English 7 Lessons
English 7 Lessons
English 7 Lessons
QUARTER I
APPRECIATING MY SELF
LESSON 1: SEARCHING FOR MY BEGINNINGS
LESSON 2: RECALLING MY ANCESTOR’S BELIEFS
LESSON 3: CONNECTING TO MY PAST
LESSON 4: LEARNING FROM MY BEGINNINGS
LESSON 5: VALUING MY ELDERS’ WISDOM
LESSON 6: CELEBRATING MY HEROES’ BELIEFS
QUARTER II
BUILDING RELATIONSHIPS
Content Standard
The learner demonstrates understanding of how Philippine Literature during the Period of Apprenticeship and other
text types through employing various listening, viewing, and reading strategies; locating library resources; using phrases,
clauses, sentences, literal and figurative languages and verbal and non-verbal cues in oral communication serve as means
of building a positive and healthy relationship.
Performance Standard
The learner creatively presents a summary of a formal essay/informative article about building relationship.
PRE-TEST
Direction: Read the following items carefully and copy the letter of the most appropriate word/group of words that
completes each statement/sentence.
1. A representation of a person in a story is _______________.
a. Setting
b. Climax
c. Character
d. Plot
2. This is the opposition between or among characters or forces in a story that shapes or motivates the action of the
plot _______________.
a. Exposition
b. Conflict
c. Resolution
d. Denouement
3. Literal meaning is defined as ____________
a. Basic meaning
b. Functional meaning
c. Hidden meaning
d. Idiomatic meaning
4. The figure of speech that uses like or as in comparison is called a ____________.
a. Metaphor
b. Simile
c. Personification
d. Hyperbole
5. The word “apprehension” means _____________.
a. Dread
b. Joy
c. Sadness
d. Anger
6. The place in school that you go to for research is _____________.
a. Library
b. Office
c. Canteen
d. Classroom
7. There are three cards that you can find in the library, EXCEPT ____________.
a. Author card
b. Subject card
c. Identification card
d. Title card
8. A summary must have a/an __________________.
a. Longer version of the original
b. Shorter version of the original
c. Rewritten version of the original
d. Opinionated version of the original
9. It is a group of related words within a sentence and without both subject and verb ____________.
a. Clause
b. Phrase
c. Question
d. Sentence
10. The shortening of a text using your own words is __________.
a. Paraphrase
b. Précis
c. Summary
d. Title
11. In this sentence that has a metaphor, the unlike objects which are being compared are ______________.
As the teacher entered the room, he muttered under his breath, “This class is like a three-ring circus!”
a. Room and class
b. Class and circus
c. Teacher and room
d. Circus and teacher
12. In this sentence, the italicized words makeup a phrase. It is a verb phrase which contains the helping/auxiliary verb
____________.
The student had just cleaned the classroom when the teacher knocked over the flower vase.
a. Had
b. The
c. Just
d. Over
13. The following is an example of a ________________.
The librarian’s voice affected us like fingernails scraping across a chalk board.
a. Simile
b. Metaphor
c. Hyperbole
d. Personification
14. The underlined part of the sentence is a/an _____________.
At the end of recess, the students ran into the room.
a. Prepositional phrase
b. Noun phrase
c. Verb phrase
d. Adjective phrase
15-17. Locate the prepositional phrase and identify the preposition including its object.
The language book is on the shelf.
15. Prepositional phrase: _______________
16. Preposition: ______________________
17. Object of the preposition: ______________
Oxymoron – is figure of speech which employs contradictory words. Generally, the oxymoron words appear together in
one sentence. An oxymoron is not meant to confuse readers, but is used to add flavour and dramatic effect to speech.
Examples:
Original copy
Found missing
Old news
Peace force
Deafening silence
Declarative Sentence – a sentence that aims to make a statement about a fact, makes a point, or state an idea.
This type of sentence helps you develop your ideas. Declarative sentences end in a period.
Example:
1. He was twenty-two. (stating a fact)
2. I had felt too weak to refuse. (making a point)
3. She would perhaps never write back. (stating an idea)
Paradox – is a figure of speech which appears to contradict itself but can be true. It is a literary device used by authors to
show contradictory ideas in a thought-provoking style. A paradox has a distinct appeal because it is usually perceived as
illogical and untrue, but after a second look, it contains a grain of truth.
Examples:
1. I must be cruel to be kind.
Meaning: if you are concerned with a person, you need to be frank and tell them their mistake even if it will hurt
them.
2. Child is father of the man.
Meaning: man’s habits are the results of his childhood ways.
3. The swiftest traveller is he that goes afoot.
Meaning: if one travels on foot, he must walk fast.
A paradox is similar to oxymoron. But do not get confused. A paradox is generally understood if you read a statement as a
whole, while an oxymoron is a two-word contradictory term found within a sentence.
Example:
Oxymoron: What he said is a true lie. (The contradiction is plainly seen in the two-words: true and lie. We know that what
was said is false.)
Paradox: Believe me, I always lie. (The contradiction is observed in the meaning of the sentence: Is the speaker’s message
true or not?)
Direction: identify the figure of speech used in each sentence. Write P if the sentence is Paradox; and write O if Oxymoron.
Interrogative Sentence – is a sentence which asks for information. It is a sentence that states a question and requires a
response. It ends with a question mark. Interrogative sentences start with WH Questions.
Yes/No questions are questions are questions that can be answered with a yes or a no response. Yes/no questions are
usually formed by inverting the be verb and the subject.
Examples:
Sentence: You are still young.
You write essays.
Question: Are you still young?
Do you write essays?
Formal Essay – is a piece of writing that informs or persuades its audience. In general, formal essay has three parts: an
introduction, body parts and conclusion.
Introduction – contains techniques that grab reader’s attention such as famous quotes, statistics, or interesting questions. It
contains the main idea of an essay.
Body – contains paragraphs that support the main idea of the essay. The details, examples and explanations are included
in this part of an essay.
Conclusion – is the last paragraph of the essay. It contains the restatement of the main idea of the essay and a summary of
the main points.
Informative Article – is any piece of writing that educates readers on a certain topic. Expository essay is an example of
informative article.
Expository essay – is an essay written to explain a process, compare viewpoints, analyze data or educate the reader on
how to do something.
QUARTER III
BLENDING WELL IN A DIVERSE SOCIETY
LESSON 1: ACKNOWLEDGING DIVERSITY
Pliant like the Bamboo
by I.V. Mallari
Page 304
Box 3:
a. Benevolent
b. Cruel
c. Relentless
d. Rude
Box 4:
a. Cooperate
b. Embrace
c. Protest
d. Welcome
Box 5:
a. Bendable
b. Flexible
c. Pliant
d. Stiff
Assignment:
Find the meaning of your answers.
1. Weak – not strong
2. Stands – upright position
3. Benevolent – to do good
4. Protest – strong disapproval
5. Stiff – not able to move
There is a story in Philippine folklore about a mango tree and a bamboo tree. Not being able to agree as to which
was stronger of the two, they called upon the wind to make decision. The wind blew hardest. The mango tree stood fast.
It would not yield. It knew it was strong and sturdy. It would not sway. It was too proud. It was too sure of itself. But
finally its root gave way, and it tumbled down.
The bamboo tree was wiser. It knew it was not as robust as the mango tree. And so every time the wind blew, it
bent its head gracefully. It made loud protestations, but let the wind have its way. When finally the wind get tired of
blowing, the bamboo tree still stood in all its beauty and grace.
If you will become one of the trees in the story, who will you choose to be? Why?
The Filipino is like the bamboo tree. He knows that he is not strong enough, to withstand the onslaught of superior forces.
And so he yields. He bends his head gracefully with many loud protestations.
And he has survived. The Spaniards came and dominated him for more than three hundred years. And, when the
Spaniards left, the Filipinos still stood-only much richer in experience and culture.
The Americans took place of the Spaniards. They used more subtle means of winning over the Filipinos to their
mode of living and thinking. The Filipinos embraced the American way of life more readily than the Spaniards vague
promises hereafter.
Then the Japanese came like a storm, like a plague of locusts, like a pestilence – rude, relentless, cruel. The
Filipino learned to bow his head low, to “cooperate” with the Japanese in their “holy mission of establishing the Co-
Prosperity Sphere.” The Filipino had only hate and contempt for the Japanese, but he learned to smile sweetly at them and
to thanks them graciously for their “benevolence and magnanimity.”
And now that the Americans have come back and driven away the Japanese, those Filipinos who profited most
from cooperating with the Japanese have been loudest in their protestations of innocence. Everything is as if the Japanese
had never been in the Philippines.
As a Filipino, will you consider yourself like the bamboo? Why? Why not?
For the Filipino would welcome any kind of life that the gods would offer him. That is why he is contented and happy
and at peace. The sad plight of other people of the world is not his. To him, as to that the ancient Oriental poet, the past is
already a dream, and tomorrow is a vision; but today, we’ll lived, makes every yesterday a dream of happiness, and
tomorrow is a vision of hope.
This may give you the idea that the Filipino is a philosopher. Well he is. He has not evolved a body of philosophical
doctrines. Much less has he put them down into a book, like Kant for example, or Santayana or Confucius. But he does
have a philosophical outlook on life.
He has a saying that life is like a wheel. Sometimes it is up, sometimes it is down. The monsoon season comes,
and he has to go undercover. But then the sun comes out again. The flowers bloom, and the birds sing in the trees. You cut
off the branches of a tree, and, while the marks of the bolo are still upon it, it begins to shoot forth new branches-branches
that are the promise of new color, new fragrance and new life.
Everywhere about him is a lesson in patience and forbearance that he does not have to learn difficulty. For the
Filipino lives in a country on which the gods lavished their gifts aplenty. He does not have to worry about the morrow.
Tomorrow will be only another day – no winter of discontent. Of he loses his possessions, there is the land and there is the
sea, with all the riches that one can desire. There is plenty to spar – for friends, for neighbours and for everyone else.
No wonder that the Filipino can afford to laugh. For the Filipino is endowed with saving grace of humor. This humor
is earthly as befits one who has not indulged in deep contemplation. But it has enabled the Filipino to shrug his shoulders in
times of adversity and say to himself “Bahala na”.
The Filipino has often been accused of being indolent and of lacking initiative. And he has answered back that no
one can help being indolent and lacking in initiative who lives under the torrid sun which saps vitality.
This seeming lack of vitality is, however, only one of his means of survival. He does not allowed the world to be too
much with him. Like the bamboo tree, he lets the wind of chance and circumstances blow all about him; and he is
unperturbed and serene.
Do you agree with the writer’s description of the Filipinos? Why? Why not?
The Filipino, in fact, has a way of escaping from the rigorous problems of life. Most of his art is escapist in nature. His
forefathers wallowed in the moro-moro, the awit, and the kurido. They loved to identify themselves as gallant knights battling
for the favours of fair ladies or the possession of hollowed place. And now he himself loves to be lost in the throes and
modern romance and adventure.
His gallantry towards women – especially comely women – is a manifestation of his romantic turn of mind.
Consequently, in no other place in Orient are women so respected, so educated and so pampered. For his women have
enabled the Filipinos to look upon the vicissitudes of fortune as the bamboo tree regards the angry blasts of the blustering
wind.
The Filipino is eminently suited to his romantic role. He is slender and wiry. He is nimble and graceful in his
movements, his voice is soft, and he is has the gift of language. In what other place in the world can find people who can
carry on a fluent conversation in at least three languages?
This gift is another means by which the Filipino as managed to survive. There is no insurmountable barrier between
him and any of the people who have come to live with him – Spanish, American, and the Japanese. The foreigners do not
have learn his language. He easily manages to master theirs.
Verily, the Filipino is like the bamboo tree. In its grace, in its ability to adjust itself to the peculiar and inexplicable
whims of fate, the bamboo tree in his expressive and symbolic national tree, it will have to be, not the molave or the narra,
but the bamboo.
What specific Filipino characteristics are you proud of? Why? Share your answer with the class.
Logical Connectors
- Are used to link two or more ideas
related with one another.
- Some examples of these connectors
are:
1. Chronological – first, then, after
that, next, lastly
Example: First, I want to call the
members. Then, I will assign their
seats. After that, I will call the
meeting to order. Next, I will
discuss the agenda of the meeting.
Finally, I will dismiss them.
2. Additional Information – in
addition/to, as well as, the same
with
Example: In addition to patis,
Filipinos like to use soy sauce.
Families as well as friends like to
use patis in different dishes.
3. Beginning – first of all, primarily, in
the beginning, to start with
Example: First of all, the food is
really delicious. Primarily, they are
costly since they came from
another country.
4. Summation/Closure – finally,
eventually, to top it all, in
conclusion, in the end
Example: Finally, the food was
delivered to our house.
In conclusion, the food in the party
was great.
QUARTER IV
CONNECTING TO THE WORLD
LESSON 1: RELATING PAST TO THE PRESENT
1.
LESSON 2: KEEPING ABREAST WITH CHANGES
1.
LESSON 3: UPHOLDING UNDERSTANDING OF BROADENING HORIZONS
1.
LESSON 4: CELEBRATING CULTURAL TIES
1.
My mother brought us up single-handedly. It was an extraordinary task for a woman so frail – dealing with three
adolescent children. But she managed. She did not finish high school, but her deft hands had skilfully eked out a living for
the four of us. She was good at knitting. Her job tided us over until the eldest got a diploma of teaching. Then she put up a
sari-sari store to send the other children to college. Mother wanted us all to get a college degree and she had sacrificed
much to see us through.
Mother had a soft heart – especially for Anita. Anita was the youngest, and I, being the middle child, always envied
her. She was sickly and Mother willingly indulged her. My sister’s whimpers never irked her. She was ever so gentle with
her while I was so impatient and jealous. I never understood my mother.
My mother who had always been a frail woman was much thinner now. Anita who was married by now had never
stopped being pampered. Her lack of concern for our mother’s failing health was getting on my nerves. I felt like shouting at
her, calling her names when I heard her ask Mother to knit a shawl for her. Mother could hardly refuse, but I knew that the
task was just too much for her. Her fingers had lost their flexibility; rheumatic pain told on her knuckles that felt a million pins
pricking. My heart went out to her every time I saw her painfully knitting the needles into the yarn.
I never want to see Mother lift a finger. She was too old to work, and we wanted to save the burden of doing even
the lightest household chores. Mother said she felt useless being cooped up in the house all day, doing nothing. That was
before Anita sweet talked her into knitting her shawl. I was beginning to hate Anita for being so callous.
Knitting the shawl might have been an agony for Mother, but she never showed any pain. At the end of the day, she
would look at her handwork, a smile on her lips as she held it against her. Knitting proved to be a slow process, but Mother
didn’t mind, I only did and when Anita showed up one day to visit Mother. I scolded her for being so thoughtless.
Anita touched my arm and in a gentle voice she said, “I did it for Mother. That shawl is giving her reason to live. She
was wasting away, didn’t you notice? She felt so useless because she had nothing to do, no matter how small. Mother is
one person who prefers to live her life working. If she stops working, she will stop living.”
I nodded my head. Perhaps Anita was right. I was beginning to understand my mother.
Source: Textbook for First Year High School, SEDP Series First Edition, 1989 pages 89-90
Irony – is the disparity or inconsistency between what seems and what is, meaning, words are used
in a way that the intended meaning is different from what is actually meant or a contrast between
what is expected and what really happens.
Examples:
The shoemaker wears shoes with holes in them.
It rains on a day a group of weather forecasters has scheduled a picnic.
Someone living in the desert keeps a boat in her yard.
Someone walks out in the midst of a hurricane and says, “nice day!”
Module 2: Lesson 5
Loving Others
2. Oxymoron – is a figure of speech which employs contradictory words. Generally, the oxymoron
words appear together in one sentence. An oxymoron is not meant to confuse readers, but is used to
add flavor and dramatic effect to speech.
Examples:
Original copy
Found missing
Old news
Peace force
Deafening silence
Act naturally
Awfully good
Terribly pleased
Even odds
Alone together
Loving hate
Real phony
Miserable abundance
Module 2: Lesson 6
Sharing Positive and Healthy Relationship
Footnote to Youth
Jose Garcia-Villa
An excerpt
Paradox – is a figure of speech which appears to contradict itself but can be true. It is a literary device
used by authors to show contradictory ideas in a thought-provoking style. A paradox has a distinct
appeal because it is usually perceived as illogical and untrue, but after a second look, it contains a
grain of truth.
Example:
1. I must be cruel to be kind. (Shakespeare)
Meaning: If you are concerned with a person, you need to be frank and tell them their
mistake even if it will hurt them.
2. Child is father of the man. (Wordsworth)
Meaning: Man’s habits are the results of his childhood ways.
3. The swiftest traveler is he that goes afoot. (Thoreau)
Meaning: If one travels on foot, he must walk fast.
A paradox is similar to oxymoron. But do not get confused. A paradox is generally understood if you
read a statement as a whole, while an oxymoron is a two-word contradictory term found within a
sentence.
Example:
Oxymoron: What he said is a true lie. (The contradiction is plainly seen in the two words: true and lie.
We know that what was said is false.)
Paradox: Believe me, I always lie. (The contradiction is observed in the meaning of the sentence: Is
the speaker’s message true or not?)
Logical connectors are used to link two or more ideas related with one another.
Some examples of these connectors are:
1. Chronological – first, then, after that, next, lastly
Ex: First, I want to call the members. Then, I will assign their seats.
After that, I will call the meeting to order. Next, I will discuss the agenda of the meeting. Finally,
I will dismiss them.
2. Additional Information – in addition/to, as well as, the same with
Ex: in addition to patis, Filipinos like to use soy sauce. Families as well as friends like to use
patis in different dishes.
3. Beginning – first of all, primarily, in the beginning, to start with
Ex: First of all, the food is really delicious.
Primarily, they are costly since they came from another country.
4. Summative/Closure – finally, eventually, to top it all, in conclusion, in the end
Ex: Finally, the food was delivered to our house.
In conclusion, the food in the party was great.
A past perfect tense is used when you are talking about a completed action before something in the
past.
Past perfect tense is formed by using the word “had” + (past participle)
Example: had written, had arrived, had eaten, had become
1. When Julio went to Ka Ponso, he had written a letter for him.
2. Julio had arrived at their house before Fidela cooked dinner.
3. After Julio had eaten dinner, Fidela and her child went to sleep.