Exploring "The Wind and the Sun": A Fable by Aesop for 3rd Grade Language Arts
In this engaging lesson, 3rd-grade students will read the classic fable "The Wind and the Sun" by Aesop. They will develop critical reading and questioning skills as they answer comprehension questions and summarize the story. Through this activity, students will discover the moral that gentleness can achieve what force cannot. Interactive discussions will encourage them to think about kindness versus force and how to apply these lessons in real life. This lesson supports language arts curriculum while fostering essential analytical skills.
Exploring "The Wind and the Sun": A Fable by Aesop for 3rd Grade Language Arts
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Presentation Transcript
3rd grade, Language Arts The Wind and the Sun Mary Ruebusch McCurdy School Click for Teacher Pages
Teacher Page Objective: The students will practice critical reading and questioning techniques through reading a fable. Activity: The students will read a fable and answer questions. They will write or tell a summary of the story. To advance slides, click the mouse.
Teacher Page Procedure: 1. Read the story to the students. (The teacher may run off a copy of the story for students in advance. The next slide is able to be copied.) 2. Students will answer questions and write a summary of the story.
The Wind and the Suna Fable by Aesop Cape= a coat without arms Finally, they decided to put the matter to a test; they would see which one could make a certain man, who was walking along the road, throw off his cape. The Wind tried first. He blew and he blew and he blew. The harder and colder he blew, the tighter the traveler wrapped his cape about him. The Wind finally gave up and told the Sun to try. Once upon a time when everything could talk, the Wind and the Sun fell into an argument as to which was the stronger. The Sun began to smile and it grew warmer and warmer. The traveler was comfortable once more. The Sun shone brighter and brighter. The man grew so hot, the sweat poured out on his face. He became weary. Seating himself on a stone, he quickly threw his cape to the ground.
The Wind and the Suna Fable by Aesop Once upon a time when everything could talk, the Wind and the Sun fell into an argument as to which was the stronger.
Cape= a coat without arms Finally, they decided to put the matter to a test; they would see which one could make a certain man, who was walking along the road, throw off his cape.
The Wind tried first. He blew and he blew and he blew. The harder and colder he blew, the tighter the traveler wrapped his cape about him. The Wind finally gave up and told the Sun to try.
The Sun began to smile and it grew warmer and warmer. The traveler was comfortable once more. The Sun shone brighter and brighter.
The man grew so hot, the sweat poured out on his face. He became weary. Seating himself on a stone, he quickly threw his cape to the ground.
What is the moral or lesson of this story? Click for the answer. Gentleness had accomplished what force could not.
Can you think of another way to say the moral of this story? Discuss this with a partner.
How does kindness work better than force?Think of some examples. Discuss these ideas with a partner. Write in your journal.
Write in your journal. What two kinds of weather are mentioned in this story?
What did it mean--”The Sun began to smile and it grew warmer and warmer?”
In your own words, retell the story of the Wind and the Sun. The end