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Facts and Opinion

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May 21, 2018

DETAILED LESSON PLAN IN ENGLISH 7 IN TEACHING READING (FACTS AND OPINION)

I. Objectives: At the end of the lesson the students will be able to:

1. Distinguish fact from opinion. (EN7RC-IIIh-2.13)


2. Determine facts and opinions from informational text. (EN7VC-IVa-6.1)
3. Identify each statement as facts or opinion.
4. Evaluate the accuracy of the information from text. (EN7SS.11g-2.1)
5. Tell the importance of distinguishing facts and opinion properly.
II. Content

Recognizing Statements, Facts and Opinion

Springboard: The People of the Philippines by the Philippine Tourism

Promotions Board

Materials: Hand-outs, power point presentation

Procedure:

A. Pre- Reading

1. Developing vocabulary/concepts

 The students will play a word game called “Who Am I”


1. The teacher will give sentences that would define opinion.
2. The students will tell if the sentences given refer to fact or opinion

Example

 I am reality
 I am an actual occurrence
 I am a view or judgement
 I am a feeling.

 Difficult words will be unlocked through another game called “Decode Me”
EXAMPLE:

1. 9-14-20-5-18-19-16-5-18-19-5 (intersperse)

1- A 8-H 15-O 22-V


2- B 9-I 16- P 23-W meaning of the word:
3- C 10-J 17-Q 24-X -scatter among or between other things
4. D 11-K 18- R 25-Y
5- E 12-L 19-S 26-Z
6- F 13-M 20- T
7-G 14-N 21-U
May 21, 2018

1. The teacher will group the students into 5.


2. Students are asked to decode all the numbers written on their charts to form
the difficult words that can be found in the text.
3. They will be presented a chart that contains the numbers with their equivalent
letter.
4. Afterwards, they are going to choose the meaning of the words by which are
written on the strips of papers.
5. The teacher will then process the activity.

2. Activating Prior Knowledge/Developing a Purpose for reading

 The students will presented by a semantic web wherein they are going to write all
the characteristics of a Filipino as many as they can.

CHARACTERISTICS
OF A FILIPINO

 The teacher will process all the answers. Ask the questions:
1. What do you feel about the activity?
2. Why do you think these words you have written portray a Filipino?

B. During Reading

 The students will be given the text


 The teacher will let the students read the text silently for 5 minutes.
 Afterwards, the second reading of the text will be done by the teacher.

C. Post Reading

The teacher will let the students watch a video clip about facts and opinion twice.

1. Engagement Activities (small group)


 The teacher will present the students identify sentence from the selection that
are facts and sentences that are opinions to justify their answers.
 Students answers will be written in the graphic organizer.
May 21, 2018

FACTS How do you know it’s a


fact?

OPINIONS How do you know it’s an


opinion?

2. Engagement Activities Discussion (whole class)

 All groups will present their final output in class. Each group will be given one
minute to present.
 The teacher will process all the answers of each group.

Developing Mastery

Go back to semantic web that the class in the pre-reading part of the lesson. Guide the
children in expanding it with new insights from the story.

3. Enrichment

Writing

1. Write 2 sentences of facts about the Philippines.

2. Write 2 sentences that you can describe about the Philippines.

Art

 Display a work of art such as Spolarium by Juan Luna. On large paper, create a
T-chart contrasting facts and opinion.

Photo Credit: google.com.ph

Music

 Students will create a rap about their community. Sentences in the rap should
here facts and opinions.
May 21, 2018

Social Studies

 The students will be given newspaper articles. They are going to evaluate if all
the information from the newspaper articles are correct.

Science

 The teacher will ask the students to pick out a book on school library. The
teacher will direct the students to read the book and write down five facts about
the animal on the paper and five opinions about the animal on the back of the
paper.

Making generalizations and abstractions about the lesson

 Go around the class and have each student say a fact.


 Write them on the board
 Go around the class and have each student say an opinion.
 Write them on the board.
 Use a different colored chalk for facts and opinions.

EVALUATION

Guided Practice/ Interactive Modeling

 Ask your students to complete the facts and opinion worksheet with a partner
 Go over the worksheet with a partner.
 Go over the worksheet as a class

Independent Practice

 Ask your students to complete the fact or opinion worksheet


 Go over the worksheet as a class.

Application

A. Role-play situations that depict the characteristics of a Filipino.


May 21, 2018
A fact is something that is true or can be proven.

An opinion is your feelings or how someone else feels about a


topic.

Write one fact and one opinion for each topic

Example: music

Fact: The violin is a stringed instrument.

Opinion: Jazz is the most beautiful type of music.

1. candy

Fact: ___________________________________________________________

Opinion: ________________________________________________________

2. tree

Fact: ___________________________________________________________

Opinion: ________________________________________________________

3. monkey

Fact: ___________________________________________________________

Opinion: ________________________________________________________

Members:

Ariste Vanessa Avanzado

Richard Niel Caraan

Sharon Corong

Patrice Nicole D. Villaluz


May 21, 2018

APPENDIX A
May 21, 2018

The People of the Philippines

by the Philippine Tourism Promotions Board

1
The Filipino is basically of Malay stock with a sprinkling of Chinese. American, Spanish
and Arab blood. The Philippines has a population of 70 million, and it is hard to distinguish
accurately the lines between stocks. From a long history of western colonial rule, interspersed
with the visits of merchants and traders evolved a people of a unique blend of east and west,
both in appearance and culture.
2
The Filipino character is actually a little bit of all cultures put together. The bayanihan or
spirit of kinship and camaraderie that Filipinos are famous for is said to be taken from Malay
forefathers. The close family relations are said to have been inherited from the Chinese. The
piousness comes from the Spaniards who introduced Christianity in the 16th century. Hospitality
is a common denominator in the Filipino character and this is what distinguishes the Filipinos
are probably one of the few, if not the only, English-proficient Oriental people today, Pilipino is
the official national language, with English considered as the country’s unofficial one.
3
The Filipinos are divided geographically and culturally into regions, and each regional
group is recognizable by distinct traits and dialects – the study and frugal Ilocanos of the north,
the Industrious Tagalog of the centrail plains, The carefree Visayas from the central islands and
the colourful tribesmen and religious Moslems of Midanao. Tribal communities can be found
scattered across the archipelago. The Philippines has more than 111 dialects spoken, owing to
the subdivisions of these basic regional and cultural groups.
4
Some 80 percent of the population is catholic. Spain’s lasting legacy. About 15 percent
is Moslem and these people can be found basically in Mindanao. The rest of the population is
made up mostly of smaller Christian denominations and Buddhist.
5
The country is marked by a true blend of cultures; truly in the Philippines. East meets
West. The background of the people is Indonesian and Malay. There are Chinese and Spanish
elements as well. The history of American rule and contact with merchants and traders
culminated in a unique blend of East and West, both in the appearance and culture of the
people of the Filipinos, or people in the Philippines.

Credits to: google.com.ph


May 21, 2018

No delay in Marawi school opening, DepEd assures

By: Jhesset O. Enano – Reporter/ @JhessetEnanoINQ

Classes in war-torn Marawi City will begin on the same day as the rest of public schools
nationwide on June 4, the Department of Education (DepEd) said on Monday.
Education Secretary Leonor Briones said she would visit Marawi’s ground zero for the first time
on Tuesday to assess the conditions of schools in the city devastated by war between
government forces and the Islamic State-inspired Maute group last year.
“We are doing all we can to speed up the construction and repair of the school buildings in
Marawi,” she said in a press briefing at the DepEd central office in Pasig City.

On Wednesday, Briones, along with Assistant Education Secretary Alfhadar Pajiji of DepEd
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, is expected to lead the closing of “Brigada Eskwela
sa Marawi” and the launch of “Oplan Balik Eskwela in Marawi” at Amai Pakpak Central
Elementary School in Marawi.
Launched in December 2017, Brigada Eskwela sa Marawi was the DepEd’s flagship program
for the recovery and rehabilitation of the Islamic city after the five-month siege.
Last year, at the height of the siege that began on May 23, classes in Marawi and in eight
school districts nearest to the conflict area were pushed back by two weeks to ensure the safety
of students, teachers and DepEd employees.
Clusters
Data from the DepEd showed that more than 31,000 students were displaced from the city and
were forced to continue their studies in other schools across the country.
Despite the ongoing rehabilitation, however, Briones noted that not all schools in Marawi could
be opened this school year.
“What DepEd did was to cluster the schools, after we observed that they were adjacent to one
another,” she said.

Briones said that of the 69 schools in the city, more than 20 would not be able to accommodate
students because of their poor and unsafe conditions.
More than 40 schools would need to undergo repairs, she said.

Credits to: newsinfoinquirer.net

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