Greek Myths: Supplemental Guide 10B | Atalanta and the Golden Apples 205
- Do you know someone who is skilled at something, such as
a certain kind of music, art, or sports? Try to use the word
skilled when you tell about him or her. [Ask two or three
students. If necessary, guide and/or rephrase the students’
responses: “I know someone who is skilled at .”] - What’s the word we’ve been talking about?
Use a Sharing activity for follow-up. Directions: Would you like to
be skilled at something one day? Tell your partner what you would
like to be skilled at. Then discuss with your partner what you can
do to become skilled at it. [Call on a few volunteers to share. This
may be a good opportunity to review the saying students learned
in The Ancient Greek Civilization domain, “Where there’s a will,
there’s a way” and the popular saying, “Practice makes perfect.”]
Greek Myths Journal (Instructional Master 10B-2) 15 minutes
- Tell students that this will be the last page in their journal and
that page nine of their journal will be about the Greek myth
“Atalanta and the Golden Apples.” - Show students Instructional Master 10B-2. Have students
describe what they see in the illustration. Have students share
about the characters in this myth. - Read the title line together “Atalanta and the Golden Apples.”
Then have students write two or three sentences about this
myth. - Students may draw a picture about their sentences on the back
of the page. - Allow time for students to share their journal entries with a
partner or with their home-language peers.
[If you have collected students’ previous journal entries, return
them and help students staple all of their journal entries together.
Tell students that they can now take their journals home and share
with their parents, caretakers, or guardians all that they have
learned about Greek myths.]