A 60 minute lesson in which students will build a description of an animal, person or object using facts.
Building a Description Using Facts
Tuning In
- Revise the content of the unit so far. Ask the students:
- What is a fact?
- What is an opinion?
- Which of these would you find in an informative text?
Teacher Instruction
- Provide each student with a descriptive phrase card from the Informative Writing - Fact Sorting Activity (depending on class size, some students may have more than one card). Attach the three topic posters (sharks, doctors and smartphones) to the board.
- Allow the students to take turns to read out their descriptive phrases to the rest of the class. The class must match each phrase to the topic being described e.g. a type of fish would belong to the topic of sharks. Build a fact file for the three topics by attaching each descriptive phrase card to the board around the corresponding topic poster.
- Focus on the topic of sharks. Using a piece of poster paper, create an anchor chart with four subheadings: classification, size and appearance, habitat and lifestyle, diet and eating habits. As a class, sort and write the descriptive phrases under the correct subheadings on the anchor chart. Explain to the students that these categories will become paragraphs when it is time to write a complete informative text.
Guided/Independent Learning
- Allow the students to choose one of the two remaining topics that were not covered in the previous activity. Have the students create their own anchor chart for the topic they have chosen using the following subheadings:
- Astronauts – classification, what they do, what equipment they use, what skills they have.
- Smartphones – classification, what they look like, what they are used for, how valuable they are.
- Allow the students to work in small groups, in pairs or individually to sort the descriptive phrases for their chosen topic and write them into the correct section of their anchor chart. Encourage the students to add any additional facts if they can.
Wrapping Up
- Allow the students to share with the class how they sorted the descriptive phrases for the two remaining topics.
Differentiation
Extending Students
- Encourage fast finishers to research additional facts about their chosen topic.
Supporting Students
- Allow students with lower literacy levels to work on the sorting activity in a small group with a teacher or teacher aide.
Suggested Assessment Strategies
- used strategic whole class or individual questioning
- observed student participation during learning activities
- recorded student progress on a checklist
- annotated student work samples
- collected and reviewed student work samples
- facilitated whole class or peer feedback sessions
- encouraged student self-reflection
- administered formal assessment tasks.
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Curriculum
ACELY1678
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EN2-7B
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VCELA277
Identify features used in imaginative, informative and persuasive texts to meet the purpose of the text, and understand how texts vary in complexity and technicality depending on the approach to the topic, the purpose and the intended audience
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