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Peter Hart /
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Launguage Arts Lesson Plan:
Brief Description
This lesson plan teaches idioms (figurative language) in a creative, fun way.
Objectives
The learner will identify idioms as groups of words with special meanings that paint a
mental picture for the reader. Remember, an idiom is an expression that cannot be
immediately understood by analyzing its literal meaning
Keywords
The learner will be able to identify figurative language in reading and apply it to his or
her own writing.
Materials
Needed
Idioms written on slips of paper, a container for the written idioms, drawing paper,
markers or crayons
Lesson
Plan
Discuss with students the meanings of familiar idioms. Then arrange the class into four
teams. Ask each team to pick a written idiom from the idiom container and create a picture
representing the literal meaning of the idiom. (For example: If the idiom is "foot
the bill," students might draw a picture of a foot with a dollar bill or a duck's
bill on it.) Then have each team show its picture to the other teams. The team that
identifies the idiom first scores 5 points. The team scoring the most points wins.
Sample Idioms
hit the books
make a beeline
got a tiger by the tail
a frog in the throat
pie in the sky
bat in the belfry
blow his or her stack
hit the nail on the head
go fly a kite
have a green thumb
pull a leg
eager beaver
stick in the mud
have a ball
raining cats and dogs
make a mountain out of a molehill
have something up the sleeve
pull the wool over someone's eyes
walls have ears
lose one's marbles
under the weather
Assessment
After students have played the game, quiz them on their understanding of the meanings and uses of idioms.
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