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Linsey Westerman
Microteach #1
September 23,
2003
I.
Unit: The Eight Parts of Speech
II.
Topic: Understanding Prepositions and Prepositional
Phrases
III.
Summative Objective: Students will be able to identify
prepositions and use them in their own writing.
IV.
Materials:
a.
Power Point Presentation
b.
Notes on Presentation
c.
Copies of both common
prepositions and preposition practice handouts for each
student.
V.
Procedures: Direct Instruction
Anticipatory Set (2-3 minutes)
First ask the students to take all
material off of their desks. Then ask them instead to place
everything on top of their desks. Next say to put everything
either beside or under their desks. (The point is to direct
the students using prepositions.) Write on the board the
commands that were given to the students at the start of the class
and explain that prepositions are words that are often used to
indicate a direction, location or command, (as seen in instructions
of where to place materials.)
Learning Outcomes (Formative Objectives) (1
min)
Students will be able to:
1.
Define prepositions and
prepositional phrases.
2.
Identify prepositions and
prepositional phrases within sentences.
3.
Create their own
prepositional phrases.
Input / Model (8-10 min)
Display the PowerPoint and review the
first four parts of speech previously discussed by class.
This brings the class to number five—
prepositions. Go through each slide on the PowerPoint
explaining each, discussing examples, and checking for
students’ understanding.
1.
Defining Prepositions
A preposition is a word that comes before a
noun or other nominal. One way to remember this is by
breaking the word apart pre-position, and recognizing that pre =
before. Prepositions often indicate a direction or a location
in space, for example, the words used to describe where to place
materials at the beginning of class, (above, below, beside,
under.) Prepositions are also used to modify noun phrases
such as “against the wall,” where the noun phrase,
“the wall” is modified by the preposition
“against.” To check for understanding, have the
students pick out the preposition in three prepositional phrases
written on the board, such as, before the game and
throughout the night. This will then lead the
discussion to prepositional phrases.
2.
Prepositional Phrases
The preposition and the nominal, (a.k.a.
object or noun,) together create a prepositional phrase.
Instruct students to take note of the facts that a prepositional
phrase always involves a noun, NOT a verb, and a prepositional
phrase includes three things: the preposition, the object of
the preposition, and any modifiers related to the preposition or
the object.
3.
Examples
Discuss the examples of prepositional phrases
on the power point. Point out the different parts of speech
that are found in a prepositional phrase.
Check for understanding / Guided Practice
(4-5 mins)
Pass out prepositional practice worksheet
containing five sentences and have students complete them as
directed and then discuss their answers in class.
Ask students to create sentences for the last
pictures in the PowerPoint. Give an example of your own
created sentence for the first one. (Example: The peas in the
pod are rowing down the river.) Write it on the board and ask
students to pick out the prepositions and prepositional phrases
within the sentence. Then ask students to volunteer their own
sentence, write it on the board and point out the prepositional
phrase that the student used.
Independent Practice
Have the students find a
paragraph from an article in the newspaper/ a magazine, and
underline all of the prepositional phrases.
Also have them describe a
room in their house using at least five prepositional
phrases.
Closure (1
min)
Tomorrow, at the beginning
of class, students will discuss their newspaper paragraphs and give
some examples of prepositional phrases they found. Students
will also hand in descriptions of rooms and try to guess whose room
is being described when a few are read to the class.
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