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    DRAWING

    CONCLUSIONS

    RIP

    VAN

    WINKLE

    Mary Ellen Page

    2000

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    Rip Van Winkle

    There are a variety of activities that you can do with the story ofRip Van Winkle

    Practice with new vocabulary

    Word definition

    Figuring meaning through context

    Old shack, keg of wine on his back, accusingly

    Discuss story and its implications

    Have students find 18 irregular verbs in the past tense (Reward those who find all of them in ten

    minutes)

    became heard was saw thought were

    had told awoke took found went

    began got hit lay wore said

    Work on any other grammar points that you feel need to be covered

    Relate story to others of this type

    Cultural aspects of the story

    American Revolution, period, events, the Dutch playing ninepins, Washington Irving, map work

    (Catskill Mts.), Dutch in New Amsterdam, clothing of the period, clothing 20 yrs. later,

    architecture,

    TYPES OF TESTING

    usual written tests of TRUE-FALSE,

    multiple choice,

    matching, essay

    oral summary

    reenactment, dramatization

    using new vocabulary in context, create sentences

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    Skim Reading Techniques

    Find a short story or create your own and give students individual copies. One that is quite good

    is Washington Irving's Rip Van Winkle. Check this out at the following website:

    http://www.2020site.org/robbinhood/rip.html This version is a poem with pictures. The short story

    version is at http://www2.lhric.org/pst/shms/Rvw.htm . The pictures are quite good in both of them.

    However, you may want a simplified American English version. Check my version below. It is also

    good for cultural material and discussion. Show students how to increase their reading speed. Allow

    them to begin to read the story, and after about 1 minutes, tell them to stop. Ask them to indicate the

    point at which they stopped. Then show them how to improve their reading speed by moving down the

    page with their hand, a ruler, or a pencil as a guide. Have them set a pace of movement and force their

    eyes to move as fast. Now ask them to begin reading again, only this time using their hands or the object

    to force their eyes to move faster. Again allow them the same amount of time and ask them to stop.

    Everyone should have read more the second time.

    After everyone has finished the whole story and you have explained all the new vocabulary, teach

    them how to "skim" (read quickly for the highlights) to find the answers to questions you have already

    prepared. Ask the questions orally and have them find and write the answers. This can be a graded or

    non-graded exercise. Get students to focus on the six journalistic questions for finding information: who,

    what, why, when,where,and how. You may also create a game out of the final assignment for this

    activity by asking them to see who can find all of the irregular past tense verbs, or a series of antonyms,

    or anything that you would like to test. By doing a number of skim reading activities in class, you can

    enable your students to read faster and learn how to find material more quickly.

    http://www.2020site.org/robbinhood/rip.htmlhttp://www2.lhric.org/pst/shms/Rvw.htmhttp://www2.lhric.org/pst/shms/Rvw.htmhttp://www.2020site.org/robbinhood/rip.htmlhttp://www2.lhric.org/pst/shms/Rvw.htm