Detailed Lesson Plan in Greek Myth
Detailed Lesson Plan in Greek Myth
Detailed Lesson Plan in Greek Myth
I. Objectives
a. Determine the significance of each story in real life situation
b. Cooperate and share ideas in classroom discussion
c. Perform and construct effective sentence in relation to the Iliad and the Odyssey
III. Procedure
Teacher’s Activity Students’ Activity
A. Routinary Activities
1. Prayer
“Let us all stand and _____ kindly lead the
prayer.” Good morning ma’am!
2. Greeting
“Good morning class!”
3. Classroom Management
“Okay, before you sit down please pick up all of
the pieces of trash under your chairs arrange it
and sit properly.”
4. Checking of Attendance
“Group leaders! Who are the absentees in your
group?” None ma’am!
“Group 1? 2? 3? 4? 5?”
Activity
“Before we proceed to the lesson, let’s have an
activity first. I have here five (5) pictures on the
board and on the other side of the board, I will
post sets of words related to the pictures. The
following words describe the picture being
posted. I will call five (5) students to attach the
words on its corresponding pictures.”
Sets of words
Zeus
*God of the sky
*God of lightning and
thunder
*God of law, order
and justice
*Achilles
*Hero of the Trojan
War
*shot with an arrow in
the heel
*Hephaestus
*God of fire
*God of metal
working, stone
masonry
*Apollo
*God of music
*God of poetry and
arts
*God of archery
*Agamemnon
*King of Mycenae
*Commander-in-chief
of Achaeans
Analysis
King of Ithaca
One of the
great heroes
who join the
Greek
Odysseus expedition to
Troy
Wife of
Odysseus
Who loyalty
waits for
Odysseus to
Penelope come back
Nymph
Lives on the
island of Ogyia
– where
Odyssey was
Calypso washed up and
kept for 7 years
The son of
Odysseus
He was still a
baby when
Odysseus left
Telemachus but an adult
when the story
started
The Sea God
who hates
Odysseus and
impedes/hinder
him from
Poseidon getting back to
Ithaca
The Poseidon’s
son
One of a
mythical race
of one eyed
Polyphemus man eating
giants
A whirlpool in
a narrow
channel of
water who suck
sea water and
Charybdis spew it out 3
times a day
A sea monster
with six hands
Seylla
Magical
females who
entrap and
destroy sailors
with the power
The Sirens of the songs
they sings
Witch who turn
some
Odysseus’ men
into pigs
Circe
(The Odyssey)
“Ten years after the fall of Troy, the
victorious Greek hero Odysseus has still not
returned to his native Ithaca. A band of rowdy
suitors, believing Odysseus to be dead, has
overrun his palace, courting his faithful -- though
weakening -- wife, Penelope, and going through
his stock of food. With permission from Zeus, the
goddess Athena, Odysseus' greatest immortal ally,
appears in disguise and urges Odysseus' son
Telemachus to seek news of his father at Pylos
and Sparta. However, the suitors, led by
Antinous, plan to ambush him upon his return.
As Telemachus tracks Odysseus' trail
through stories from his old comrades-in-arms,
Athena arranges for the release of Odysseus from
the island of the beautiful goddess Calypso,
whose prisoner and lover he has been for the last
eight years. Odysseus sets sail on a makeshift raft,
but the sea god Poseidon, whose wrath Odysseus
incurred earlier in his adventures by blinding
Poseidon's son, the Cyclops Polyphemus,
conjures up a storm. With Athena's help,
Odysseus reaches the Phaeacians. Their princess,
Nausica, who has a crush on the handsome
warrior, opens the palace to the stranger.
Odysseus withholds his identity for as long as he
can until finally, at the Phaeacians' request, he
tells the story of his adventures.
Odysseus relates how, following the
Trojan War, his men suffered more losses at the
hands of the Kikones, then were nearly tempted to
stay on the island of the drug-addled Lotus Eaters.
Next, the Cyclops Polyphemus devoured many of
Odysseus' men before an ingenious plan of
Odysseus' allowed the rest to escape -- but not
before Odysseus revealed his name to
Polyphemus and thus started his personal war
with Poseidon. The wind god Ailos then provided
Odysseus with a bag of winds to aid his return
home, but the crew greedily opened the bag and
sent the ship to the land of the giant, man-eating
Laistrygonians, where they again barely escaped.
On their next stop, the goddess Circe
tricked Odysseus' men and turned them into pigs.
With the help of the god Hermes, Odysseus
defied her spell and metamorphosed the pigs back
into men. They stayed on her island for a year in
the lap of luxury, with Odysseus as her lover,
before moving on and resisting the temptations of
the seductive and dangerous Sirens, navigating
between the sea monster Scylla and the
whirlpools of Charybdis, and plumbing the depths
of Hades to receive a prophecy from the blind
seer Tiresias. Resting on the island of Helios,
Odysseus' men disobeyed his orders not to touch
the oxen. At sea, Zeus punished them and all but
Odysseus died in a storm. It was then that
Odysseus reached Calypso's island.
Odysseus finishes his story, and the
Phaeacians hospitably give him gifts and ferry
him home on a ship. Athena disguises Odysseus
as a beggar and instructs him to seek out his old
swineherd, Eumaeus; she will recall Telemachus
from his own travels. With Athena's help,
Telemachus avoids the suitors' ambush and
reunites with his father, who reveals his identity
only to his son and swineherd. He devises a plan
to overthrow the suitors with their help.
In disguise as a beggar, Odysseus
investigates his palace. The suitors and a few of
his old servants generally treat him rudely as
Odysseus sizes up the loyalty of Penelope and his
other servants. Penelope, who notes the
resemblance between the beggar and her
presumably dead husband, proposes a contest: she
will, at last, marry the suitor who can string
Odysseus' great bow and shoot an arrow through
a dozen axe heads.
Only Odysseus can pull off the feat.
Bow in hand, he shoots and kills the suitor
Antinous and reveals his identity. With
Telemachus, Eumaeus, and his goatherd
Philoitios at his side, Odysseus leads the massacre
of the suitors, aided only at the end by Athena.
Odysseus lovingly reunites with Penelope, his
knowledge of their bed that he built the proof that
overcomes her skepticism that he is an impostor.
Outside of town, Odysseus visits his ailing father,
Laertes, but an army of the suitors' relatives
quickly finds them. With the encouragement of a
disguised Athena, Laertes strikes down the
ringleader, Antinous' father. Before the battle can
progress any further, Athena, on command from
Zeus, orders peace between the two sides.
Abstraction
Application
Creativeness – 20 percent
The students showcase their uniqueness when it
comes on making a concept and neatness in their
output.
– 5 points
The students are able to speak clearly and interact
with audience for them to understand the task
given to the group.
Fidelity of Content to the Topic – 40 percent
The students show the relation of their
presentation to the topic, so that the ideas will be
not shuffled.
Presentation – 40 percent
The students able to perform the play according to
the sequence of the events
III. Evaluation
“Get ¼ sheet of pad paper and answer the
following.”
Directions: Identify if the statement is True or
False. Write T for TRUE and F for FALSE.
V. Assignment
Prepared by: