Nursery Rhymes and Fables: Supplemental Guide 1A | Roses Are Red 17
RRoses Are Redoses Are Red
1 A
Introducing the Read-Aloud 10 minutes
Introducing Nursery Rhymes
- Tell students that for the next few weeks, they are going to listen to
many nursery rhymes. - Ask students, “Does anyone know what nursery rhymes are?” Call on
a few volunteers to answer. - Have students say nursery rhymes with you three times.
- Explain that nursery rhymes are short poems written for young
children. Nursery rhymes are some of the first poems children learn
by heart. After hearing the same nursery rhymes over and over,
children might be able to memorize them. Nursery rhymes are fun
to listen to and fun to learn. Many nursery rhymes contain rhyming
words, strong rhythm, repeated lines, and silly words. Tell students
that they will hear many enjoyable and fun nursery rhymes and that
they will be able to say at least one nursery rhyme by heart. - Explain that they may also hear these nursery rhymes called “Mother
Goose” rhymes. No one knows whether Mother Goose was a real
person who actually wrote these poems. Tell students that the nursery
rhymes they will hear have been around for hundreds of years and
many English speaking students’ parents and grandparents probably
heard these poems as young children.
Introducing “Roses Are Red”
Show image 1A-1: Red roses and blue violets
- Point to the red roses. Tell students that today’s poems are about
flowers. The title of the first poem is “Roses Are Red”. Mention that
one kind of flower is the rose. - Have students say rose with you three times.
- Point to the blue violets. Mention that another kind of flower is the violet.
- Have students say violet with you three times.