Plant Mom has a way, summary of text content

Text introduction:

"Plant Mother Has a Solution" is from the first volume of the second-grade Chinese textbook (including the 2017 edition) of the People's Education Press. This article uses anthropomorphic techniques to vividly express scientific knowledge in the form of rhymes. The language is catchy, and it is a popular science work that you will never tire of reading.

Text content:

If the child has grown up,

you have to say goodbye to your mother and live all over the world.

Cows and horses have legs, and birds have wings.

How do plants travel?

Mother Dandelion prepared a parachute,

Give it to your doll.

As long as the wind blows gently,

the children will ride on the wind and set off one after another.

Xanthium’s mother has a good idea.

She puts on spiked armor for her children.

As long as they hang the animal fur,

children can go to fields and valleys.

Mama Pea had a better idea.

She let the pods dry in the sun.

With a pop, the pods exploded.

The children jumped away from their mother.

Plant mothers have many ways to do it.

If you don’t believe me, just observe carefully.

There is a lot of knowledge there, but careless children cannot get it.

Text Appreciation

This lesson combines natural knowledge into poems full of children's interest and rich rhythm, which are easy to understand and catchy. This article vividly introduces the methods of seed dispersal of dandelions, cockleburs and peas. When students read the text, they should carefully understand the rhythm and beauty of the text, so that they can understand the knowledge the text tells us.

Text objectives

This article aims to cultivate students’ good habits of paying attention to the things around them, stimulate students’ interest in understanding plant knowledge and exploring the mysteries of nature, and enable students to learn to love life and the world. nature.

Analysis of Text Goal Development

This article is a text that I learned when I was a child. Now that I am about to enter my forties, when I learned it, I only knew that it was a popular science text. Now more than 20 years have passed, and I have discovered its profound meaning.

The first sentence of the text, "If the child has grown up, he must say goodbye to his mother and is at home all over the world." The opening question tells us why plants leave their mothers. The answer is: we have grown up. In real life, many of us have grown up but still rely on our parents and are old people. Are we worse than plants? Therefore, I think the profound meaning of this article is: if we have grown up, we must be able to be self-reliant and self-reliant.