Day 1 Lesson Plan

English Grade 7 Lesson Plan 1

Reading Narratives

Key Idea

Reading Narratives (Short Story)

Most Essential Learning Competencies

 Use appropriate reading strategies to meet one’s purpose (e.g., Scanning, skimming, close reading, etc.) (EN7RC-IV-b-10)

 Determine the worth of ideas mentioned in the text listened to (EN7LC-IV-g-8.2)

 Cite evidence to support a general statement (EN7RC-IV-g- 10.4)

 React to what is asserted or expressed in a text (EN7RC-IIIe-2.1.7)


Component 2: Lesson Purpose of the lesson

Time: 3 minutes

 The teacher states the purpose/focus of the lesson is to help students with strategies for reading narratives that they may not have seen before by looking at one in detail.

In this lesson, we are going to read a short story and I am going to ask you about what has happened to the characters. The story has a lot to tell you about life. We are going to learn some strategies for reading narratives by looking at this story in detail.

[Teacher Notes: Emphasize that the lesson will help them know what to look out for or what are the important bits when they have to read narrative texts they’ve never read before.]


Component 3: Language Practice 

Time: 5 minutes  

Before reading. Teacher: This narrative is called The Hare and the Tortoise. It is a type of narrative called a fable. What is a fable?”  Writes answer on board. Students copy onto Worksheet. Answer: A short story that tells a moral truth, often using animals as characters.  Here are some words we are going to meet from the text (Refer to Worksheet and read.)  hare (a large rabbit)  tortoise (a land animal like a turtle)  challenged (dared to enter a contest)  finish line (the end point of a race)  chagrin (annoyance or anger).  What do these words mean? (Discuss word meanings, look for context clues, write definitions on the board, and get students to copy onto Worksheet.) [Teacher notes: You may use illustrations to decode the meaning of the words.]  Let’s practice these words. Say them and their meanings after me. Look at their spelling.  Let’s put them in a sentence. I’ll do the first one…. “Hares look like rabbits but are bigger and are big pests for farmers.” [Teacher note: Try to get students to write sentences that reveal the meaning of the words.]  Now with your partner, write a sentence for each of the other words in the list.  The teacher samples sentences to ensure the words are used according to their meanings. [Teacher Note: Check student vocabulary knowledge required to understand the text. If running short of time, either omit sentence writing or do the activity orally as a class.]


Component 4: Lesson Activity

Time: 25 minutes total

Component 4A.1 Reading the Short Story

Time: 5 minutes