Greek Myths: Supplemental Guide 8 | Other Adventures of Hercules 147
Students will:
Recount information from “Other Adventures of Hercules,” a
Greek myth, and determine the central message of the myth
(RL.2.2)
Describe how Hercules and Atlas respond to challenges in
“Other Adventures of Hercules” (RL.2.3)
Plan, draft, and edit a narrative Greek myth, including a title,
setting, characters, and well-elaborated events of the story
in proper sequence, including details to describe actions,
thoughts, and feelings, using temporal words to signal event
order, and providing a sense of closure (W.2.3)
Recount a personal experience involving “back to the drawing
board” with appropriate facts and relevant, descriptive details,
speaking audibly in coherent sentences (SL.2.4)
Explain the meaning of “back to the drawing board” and use in
appropriate contexts (L.2.6)
Make predictions orally prior to listening to “Other Adventures of
Hercules” and then compare the actual outcomes to predictions
Identify how Hercules feels at the end of the story compared to
how he felt at the beginning of the story
Core Vocabulary
accurate, adj. Correct, without error
Example: “If you don’t study for your spelling quiz, you will not be able
to produce an accurate spelling for all of the words,” the teacher said.
Variation(s): none
guidance, n. The act of helping someone to make a decision
Example: Toby went to his mom for guidance on what to do when he
had a disagreement with his best friend.
Variation(s): none
immeasurable, adj. Impossible to measure; huge
Example: My grandfather always says that his love for me is
immeasurable.
Variation(s): none
reputation, n. What most people think of a person or thing
Example: Meg had a reputation for always doing her best in class.
Variation(s): reputations