the Fair Guinevere from the Legend of King Arthur
Activity #2
Freak the Mighty: Chapters 4
Before we read...review Ch 2 & 3 Reading guide
Before we read...review Ch 2 & 3 Reading guide
Standards
RL6.1 - Making Inferences and using evidence to support your thinking
RL6.2 - Determine how a theme is conveyed through details, and provide a summary of a text
Reading Strategy - Annotating a Text
While you read it is important to annotate what you are reading. This will allow you to comprehend what you are reading and make more accurate inferences about the reading.
- Use the back of your reading guide to record important information or questions you have while reading. Notes could be about:
- Characters
- Setting
- Plot
- Themes
- Conflicts
- Figurative Language
Key Questions:
- Why does Kevin refer to his mom as "the Fair Gwen of Air"?
- Describe the similarities between King Arthur's men and robots.
- Explain what Kevin means when he says, "Books are like truth serum-if you don't read you can't figure out what is real."
- List all the ways Kevin and Max are opposites.
- What other inferences can you make?
- How do you know? (What is your evidence?)
RTI
Small Group Read Aloud Chapter 4
Standards
RL6.1 - Making Inferences and using evidence to support your thinking
RL6.2 - Determine how a theme is conveyed through details, and provide a summary of a text
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