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Lesson Plan For Little Red Riding Hood

This lesson plan aims to teach students about the folk tale of Little Red Riding Hood through reading, dramatization, and discussion. Students will first discuss what folk tales are and read the story. They will then practice dramatizing conversations between Red Riding Hood and the wolf by reading scripts aloud. Students will retell the story to classmates and compare the wolf in the story to real wolves. Extensions include learning about forest habitats, researching wolves in non-fiction texts, writing new endings, and creating art related to the story.

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Hakim Ibrahim
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2K views1 page

Lesson Plan For Little Red Riding Hood

This lesson plan aims to teach students about the folk tale of Little Red Riding Hood through reading, dramatization, and discussion. Students will first discuss what folk tales are and read the story. They will then practice dramatizing conversations between Red Riding Hood and the wolf by reading scripts aloud. Students will retell the story to classmates and compare the wolf in the story to real wolves. Extensions include learning about forest habitats, researching wolves in non-fiction texts, writing new endings, and creating art related to the story.

Uploaded by

Hakim Ibrahim
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Lesson Plan for: Little Red Riding Hood Type of story: Folk Tale Objectives: The students will

l be able to dramatize one of the two conversations between Red Riding Hood and the Wolf, using different voices for the different characters. The students will be able to retell this story to a classmate or in front of the class. The students will be able to compare the wolf in this story with the wolf in any other story they have heard or story they have read, including non-fiction literature) Procedure: 1. Read the section of this book about folk tales. Discuss what the term means. Share examples of different folk tales, and allow the students to give the names of folk tales they have heard before. 2. Tell the story of Little Red Riding Hood. Ask the typical comprehension questions such as: Why was the girl called Little Red Riding Hood? Why was the girl going to her Grandmothers house? What questions did the girl ask the wolf? 3. Give the students a written script of the story. Encourage them to highlight the conversations between the wolf and the little girl as you retell the story. Tell the student that this time, you will read the story instead of telling it. 4. Allow the students to practice reading, then telling the parts with the Conversations between the girl and the wolf. Encourage a few volunteers to share in front of the class. Talk about how to stand in a V during dialogs, so the audience can see their fronts as they interact together. 5. Have the students read the story one more time then try to tell it out loud to a partner. Encourage the partner to coach the student with the story. Then ask for a volunteer to tell the story before the class. 6. Discuss what the students know about wolves and other placed where they have learned about wolves. Compare and contrast the wolf in this story with other wolves. Social Studies Extension Discuss different types of forests around the world and which one(s) families like Little Red Riding Hoods family and wolves might be able to live in. Science extension Read about wolves in a non-fiction source. Talk about where wolves live, what they eat, their habitat, their life span, and other facts about wolves. Language Arts/Writing Extension Ask the students to write a new ending to the story, or have them write more questions that Red Riding Hood could have asked the wolf. Model writing the questions and answers for the students, and discuss proper punctuation for the conversations. Art Extension Draw one of the scenes from the story. Or make a shoebox diorama that shows one scene from the story.
Sample Lesson by Dr. Mike Lockett, 2010 International Storyteller/Childrens Author www.Mikelockett.com

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