Before you watch the segment:
Take a look at Po and Tai Lung. Then write next to the characters the qualities that best describe them, according to your impressions from the pictures. Make sure you write different adjectives for each of the characters.
This is Po:
Ex:
FAT
FUNNY
This is Tai Lung
Take a look at Po and Tai Lung. Then write next to the characters the qualities that best describe them, according to your impressions from the pictures. Make sure you write different adjectives for each of the characters.
This is Po:
Ex:
FAT
FUNNY
This is Tai Lung
Ex:
STRONG
INTELLIGENT
FAT - STRONG - FRIENDLY - HEAVY - SMART
FUNNY - INTELLIGENT - TIRED - FAST - CONFIDENT
LAZY - AGGRESSIVE - DANGEROUS - UGLY - QUIET
FUNNY - INTELLIGENT - TIRED - FAST - CONFIDENT
LAZY - AGGRESSIVE - DANGEROUS - UGLY - QUIET
After watching the segment:
Take a look at your list again and decide if you would like to change your original guesses by writing sentences comparing Po and Tai Lung.
Ex:
(Po / Funny) Po is funnier than Tai Lung.
(Tai Lung / Strong) Tai Lung is as strong as Po.
(Po) / Fat) Po is fatter than Tai Lung.
(Tai Lung / intelligent) Tai Lung is less intelligent than Po.
(Tai Lung / Strong) Tai Lung is as strong as Po.
(Po) / Fat) Po is fatter than Tai Lung.
(Tai Lung / intelligent) Tai Lung is less intelligent than Po.
How to develop your own activity
- Select a scene in which you can compare two characters
- Choose adjectives that describe the characters
- Prepare a chart for students to fill in with adjectives that describe them
- Select the adjectives you want to assess
- The students write sentences using comparatives
WORKSHEET
MOVIE SEGMENT DOWNLOAD - KUNG FU PANDA
OPTION 2 - MOVIE SEGMENTS TO TEACH CHILDREN GRAMMAR AND VOCABULARY
MOVIE SEGMENT DOWNLOAD - KUNG FU PANDA
OPTION 2 - MOVIE SEGMENTS TO TEACH CHILDREN GRAMMAR AND VOCABULARY
I. Project
a picture of Po and Tai Lung on the board. Give each student a white and an
orange balloon. Tell them that the white balloon represents Po and the orange
balloon represents Tai Lung. Each student gets slips of paper with the
vocabulary in the box. Make sure they understand the adjectives. Tell them to
stick the words on the balloons according to what they think of the characters.
I.
Count
how many of each adjective they have on the balloons for each character and
elicit comparative sentences. Write the sentences on the board as the students
say them.
II.
Play the
video segment.
III.
Miming Game: Ask students to stand up and make a line
with their backs to the board. One
student should face the board and mime the sentence projected on the board
(Slides with comparative sentences about Po and Tai Lung). The first student in
the line has to say the sentence. If he says it correctly, he mimes the
following sentence and the student who was miming goes to the end of the line.
IV.
Follow up:
Students pair up to make a poster using their balloons and a slip with an
adjective the Teacher gives them. Tell them to draw the faces of Po and Tai
Lung on the balloons. They should glue the balloons and the word on a sheet of
paper and write a comparative
sentence.
Hi I really like your website 'cause I use it in class. But I would like to tell you that the video link on your website doesn't work, you click on it and it says it's no longer available.
ReplyDeleteCould you do something about it.
THX
sara
Try it again tomorrow. I'll replace the segment on youtube. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteClaudio! Thank you so much for sharing your worksheet and your wonderful lesson plan! I would like to be able to make worksheets as skillfully as you, but struggle with that. Any tips? Is there a special program you use? I think I have Microsoft Word on my Mac and feel very limited. Thanks again!
ReplyDeleterachayoub@yahoo.com
Thanks for your compliments. To tell you the truth, I don not use any kind of program or software to do it. I use Word, that's all. I'm not techy savvy, so I think that I just use the basics. If you send me a message with your worksheets telling me what you'd like to do with them, I may be able to help you out with tips, OK? claudioazevedo@thomas.org.br
ReplyDeleteSee you.