UNDERSTANDING THE USE OF A COLON & PARALLELISM
Planning Points
Approximate Time Needed: 15-20 minutes
Lesson Objectives:
Materials Needed:
Description
I taught her to point and call out the five elements that make up the physical world: metal, wood, water, fire, earth.
I taught her what makes the world a living place: sunrise and sunset, heat and cold, dust and heat, dust and wind, dust and rain.
I taught her what is worth listening to in this world: wind, thunder, horses galloping in the dust, pebbles falling in the water. I taught her what is frightening to hear: fast footsteps at night, soft cloth slowly ripping, dogs barking, the silence of crickets.
I taught her two things mixed together produce another: water and dirt make mud, heat and water make tea, foreigners and opium make trouble.
I taught her the five tastes that give us the memories of life: sweet, sour, bitter, pungent, and salty.
Amy Tan, The Hundred Secret Senses, pgs. 53-54
Put the following sentence starter on the board:
You use a colon when . . .
Using the student's wording, write the rule for colon usage.
I taught her to point and call out the five elements that make up the physical world: metal, wood, water, fire, earth.
I taught her what makes the world a living place: sunrise and sunset, heat and cold, dust and heat, dust and wind, dust and rain.
I taught her what is worth listening to in this world: wind, thunder, horses galloping in the dust, pebbles falling in the water. I taught her what is frightening to hear: fast footsteps at night, soft cloth slowly ripping, dogs barking, the silence of crickets.
I taught her two things mixed together produce another: water and dirt make mud, heat and water make tea, foreigners and opium make trouble.
I taught her the five tastes that give us the memories of life: sweet, sour, bitter, pungent, and salty.
Amy Tan, The Hundred Secret Senses, pgs. 53-54
Teacher's Notes
<< Back | Table of Contents | Next >>