Excellent Teaching Plan Design of Whispering-Meteorite

First, the content analysis of teaching materials

This is a poem describing meteorite knowledge, which is fluent in language and easy to understand. Through various forms of reading in teaching, students can understand the wonders of meteorites and stimulate their interest in exploring natural mysteries.

Second, the teaching objectives

1. Through learning, students can understand the content of the text, learn about meteorites in whispers, cultivate their ability to collect information, and stimulate their interest in exploring natural mysteries.

2. Learn new words, understand key words, accumulate words and use them flexibly.

3. Read the text correctly, fluently and emotionally. And feel the beauty of poetry in reading.

Third, the focus of teaching

1, read the text, learn about whispering meteorites, and stimulate students' interest in exploring natural mysteries.

2. Read the text correctly, fluently and emotionally. Feel the beauty of poetry in reading.

Fourth, the teaching content and process

(1) Have a heart-to-heart talk? Stone? Stimulate interest and introduce new lessons.

1, talk? Stone? lead into/introduce

Students, this is a? Stone? Word, who can put a little magic on the glyph, add a part to its top, bottom, left and right to make it a new word? (Students speak freely) A small one? Stone? Words are so interesting that stones in nature are more interesting.

[Introducing new lessons with games to make students full of interest at the beginning of class]

2, the teacher shows it? A cosmic visitor? Meteorite map

Look, class, this is a stone. Look carefully. What did you find? Students talk about their findings: this is a huge stone with four striking characters written on it? A cosmic visitor? Indeed, this is not an ordinary stone. It comes from the vast universe. It is whisper (blackboard writing: whisper) and its name is meteorite (blackboard writing: meteorite).

[Teacher shows? A cosmic visitor? Meteorite map, boulder, eye-catching A cosmic visitor? Four Chinese characters have brought great impact on students' vision, stimulated their curiosity and enhanced their desire to explore. ]

(2) Show information and learn about meteorites.

1. What do you know about meteorites? Students show the collected materials.

2. Teacher's presentation materials: The teacher also collected some materials (display: meteor shower). 1On March 8th, 976, a strange rain fell in Jilin Province, China. It is not raindrops that fall from the sky, but big stones. The scene is spectacular. This is a meteor shower. There are more than 100 stones falling from this meteor shower, and the largest one weighs 1770 kg. Meteorites come in different shapes and sizes, some like rice grains and some like turtle shells.

Through the display of materials, students' ability to collect information is cultivated, so that students can have a preliminary understanding of meteorites and pave the way for learning poetry. Because rural students are limited by conditions, the information collected is always limited, so it is very necessary for teachers to supplement some information. ]

(3) Self-reading poetry and overall perception.

1. There is a poem about meteorites in our textbook. do you want to see it ?

2. Students mark unfamiliar words when reading and solve them independently by literacy. Teachers guide students to identify key words.

3. Students read poems repeatedly. Requirements: tell everyone what you have gained after reading it.

Students report their reading gains, and the teacher comments on the report.

[By reading poems by themselves, students have an overall perception of poetry]

(4) Read it again and understand the content.

1, cooperative reading at the same table, requiring one person to read a section and comment on each other after reading.

2, deskmate cooperative reading display, collective evaluation.

3. Teachers demonstrate reading.

4. Students evaluate the teacher's reading.

5. Students read by themselves: Pay attention to the pronunciation of the last word after each sentence.

6. Named reading and collective evaluation.

7. Communicate what you read collectively.

(Note after teaching: I know that meteorites are stones and stars, and meteorites are produced by friction with the atmosphere. I found that the words in each stanza of this poem read smoothly, and the more you read it, the more you can read the charm. )

Pay attention to reading, read in various forms, read at the same table, read by teachers, read by themselves, and read by name, so that students can understand the content, feel the beauty of poetry and feel the wonder of meteorites. ]

8. Students ask: Is there anything you don't understand? Answer after group discussion.

[Once students' desire to explore is stimulated, their potential is unlimited]

(5) Extend and sublimate feelings.

1, imagine: If you were a meteorite and you came to this world from the distant horizon, what would you like to say to everyone?

Let students summarize in a fairy tale way, which not only stimulates students' interest in learning, mobilizes students' enthusiasm for learning, but also cultivates students' ability to integrate information. ]

2. Talk about your wish (show the meteorite map) and whisper in the face? Meteorite, what do you want to say to it?

Realize the dialogue between students and the text, and let the emotions be sublimated. ]

3. Play the theme song of "Blue Cat Naughty 3,000 Questions".

The teacher concluded: Yes, as long as we love talking, asking questions and thinking, everything in the world will be clear. Let's continue to explore the infinite mystery of nature with a big question mark in our hearts!