and summarizing. 2- • Explains specific features of different literary
genres for interpretation and literary appreciation 3- • Reads literary texts for
enjoyment/pleasure and compares, interprets and appreciates characters, themes, plots, and incidents and gives opinion.
4-Appreciates nuances and shades of literary meanings, talks about literary devices like onomatopoeic
sounds, symbols, metaphors, alliterations, comparisons, allusions and the poet’s or the writer’s point of view.
5- • Identifies significant literary elements such as figurative language — metaphor, imagery, symbol, simile, intention or point of view, rhyme
scheme, etc.
BB. At the end of the class discussion, students are expected to:
6- Show understanding of explicit and implicit meanings and perspectives in literary texts
7- • Interpret layers of meaning • Construct meaning by drawing upon Inferences
8-Shows understanding of explicit and implicit meanings and perspectives in both literary and non-fiction texts (if
the dominant focus is placed on ‘appreciates nuances’)
9- Comments on writer’s use of language and structure in literary and non-fiction texts
CC. Details of Pedagogical Strategies/Process (Art integrated /Sports integrated/ Story telling based/Toy based /Any other pedagogy): Sports
integrated, Fun activity based
DD. Topic of the lesson for presentation by the students (once in a week by rearranging classroom setting suitable for group work):
EE. Name 21
st
Century Skills to be developed:
Critical thinking, Analytical thinking, Collaboration, Skill of Judgment, Conversation skill
FF. Activities/Experiments/Hands-on-learning/Projects:
Editing Task, Matching Items, Chart Making
GG. Interdisciplinary linkage and infusion of Life Skills, Values, Gender Sensitivity and Environmental Awareness:
HH. Resources (including ICT):
1. Black board, Colored Chalk, Duster
2. Diksha App material
3. Reference booKS.
4. Beehive Textbook in English for Class X, Chapter 2: A Tiger In The Zoo
5. An image of futuristic learning to project or hand out
6. Annotatable sheets with a section of the story printed on them –
Introductory activity
Write ‘ Describe the tiger in the Zoo and in the Wild?’ on the board.
Give learners 1 minute thinking time. After 1 minute, use name sticks (no hands up approach) to ask a learner to provide an answer.
Continuing using the name sticks, ask others in the class to choose whether to ‘add to’, ‘change’, ‘develop’ or ‘challenge’ (ACDC) the previous learner’s
response. Gather as many ideas as possible and write any relevant words and phrases on the board as a mind map.
Main activity Organize learners into small groups (3–4 learners). Display an image of a
tiger .
Guide learners through the ‘See–Think–Wonder’ strategy: • Tell learners they have 1 minute to note what they can SEE in the image, i.e. What can you
actually see in this image? • Tell learners they have 1 minute to note what they THINK about the image, i.e. What do you think of when looking at this
image? • Tell learners they have 1 minute to note what they WONDER about the bigger implications of the image, i.e. What bigger ideas does the image
suggest? What big questions does it make you ask?
Learners collaborating to improve learning
Ask a member of each group to read out what they wrote under SEE, then what they wrote under THINK, and then what they wrote under WONDER.
Using activity and discussion to elicit evidence of learning
Model good reading by reading the poem aloud to the class, making it as dramatic as you can (e.g. through appropriate use of intonation, pace, word emphasis).
Discuss the learners’ initial response to the poem – ask them to share their emotional reactions to the tiger.
Organize learners into groups of three. Give each group a printed copy of the poem and highlighter pens in three different colours. Ask the learners to
highlight:
words associated with aggression/anger in one colour
words associated with imprisonment or freedom in a second colour
words associated with descriptions of the tiger in a third colour. This should include words associated with sight, sound and texture.
Explain to learners that if some words/phrases fit into two categories, they can highlight them twice.
Begin reading ‘
Once each group has highlighted their text, ask them to use a pen or pencil to annotate the poem, identifying any examples of literary devices, for example:
“pads of velvet” – metaphor
“his brilliant eyes / at the brilliant stars” – repetition
“Where plump deer pass” – alliteration
Teacher giving success criteria and modeling to move learning forwards.
Using their annotations, ask learners to individually write a paragraph responding to the following question:
Plenary