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SWB opinion please


Uccnorsworth
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Are the literary elements and theory discussed within FLL or WWE?

 

We cover quite a bit of comprehension and retelling for our content area subjects, but I wondered whether I was covering literary theory adequately since I am not using a formal "Reading" text. My daughter who is still enrolled in PS covered similes, metaphors, alliteration, and onomatopoeia this year in sixth grade. Is there a need to point out these terms, or is it ok to point out the purpose of this verbiage in read-aloud and independent reading?

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Interested in the answer, too...we've used narration with my son (going into 9th grade)--next year, we'll use Lightning Lit with Shakespeare to introduce literary analysis. I was a lit major in college (undergrad and M.A.), and I'm so afraid of ruining reading by overkill of analysis...I have the same fear of diagramming, because I enjoy it myself (spent some time in a Ph.D. program in linguistics and had a blast--I know I'm weird...I love grammar!)

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I don't know if these will help you, but in our Poetry ,my son is in 3rd grade, we used Read and Understand Poetry, and he loves it, it teaches you, simile, alliteration, and all sorts of stuff about reading poetry. And it is not really expensive.

 

Leila

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for many different literary elements. It's fairly simple, but I've found it useful, if only as a list/starting point.

 

When we read aloud, my boys notice many alliterations, personifications, onomatopoeias, and similes on their own and can call them by the correct term. They're only 7; it's really not difficult to teach. But then, I do love literature so I take delight in them as well! I want to do hyperbole next. My 5 year old daughter provides an endless supply of examples of those. :)

 

Also, a long shot, but if you have a Core Knowledge teacher handbook, those point out many literary elements/devices in the sections on Sayings and Literature, at least in the K and 1st Grade Teacher Handbooks. Those have been the most useful source of lit. element study for me, but I would definitely not purchase them just for that!

 

yvonne

 

http://volweb.utk.edu/Schools/bedford/harrisms/spotlight.htm

(scroll down)

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