Lesson Plan
What's a Metaphor?
In this lesson, students complete worksheets and engage in peer discussions to learn more about metaphors. Young writers will love making their own creative metaphors.
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Learning Objectives
Students will understand the concept of a metaphor and be able to construct their own metaphors.
Introduction
(5 minutes)- Poll the class using the following prompt: "What is a metaphor?"
- Have students volunteer to share their thoughts.
- Write a metaphor on the board like the following example: "Your room is a disaster area."
- Tell students that metaphors are analogies that compare two unlike things by saying they're the same.
- Have students identify the two things being compared and explain how they are similar.
- Explain to students that in this lesson they will identify metaphors, explain how they are similar, and use them in a sentence.
Beginning
- Provide additional examples of metaphors in English, or an example in students' home language (L1) if appropriate.
- Allow ELs to look up the terms ("metaphor," "alike," "similarities," "compare," "analogy") with a home language resource. Give them the opportunity to talk with a partner about the terms in their home language.
Intermediate
- Have ELs discuss what they know about metaphors with a partner and then share out as a whole group. Allow them to use L1 or L2.
- Provide a word bank for students to use when discussing what they know about metaphors.
- Use a gesture or visual to help students understand the term "metaphor."