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最新讲座的海报、录像和PPT


第五册第四课【凡事感恩】教学安排、家庭作业


本课的计划
课文生字:凡、罗、哲、伟、漠、迷、免、肺、规、律、脑、披、裙、增、保、护
阅读材料生字:曾、翁、鸭、段、塘、藏



第一周
本周的计划
生字:凡、罗、哲、伟、漠、迷、免、肺、规、律、脑
课文:学习前半部分

第一堂课 第二堂课 家庭作业
课前活动
介绍Marcus Cicero

播放《Dogs that say grace before eating - Dog Training》声音。

词汇列表
学课文前,先学词汇列表里前半部分的生字、生词。

讲解课文
金句,课文第一、二段


课前活动
播放心脏跳动的声音。

讲解课文
第三段

课堂测验
词汇、课文朗读

上网听读课文。
第一周家庭作业


第二周
本周的计划
生字:限、科、竞、线、纬、卷
课文:学习后半部分

第一堂课 第二堂课 家庭作业
课前活动
播放《袋鼠LuLu》的视频。

词汇列表
学词汇列表里后半部分的生字、生词。

讲解课文
课文第四至五段

课前活动
讲故事:失与得。

讲解课文
课文剩余部分

课堂活动
  • 感恩节的由来,感恩节有哪些活动?

  • 说说感恩的故事。

  • 看图说话(需要login)


上网听读课文。
第二周家庭作业


第三周
本周的计划
复习课文
详解单词和词组
华夏文化巡礼──孝道

第一堂课 第二堂课 家庭作业
课前活动
播放《Christian The Lion - Reunited - From "The View"》的视频。

详解单词和词组
凡事、凡是、不仅……而且……、为了、是否、因此、如果……就……

课堂活动
在黑(白)板上背诵默写:“人家帮我,永远不忘;我帮人家,不记心上。”

bingo游戏(需要login)
需要事先打印该课的bingo卡。

课前活动
播放《孝顺》的视频。

文化巡礼
孝道。

课堂活动
  • 中心思想提示:不感恩是人的本性,像田地里的杂草,自然就会生长。感恩像花朵,需要栽种、施肥、浇灌、精心培育。孩子若没有感恩的心,多半是因为教育的缺失。 做父母的若希望子女对自己的付出和疼爱,心存感谢的话,首先我们要有感恩的心,其次要教育他们对他人的帮助、给与和关心感恩。

    感恩是一条找到快乐甜美的捷径,是你幸福的泉源,是你后裔兴旺的保证。

  • 批改作业,纠正错误,肯定成绩。

  • 讲解“课外阅读” (需要login)

第三周家庭作业


第四周
本周的计划
生字:曾、翁、鸭、段、塘、藏
课文:学习阅读材料【鼓掌】

第一堂课 第二堂课 家庭作业
课前活动
讲故事:Celebrating My Scars

朗读课文

Quizlet游戏(需要login)


课前活动
幽默与笑话(图片在下面)

朗读课文

课堂讨论
你能感谢责备你的人吗?因为他发现了你的缺点。
听写生字:曾、鸭、段。

第四周家庭作业 预习新课文的词汇列表。


第一周第一堂课课前活动:介绍 Marcus Cicero
Marcus Cicero (106 BC –– 43 BC) was a Roman philosopher, statesman,
lawyer, orator, political theorist, Roman consul and constitutionalist.

Quotes by Marcus Cicero
Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all others.
A room without books is like a body without a soul.






第一周第二堂课课前活动:心脏的跳动声音

心脏的跳动声音
from: www.soundjay.com/heartbeat-sound-effect.html
Just listen, No download!








更快




第二周第一堂课课前活动:袋鼠LULU



The Story of LULU



第二周第二堂课课前活动

失与得

  据说楚王打猎时丢失一张弓,手下的人准备去找回来,但他说:“不必了,楚王失了弓,楚国人会拾得,何必去找呢?” 后来孔子听说此事后,认为楚王的心胸不够宽广。他认为不必提楚王、楚国人,建议改成“有人失弓,有人得弓。” 老子听了以后,建议把“人”去掉,这样就变成了“失弓,得弓。”反正,弓存在于天地之间,就无所谓失与得了。



第三周第一堂课课前活动:Christian The Lion



第三周第二堂课课前活动:孝顺



第四周第一堂课课前活动:Celebrating My Scars

  Po Bronson, in his book Why Do I Love These People? (Random House, 2005), tells a true story about a scarred and stately elm tree. The tree was planted in the first half of the 20th Century on a farm near Beulah, Michigan (USA). It grew to be magnificent. Today the elm spans some 60 feet across its lush, green crown. Its trunk measures about 12 feet in circumference. And a vivid scar encircles the tree.

In the 1950s the family that owned the farm kept a bull chained to the elm. The bull paced round and round the tree. The heavy iron chain scraped a trench in the bark about three feet off the ground. The trench deepened over the years threatening to kill the tree. But though damaged so severely, the tree strangely did not die.

After some years the family sold the farm and took their bull. They cut the chain, leaving the loop embedded in the trunk and one link hanging down. The elm continued to grow and bark slowly covered parts of the rusting chain that strangled it. The deep gash around the trunk became an ugly scar.

Then one year agricultural catastrophe struck Michigan -- in the form of Dutch Elm Disease. A path of death spread across vast areas of countryside. Most elm trees in the vicinity of the farm became infected and died. But that one noble elm remained untouched.

Amazingly, it had survived two hardships. It was not killed by the bull's chain years earlier, and this time it out-lasted the deadly fungus. Year after year it thrived. Nobody could understand why it was still standing in a vast area where most every other elm tree was gone.

Plant pathologists from Michigan State University came out to study the tree. They looked closely at the chain necklace buried deep in the scar. These experts reported that the chain itself actually saved the elm's life. They reasoned that the tree absorbed so much iron from the chain left to rust around its trunk that it became immune to the fungus. What certainly could have killed the tree actually made it stronger and more resilient.

As Ernest Hemingway said, “The world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong at the broken places.” The same chain that severely wounded the tree saved its life in the end.

from http://stevegoodier.blogspot.com/2013/10/celebrating-my-scars.html




第四周第二堂课课前活动
笑话与幽默





以下不是笑话与幽默,是FYI
The First Thanksgiving at Plymouth, 1914 by Jennie Augusta Brownscombe





Amazing Grace: The History of the Slave Scale



牵手




站着一只脚睡觉的鸭子



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