课件25张PPT。3Reading (III)Leisure timePoems7Before you readWhile you readAfter you readCONTENTS PAGEBefore you read3-112A Look at the picture of the second poem on page 111.3What do you think the poem will probably be about?3-2123B Look at the title of the second poem.What do you think the poem will probably be about now?Is there any relation between the title and the picture?C Read through the poem. Find the rhymingwords in each verse.3-3123My School
‘For your homework, write a poem,’
You said to us, Miss Li.
I wrote these verses on my own,
I hope you’re pleased with me.
I want to talk about the school
I loved when I was small.
With lots of little boys and girls,
Two teachers and a hall.
Mr Black was sometimes cross:
‘Silence! Pay attention!’
He scolded pupils in his class,
And put them in detention.But Miss White was like you, Miss Li,
She helped in every way.
She loved chatting with her class,
Her lessons seemed like play!
If you’re puzzled by my words,
I can explain, Miss Li.
The staff and students were not real,
They’re little dolls, you see.While you read7-112345A Read the poem.My School‘For your homework, write a poem,’
You said to us, Miss Li.
I wrote these verses on my own,
I hope you’re pleased with me.Why did the author write this poem?What was the author’s hope?677-212345I want to talk about the school
I loved when I was small.
With lots of little boys and girls,
Two teachers and a hall.What was the author going to write about in her poem?What kind of school was it?What can you see in it?677-312345Mr Black was sometimes cross:
‘Silence! Pay attention!’
He scolded pupils in his class,
And put them in detention.
But Miss White was like you, Miss Li.
She helped in every way.
She loved chatting with her class,
Her lessons seemed like play!Was Mr Black popular among the pupils?What does the author think of Miss White?677-412345If you’re puzzled by my words,
I can explain, Miss Li.
The staff and students were not real,
They’re little dolls, you see.Why did the author think her teacher would probably be puzzled by her words?What are the staff and students in the school?67B Complete the card about the second poem. How many verses does this poem have?(2)____________
Is it a rhyming poem?(3)____________7-512345(1)__________________ (Name of the poem)My SchoolFive.Yes.677-6What is it about?
Verse 1: (4)__________________________________________ ___________________________________________ ___________________________________________
Verse 2: (5)__________________________________________ ___________________________________________ ___________________________________________
Verse 3: (6)__________________________________________ ___________________________________________ ___________________________________________ The writer says that this poem is her homework for her teacher, Miss Li. She tells us about a school which had lots of pupils and two teachers. The writer explains that it was not a real school. The staff/teachers and students/ pupils were little dolls, not real people.12345677-7Who is the author talking about?(7)_______________
My score for this poem is (8)_______________.
I think the poem is (9)_______________. Her teacher.interesting/ funny/ true/ boring/ difficult1234567My School
A student describes the (1)__________ school she (2)__________ to play with when she was (3)__________. She imagined that one of the teachers was rather (4)___________, but the other was kind and (5)__________.After you read2-112A Complete the summary about the poem.toyusedsmallcrossfriendlyB Write a similar poem to My School. Writeabout your real school.122-2My SchoolConsolidationRecite My School.
Workbook 8B, page 53.
verse/v?:s/n.a section of a poem, like a paragraph in a textThis is a poem with six verses and twenty four lines.on one’s ownalone; without help from other peopleI can’t carry it on my own; it’s too heavy.
Would you please clean your room on your own?pleased/pli:zd/adj.feeling happy about somethingI’m really pleased that you’re feeling better.
I’m pleased to hear about your news.(be) pleased with(be) happy withShe was very pleased with her exam results.
The boss should be pleased with you.attention/?'ten?n/n.the act of listening to, looking at or thinking about something/ somebody carefullyShe tried to attract the waiter’s attention.
An article in the newspaper caught my attention.pay attentionfocus one’s mind (on); listen carefullyPlease pay attention (= listen carefully) to what I am saying.
Don’t pay any attention to what they say (= don't think that it is important).scold/sk??ld/v.criticize someone; tell someone off because they have done something badHe scolded them for arriving late. detention/d?'ten?n/n.the punishment of being kept at school for a time after other students have gone home They can’t give me (a) detention for this. chat/t??t/v.talk together in a friendly wayMy kids spend hours chatting on the phone to their friends.
What were you chatting about?