q1 Module 5
q1 Module 5
q1 Module 5
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Republic Act 8293, Section 176 states that: No copyright shall subsist in any work
of the Government of the Philippines. However, prior approval of the government agency or
office wherein the work is created shall be necessary for exploitation of such work for profit.
Such agency or office may, among other things, impose as a condition the payment of
royalties.
Borrowed materials (i.e., songs, stories, poems, pictures, photos, brand names,
trademarks, etc.) included in this module are owned by their respective copyright holders.
Every effort has been exerted to locate and seek permission to use these materials from
them. The publisher and authors do not represent nor claim ownership over them.
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Introductory Message
For the Facilitator:
Welcome to the 21st Century Literature from the Philippines and the World 11/12
Alternative Delivery Mode (ADM) Module on the Elements of a Short Story!
This learning resource hopes to engage the learners into guided and independent
learning activities at their own pace and time. Furthermore, this also aims to help
learners acquire the needed 21st century skills while taking into consideration
their needs and circumstances.
In addition to the material in the main text, you will also see this box in the body of
the module:
As a facilitator, you are expected to orient the learners on how to use this module.
You also need to keep track of the learners' progress while allowing them to
manage their own learning. Furthermore, you are expected to encourage and assist
the learners as they do the tasks included in the module.
Welcome to the 21st Century Literature from the Philippines and the World 11/12
Alternative Delivery Mode (ADM) Module on the Elements of a Short Story!
The hand is one of the most symbolized parts of the human body. It is often used to
depict skill, action and purpose. Through our hands we may learn, create and
accomplish. Hence, the hand in this learning resource signifies that you as a
learner are capable and empowered to successfully achieve the relevant
competencies and skills at your own pace and time. Your academic success lies in
your own hands!
This module was designed to provide you with fun and meaningful opportunities
for guided and independent learning at your own pace and time. You will be
enabled to process the contents of the learning resource while being an active
learner.
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What I Need to Know This will give you an idea of the skills or
competencies you are expected to learn in
the module.
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1. Use the module with care. Do not put unnecessary mark/s on any part of
the module. Use a separate sheet of paper in answering the exercises.
2. Don’t forget to answer What I Know before moving on to the other activities
included in the module.
3. Read the instruction carefully before doing each task.
4. Observe honesty and integrity in doing the tasks and checking your
answers.
5. Finish the task at hand before proceeding to the next.
6. Return this module to your teacher/facilitator once you are through with it.
If you encounter any difficulty in answering the tasks in this module, do not
hesitate to consult your teacher or facilitator. Always bear in mind that you are not
alone.
We hope that through this material, you will experience meaningful learning and
gain deep understanding of the relevant competencies. You can do it!
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This module was designed and written with you in mind. It is here to help you
master the basic elements of a short story. The scope of this module permits it to
be used in many different learning situations. The language used recognizes the
diverse vocabulary level of students. The lessons are arranged to follow the
standard sequence of the course. But the order in which you read them can be
changed to correspond with the textbook you are now using.
This module also aims to engage you in appreciation and critical study of 21st
Century Literature from the Philippines and the World, encompassing their various
dimensions, genres, elements, structures, contexts, and traditions. This module
allows you to embark on a journey from Philippine regions to the different parts of
the world through various literary encounters.
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What I Know
DIRECTIONS: Choose the letter of the correct answer. Write the chosen letter
on a separate sheet of paper.
1. Which element refers to the time and location where the story happens?
a. Plot
b. Setting
c. Conflict
d. Characterization
2. The phrase, “Don’t judge the book by its cover,” is an example of
a. Mood
b. Setting
c. Theme
d. Conflict
3. What do you call the most important character in a story?
a. antagonize
b. protagonist
c. antagonist
d. instigator
4. Which plot structure creates tone, presents characters and other important
details to introduce the story?
a. Setting
b. Theme
c. Exposition
d. Climax
5. Which element of a short story is known as the vantage point used to narrate
the story?
a. Setting
b. Theme
c. Exposition
d. Point of view
6. What do you call the character who contends with the main character in a
short story?
a. investigator
b. protagonist
c. antagonist
d. instigator
7. Which element of short story shows the author’s attitude or feelings?
a. Plot
b. Theme
c. Exposition
d. Tone
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Lesson
Basic Elements of a Short Story
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A short story has six basic elements that you as a reader should look for
when analyzing one. Every story begins with a seed of an idea. Hence, the author
should think of these basic elements when writing a story. Although not all stories
put equal importance on every aspect, each of these elements must be expected in
the story. At the end of this lesson, you are expected to do a self- and/or peer
assessment of the creative adaptation of a literary text based on rationalized
criteria.
What’s In
Studying literature can be very easy with the right amount of knowledge
gained from your studies in the past. Can you recall module 4? How do you define
anecdote? What are the purposes of an anecdote? What lesson does the anecdote in
“Home of the Ashfall” convey? For this next lesson, you will be guided in gathering
more literary tools that will surely make learning more exciting.
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What’s New
In this module, you will learn about the six basic elements of a short story.
You will be reading a short story entitled “Sinigang” by Marie Aubrey J. Villaceran,
a professor at the Department of English and Comparative Literature in the
University of the Philippines, Diliman. In the story, Liza narrates how she deals
with the issue of her father, having an affair with another woman, and how it
emotionally separates her from him. Read and learn more about the story and find
out how the basic elements are used.
SINIGANG
Marie Aubrey J. Villaceran
She had finally decided to ask the question. I had been wondering how long
my Tita Loleng could contain her curiosity.
I continued to pick out tomatoes for the Sinigang we were to have for dinner.
I wasn’t usually the one who assisted my aunt with the cooking. She preferred my
younger sister, Meg, for I knew far less in this area—not having the aptitude, or the
interest, I guess—for remembering recipes. That didn’t matter today, though. This
time, Tita Loleng wanted more than just an extra pair of hands in the kitchen.
I put the tomatoes in the small palanggana, careful not to bruise their
delicate skin, and carried them to the sink.
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I was surprised, for I had not heard anyone approaching. Most of the
mourners preferred to stay out on the veranda for fear that the heat from the lights
might also cause them to wither.
I looked up slowly: long, slim feet with mauve-painted toenails that peeked
through the opening of a pair of scruffy-looking slippers; smooth legs unmarred by
swollen veins or scars—so unlike the spider-veined legs of my mom—encased in a
black, pencil-cut skirt; a white blouse with its sleeves too long for the wearer,
causing the extra fabric to bunch around the cuffs; a slim neck whose skin sagged
just a little bit; and a pale face that seemed like it had not experienced sleep in
days. The woman looked to me like she was in her forties—the same age as my
mother.
“Yes,” I had answered that woman—the same answer I now gave to Tita
Loleng.
I gently spilled out all the tomatoes into the sink and turned on the tap. The
water, like agua bendita, cleansed each tomato of the grime from its origins.
“What did she tell you?” Tita Loleng asked.
She was. She looked like she had Indian blood with her sharp nose and
deep-set eyes thickly bordered by long lashes. Just like Mom, she still maintained a
slim figure though she already had children. The woman, upon seeing my curious
stare, had explained, “I am Sylvia.”
All my muscles tensed upon hearing her name. It took all my self-control to
outwardly remain calm and simply raise an eyebrow.
But I was not a priest. I looked down at her and my face remained
impassive.
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When her weeping had subsided, she raised her head and looked at me.
“Everyone makes mistakes, Liza.” Her eyes begged for understanding.
It was a line straight out of a Filipino soap opera. I had a feeling that the
whole situation was a scene from a very bad melodrama I was watching.
Tita Loleng nodded understandingly. She gestured for me to place the basin
on the table where she already had the knives and chopping board ready.
“Oh, he was sleeping in one of the bedrooms. Mom did not want to wake him
up because they told her he had not slept for two nights straight.”
Tita Loleng snorted. “Haay, your mother talaga,” she said, shaking her head.
I had to smile at that before continuing. “When he saw me, Sylvia had
already been called away to entertain some of the visitors.”
“Was he surprised to see you?” Tita knew that I had not wanted to go to the
funeral. Actually, she was one of the few people who respected, and understood, my
decision.
“No.” I sliced each of the tomatoes in quarters. The blade of the knife clacked
fiercely against the hard wood of the chopping board. “He requested Mom to make
me go there.” We both knew that I could never have refused my mother once she
insisted that I attend. I had even gone out and gotten drunk with some friends the
night before we were to leave just so I could have an excuse not to go, but my mom
was inflexible. She had ordered my two sisters to wake me up.
Tita Loleng gave me a sympathetic look. “No choice then, huh?” She was
forever baffled at the way my mother could be such a martyr when it came to my
father and such a tyrant to her children.
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“Nope.”
I gave him a non-committal nod, not even glancing his way.Tita Loleng
interrupted my thoughts with another one of her questions.
I took the sliced tomatoes, surprised to find not even a splinter of wood with
them, as well as the onions Tita Loleng had chopped and put them in a pot. “What
next?” I asked her.
“The salt.” Then she went and added a heaping tablespoonful of salt to the
pot.
“Uh-huh. Your Mom and I prefer it a bit saltier, but your Dad likes it this
way.” Then she gestured towards the pot, closing and opening her fist like a baby
flexing its fingers.
I started crushing the onions, tomatoes, and salt together with my hand.
“He was an acolyte in church,” my father had said then, finally splintering the
silence I had adamantly maintained. “Father Mario said that we shouldn’t feel sad
because Lem is assured of going to a better place because he was such a good
child.” Good, I thought, unlike me whom he always called “Sinverguenza”, the
shameless daughter.
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I finally turned to him. There was only one question I needed to ask. “Why?”
My mask of indifference slipped. It felt like a giant hand was rubbing salt
into me, squeezing and mashing, unsatisfied until all of me had been crushed.
“Stop it na, Liza!” Tita Loleng exclaimed. “Anymore of that mashing and you
will be putting bits of your own flesh and bone in there,” my aunt warned. She
went to the refrigerator and took out plastic bags containing vegetables. She placed
them in the sink. “All of these will be needed for the sinigang,” she said. “Prepare
them while you’re softening the meat.” Then she took off her apron, “You go and
finish off here. I will just go to my room and stretch my back out a bit.” With a
tender pat on my head, she walked out of the kitchen.
I poured the hugas bigas into the mass of crushed onions and tomatoes and
added the chunks of beef into the concoction before covering the pot and placing it
on the stove. I turned on the flame. The sinigang needed to simmer for close to an
hour to tenderize the meat.
In the meantime, I started preparing all the other ingredients that will be
added to the pot later on. Taking all the plastic bags, I unloaded their contents into
the sink then washed and drained each vegetable thoroughly before putting them
beside my chopping board.
I reached for the bunch of kangkong and began breaking off choice sections
to be included in the stew. When I was a child, before Tita Loleng had chosen to
stay with us, my mom used to do the cooking and she would have Meg and I sit
beside her while she readied the meals. I remembered that whenever it came to any
dish involving kangkong, I would always insist on preparing it because I loved the
crisp popping sound the vegetable made whenever I broke off a stem. It was on one
such occasion, I was in second year high school by then but still insistent on
kangkong preparation, when Mom had divulged the truth about the boy who kept
calling Dad on the phone everyday at home. Meg had also been there, breaking off
string beans into two-inch sections. Neither of us had reacted much then, but
between us, I knew I was more affected by what Mom had said because right until
then, I had always been Daddy’s girl.
When the kangkong was done, I threw away the tough, unwanted parts and
reached for the labanos. I used a peeler to strip away the skin—revealing the white,
slightly grainy flesh—and then sliced each root diagonally. Next came the
sigarilyas, and finally, the string beans.
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Once, I asked Tita Loleng how she knew what type of vegetable to put into
sinigang and she said, “Well, one never really knows which will taste good until one
has tried it. I mean, some people cook sinigang with guavas, some with kamias. It
is a dish whose recipe would depend mostly on the taste of those who will do the
eating.”
I got a fork and went to the stove where the meat was simmering. I prodded
the chunks to test whether they were tender enough—and they were. After pouring
in some more of the rice washing, I cleared the table and waited for the stew to boil.
A few minutes later, the sound of rapidly popping bubbles declared that it
was now time to add the powdered tamarind mix. I poured in the whole packet and
stirred. Then I took the vegetables and added them, a fistful at a time, to the pot.
As I did so, I remembered the flower petals each of my two sisters and I had
thrown, fistful by fistful, into the freshly dug grave as Lem’s casket was being
lowered into it.
My dad was crying beside me and I recalled thinking, would he be the same
if I was the one who had died? I glanced up at him and was surprised to find that
he was looking at me. His hand, heavy with sadness, fell on my shoulder.
“I’m sorry,” he had told me.
I let the stew boil for a few more minutes before turning off the fire.
The sinigang would be served later during dinner. I pictured myself seated in
my usual place beside my father who is at the head of the table. He would tell Mom
about his day and then he would ask each of us about our own. I would answer,
not in the animated way I would have done when I was still young and his pet, but
politely and without any rancor.
Then, he would compliment me on the way I had cooked his favorite dish
and I would give him a smile that would never quite show, not even in my eyes.
DIRECTIONS: Study the following questions carefully and write your answers
on a separate sheet of paper.
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What is It
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5. Theme- This is the central idea in a short story and a general truth. This is
considered as the author’s message to the readers.
6. Point of View – This is the way the story is told or narrated. It is also known as
the vantage point that a writer uses to narrate the story. The following are the types
of point of view in a short story:
a. First Person – the narrator participates in and tells the story using the
pronoun ‘I’.
b. Limited Third Person – the narrator is not in the story and narrates
using the pronouns ‘she’ or ‘he’. Also, the narrator is unable to see into the minds
of the characters.
c. Omniscient Third Person – the narrator is not in the story and tells the
story using the pronouns ‘she’ or ‘he’. In this point of view, the narrator can tell the
thoughts of the characters as he can see into their minds.
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What’s More
The elements of a short story are the characters, setting, plot, conflict, theme, and
point of view. The plot structure is composed owaf the following: exposition, rising
action,climax, falling action and resolution.
A. DIRECTIONS: Identify the six (6) elements from the short story Sinigang.
1. Setting : _______________________________________________________
2. Characters : _______________________________________________________
3. Plot : _______________________________________________________
4. Conflict : _______________________________________________________
5. Theme : _______________________________________________________
B. DIRECTIONS: In this activity, you have to identify the plot structure of the story
“Sinigang”. Write A for exposition; B for rising action; C for climax; D for falling
action; and E for resolution. Write your answers on a separate sheet of paper.
2. The woman looked to me like she was in her forties—the same age as my
mother.
4. I finally turned to him. There was only one question I needed to ask. “Why?”
6. All my muscles tensed upon hearing her name. It took all my self-control to
outwardly remain calm and simply raise an eyebrow.
7. When my Dad had come out of the room, I remembered sensing it immediately—
the same way an animal instinctively perceives when it is in danger.
8. When her weeping had subsided, she raised her head and looked at me.
“Everyone makes mistakes, Liza.” Her eyes begged for understanding.
9. I continued to pick out tomatoes for the sinigang we were to have for dinner. I
wasn’t usually the one who assisted my aunt with the cooking.
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What I Can Do
Activity 2: Blog
Directions: Create a blog on moral values that you got from the short story
"Sinigang" and its impact to you as a 21st century learner. Share it to the world by
posting your blog in WordPress. Let your classmate or friend evaluate your work
using the rubric below.
Tick the box of the score given. Be guided of the score and its description.
Score Description
5 Excellent
4 Very Good
2 Good
2 Fair
1 Poor
No. CRITERIA 5 4 3 2 1
1. Uses audio/visual aids or media to
clarify information.
2. Presents relevant content based on the
theme of the story.
3. Shows considerable originality and
inventiveness.
4. Presents the ideas in a unique and
interesting way.
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Assessment
DIRECTIONS: Choose the letter of the correct answer. Write the chosen letter
on a separate sheet of paper.
4. What point of view was used by the author in telling the story?
a. Third Person c. First Person
b. Omniscient Third Person d. Limited Third Person
9. What do you call the series of events when things begin to happen in the
story?
a. Rising Action c. Exposition
b. Theme d. Climax
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12. What element creates the tone and presents the characters and other
important facts to introduce the story?
a. Setting c. Exposition
b. Theme d. Climax
14. Based on the text, what does the word “Sinverguenza” mean?
a. a person who is shameless c. a person who is calm
b. a person who is sinful d. a person who is reckless
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Additional Activities
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Answer Key
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References
Lacia, Ferdilyn C., Lydia L. Libunao, Mark G. Fabella and Vivian I. Buhain. The
Literatures of the Philippines. Quezon City Metro Manila: Rex Book Store,
Inc.: 2016.
Marcos, Lucivilla,Wilfredo Bantados and Suzette Valdez. Introduction to Literature
with Special Glimpse of Philippine Literature. City of Manila, Metro Manila:
Purely Books Trading & Publishing Corp., 2012.
The Best Philippine Short Stories. “Sinigang by Marie Aubrey J. Villaceran.” Last
modified September 2015.
https://www.sushidog.com/bpss/stories/sinigang.htm
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