The Clock Struck What
The Clock Struck What
The Clock Struck What
It's time-telling time with this fun lesson featuring Trudy Harris' 'The Clock Struck One.' Students will learning
about time with a short story and hands-on practice with analog clocks.
Learning Objectives
Students will be able to tell and write time to the hour and half hour.
Attachments
Beginning
Before reading the story, ask students to name different devices for telling time, such as different types
of clocks and watches.
Show students the picture of the grandfather clock. Point to the other types of clocks in the book and
have students repeat as you name them: cuckoo clock, alarm clock, pocket watch, etc.
Intermediate
Rephrase the story as you read. Think aloud, "It says the clock struck one. That means it was 1 o'clock. I
see the clock shows 1 o'clock, so that makes sense with what I see in the picture.
Explain the struck is the past tense of strike. Strike can mean different things, including to hit something.
Show the class at least two different clocks from the book. Ask students to share any similarities and
differences they noticed.
Show students the demonstration clock and tell them it is called an analog clock. Introduce the short
and long hand.
Explain to the class that the short hand tells the hour and the long hand represents the number of
minutes. Model counting five minutes, by either pointing or moving the long hand to each digit on the
demonstration clock.
Repeat counting by five minutes, but placing emphasis on the 6 for 30 minutes and on the 12 for 60
minutes. Explain that 60 minutes equals one hour.
EL
Beginning
Have students repeat, "The hour hand is shorter, and the minute hand is longer." Gesture with your
hands close together when you say "shorter" and move them far apart to show "longer."
Ask students how to say "hour, minute, second, 1 o'clock" in their home language (L1). For Spanish-
speaking students, point out cognates: hora/hour, minuto/minute, segundo/second.
Ask students to name the shape of the analog clock.
Intermediate
Point to the clock in the classroom and tell students that it is an example of an analog clock. Ask them to
name other places they have seen analog clocks.
Create a Venn diagram to compare and contrast an analog clock with a digital clock. Display the sentence
stems:
The analog clock and the digital clock both ____ (have numbers/tell time).
The analog clock ____ (is round/has hands), but the digital clock (is a rectangle/does not have
hands).
Beginning
Teach students that the pointers on the clock are also called hands. Call out times and have them show
you these using their own arms/hands (i.e., left arm straight in the air and right arm to the side to show
3:00).
Show students how 30 minutes pass between and 5:30 with the demonstration clock. Ask students to
Intermediate
Show students times to the half hour, counting by fives on the demonstration clock as the minute hand
moves. Instruct students to write the times digitally on paper or personal whiteboards.
Display the sentence frame, "It is ____." Then, have students use a complete sentence to tell the time as
they set their analog clocks.
Beginning
Instruct students to circle the shorter hand on the worksheet. Remind them that this is the hour hand,
and the longer hand is the minute hand.
Tell them that when no minutes in the hour have passed, the minute hand points straight up at the 12.
We say, "It is ____ o'clock."
Intermediate
Tell students to practice saying the times in a complete sentence using the sentence frames.
Tell students that 7:00 is read "7 o'clock."
Differentiation
Enrichment:
Allow advanced students to pair up with their analog clocks to quiz each other on telling time to the hour
and half hour. Provide these students with the Time Practice: On the Hour and Half Hour worksheet.
Support:
For students who need support, provide time-telling practice within a small group. Show students times to
the hour and half hour on the demonstration clock and guide students to tell the time. Provide context by
showing familiar times, such as the time that students go to lunch or arrive at school.
Assessment (5 minutes)
To check for student understanding, monitor the classroom as students are working on their analog
clocks and worksheets.
Check students' worksheets for correctness.
EL
Beginning
Assess students' oral language by assigning them work in partners. One partner shows a time to the hour
on their analog clock and asks, "What time is it?" The second partner answers, "It is ____ o'clock." Then,
write the time digitally.
Tell students the story problem, "Tito reads every night after school. He starts reading at 5:30, and
finishes 30 minutes later. What time does he finish reading?"
Provide the sentence frame, "Tito finishes reading at ____ ."
Discuss student thinking and responses.
Beginning
Chorally count by fives to 60, pointing to the numbers on a number line or hundreds chart.
Intermediate
Arrange students in a circle. Students can count on by five, saying the next number in the sequence
when they are past an item. Remind students that there are 60 minutes in one hour, and tell them to
start over at zero after reaching 60.
Example:
11 12 1
10 2 11 12 1
11 12 1
3 10 2
9 10 2
9 3 9 3
8 4
7 6 5 8 4 8 4
7 6 5 7 6 5
11 12 1 11 12 1
11 12 1 10 2
10 2 10 2
9 3 9 3
9 3
8 4 8
8 4
4
7 6 5
7 6 5 7 6 5
Time Practice:
On the Hour and Half Hour
1. Look at each clock carefully and write the time.
11 12 1 11 12 1
10 2 11 12 1 11 12 1 10 2
10 2 10 2
9 3 9 3
9 3 9 3
8 4 8 4
7 6 5 8 4 8 4 7 6 5
7 6 5 7 6 5
6:00 : : :
2.
11 12 1 11 12 1
10 2 11 12 1 11 12 1 10 2
10 2 10 2
9 3 9 3
9 3 9 3
8 4 8 4
7 6 5 8 4 8 4 7 6 5
7 6 5 7 6 5
: : : :
3.
11 12 1 11 12 1
10 2 11 12 1 11 12 1 10 2
10 2 10 2
9 3 9 3
9 3 9 3
8 4 8 4
7 6 5 8 4 8 4 7 6 5
7 6 5 7 6 5
: : : :
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Half-Hour Match Up
View the time on the clocks. Draw a line from the time to the correct time on the clock.
11 12 1 11 12 1
10 2 11:30 10 2
9 3 9 3
8 4
7 6 5 2:30 8
7 6 5
4
11 12 1 11 12 1
10 2 4:30 10 2
9 3 9 3
8 4 8 4
7 6 5 7:30 7 6 5
11 12 1 11 12 1
10 2 12:30 10 2
9 3 9 3
8 4
7 6 5 3:30 8
7 6 5
4
11 12 1
10 2
9:30 10
11 12 1
2
9 3 9 3
8
7 6 5
4
5:30 8
7 6 5
4
11 12 1
10 2 1:30 10
11 12 1
2
9 3 9 3
8 4
7 6 5 8:30 8
7 6 5
4
10
11 12 1
2
10:30 10
11 12 1
2
9 3 9 3
8
7 6 5
4
6:30 8
7 6 5
4
Example:
11 12 1
10 2 11 12 1
11 12 1
3 10 2
9 10 2
9 3 9 3
8 4
7 6 5 8 4 8 4
7 6 5 7 6 5
11 12 1 11 12 1
11 12 1 10 2
10 2 10 2
9 3 9 3
9 3
8 4 8
8 4
4
7 6 5
7 6 5 7 6 5