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Teaching Tone and Mood Lesson PlanTeaching Tone and Mood Lesson Plan
Publisher
Lafayette Parrish School System
Resource Details
Curator Rating
Educator Rating
Not yet Rated
Grade
6th - 8th
Subjects
English Language Arts
1 more...
Resource Type
Lesson Plans
Audience
For Teacher Use
Instructional Strategies
Direct Instruction
2 more...
Technology
Projection
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Lesson Plan

Teaching Tone and Mood

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Tone and Mood are not synonymous! Introduce young readers to these literary devices with a series of exercises that not only point out the significant differences between the terms but also shows them how to identify both the tone and mood of a piece of writing.

120 Views 100 Downloads
CCSS: Adaptable

Concepts

literary devices, tone, mood, diction, syntax, elements of a short story, poetry, poetry analysis, literary analysis, robert frost, the road not taken, walt whitman, alfred, lord tennyson

Additional Tags

english language arts

Instructional Ideas

  • Ask class members to bring in comic strips, newspaper articles, passages from novels, or clips from TV programs that they believe demonstrate a certain tone or mood
  • Model the process by projecting and reading aloud the first two paragraphs of Poe's "Fall of the House of Usher"

Classroom Considerations

  • Instructors must select and prepare the four movie clips that clearly reveal both tone and mood
  • Requires additional prep time to find images of faces with different facial expressions and to make individual copies of the four worksheets

Pros

  • Definitions and examples clearly distinguish between tone and mood
  • Includes a list of feeling words, as well as lists of adjectives that describe tone and mood

Cons

  • No answer key is included
  • Does not included suggestions for movie clips

Common Core

SL.8.1.a

View 35,397 other resources for 6th - 8th Grade English Language Arts

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