Word Choices Matter
Overview
Subject: English
Year Group: Year 4 (KS2)
Lesson Duration: 45 minutes
Class Size: 30 pupils
Curriculum Focus: National Curriculum for English – Reading Comprehension (Years 3 and 4)
Curriculum Objective:
"Discuss words and phrases that capture the reader’s interest and imagination."
(Programme of Study for Reading – comprehension Y3/Y4)
Content Domains:
- 2g: Identify / explain how meaning is enhanced through choice of words and phrases
- 2d: Make inferences from the text / explain and justify inferences with evidence from the text
Learning Outcome
By the end of this lesson, pupils will be able to:
- Identify specific vocabulary choices within a poem
- Explain how word choices enhance the meaning and support the reader’s understanding
- Make simple inferences and back up ideas with evidence from the text
Success Criteria
- ✅ I can find and copy words that give clues about meanings
- ✅ I can explain how a word or phrase shows what the snails are doing or feeling
- ✅ I can give evidence from the poem to answer a question
- ✅ I can work with a partner to check for understanding
- ✅ I can say why a word or phrase is effective or interesting
Anchor Questions (Displayed During Session)
A (Core Model Question):
Which words suggest that the snails have damaged the artwork?
B:
The poet uses phrases like ‘gather in the centre’ and ‘huddled together’. What does this tell us about these snails?
Key Vocabulary Teaching
Focus Vocabulary (to be taught in context through the poem):
- evidencing
- digested
- devoured
- rearranged
- huddled
- graffitied
- centre (Year 3&4 spelling list word)
Word Strategies:
- Clap syllables
- Define in context
- Word families (e.g. devour ➝ devoured, devouring)
- Semantic fields (all destructive/creative verbs used by the poet)
Text for Lesson (to be enlarged/displayed)
In a sea of poster paint
they gather in the centre,
their trails evidencing their route.
From at the tank I left open,
multi-coloured in the pile of artworks
where Mr Bishop discovered them.
Their wet mouths have devoured the edges,
digested holes in mini Pollocks,
chewed over the next Rothko,
re-arranged a Picasso.
Full and satisfied they retract.
A herd huddled in Year 4’s work.
Silver slime trails webbing the brush strokes.
Every painting graffitied in the course of a night.
Signed by a snail.
Teaching Sequence (45 minutes)
🟡 Step 1: READ (12 minutes)
Activate Prior Knowledge:
- Show images of snails on the board:
- Ask: "What do you know about snails?" — Mind map as a class.
- Discuss their texture, movement, trails and food habits — link to art materials and real classroom setting.
Introduce Vocabulary:
- Use context clues and class discussion to understand:
- evidencing, devoured, digested, rearranged, huddled, graffitied, centre
- Attention to centre — link to correct spelling and meaning (central point in a classroom/art).
Teacher Read Aloud (Free Verse Poem):
- Model fluent reading with small pauses for punctuation.
- Note rhythm and emotional tone — not humorous but mischievous.
Choral Reading (Fluency):
A herd huddled in Year 4’s work.
Silver slime trails webbing the brush strokes.
- Discuss punctuation = pause
- Model varied tone based on meaning
🟠 Step 2: MODEL (5 minutes)
Model Question A:
Which words suggest that the snails have damaged the artwork?
- Think aloud: “I’m looking for words showing damage.”
- Text mark:
- Circle chewed the edges
- Underline devoured, digested, re-arranged
- Discuss what each word tells us about the damage — destructive, creative, accidental?
Model Strategies:
- Use root word strategy: re-arranged ➝ arrange
- Use phonics: graffitied – breaking into syllables for decoding
- Scan the paragraph for keywords related to damage
Reference Teacher Copy: Text mark on visualiser or displayed text
🔵 Step 3: PRACTISE (8 minutes)
Pair Work Using Teacher-Model Text Extract: (one between two)
- Read the extract again in pairs.
- Refer to Anchor Questions A and B; display these on whiteboard and flipchart.
- Encourage use of highlighters or coloured pencils:
- Circle evidence words/phrases (answering Qs A and B)
- Underline any new or interesting words (e.g. huddled, evidencing)
Support Prompts (For Struggling Learners):
- “Which word shows eating or consuming?”
- “Which words tell us about movement or being close together?”
🟢 Step 4: APPLY (10 minutes)
Independent Evidence Writing (Reading Journals):
Pupils will:
- Answer both Anchor Questions A and B in full sentences.
- Use sentence starters:
- "I think the snail damaged the artwork because the poet says..."
- "The phrase ‘huddled together’ makes me feel that the snails..."
Verbal Reflection:
- Invite 3 children to share answers to each question
- Teacher uses assessment for learning to adjust teaching where needed
- Clarify misunderstandings, praise specific use of evidence
Assessment Opportunities
Formative observation during:
- Pair discussions and fluency practice
- Application task (written responses)
- Use of evidence (checking vocabulary understanding, retrieval, and inference)
Teacher notes whether children:
- Can locate and copy appropriate phrases
- Can link vocabulary choices to meaning
- Use key strategies (scanning, rereading, root words, prior knowledge)
Extra Find and Copy Questions (for scaffolding or early finishers)
- Find and copy one word that shows the snails ate something.
- Find and copy a phrase that tells us where the snails were all together.
- Find and copy one phrase that shows the snails were moving across the page.
- Find and copy one word that suggests something was changed.
Extension Questions (for Greater Depth Learners)
-
What do you think the poet meant by ‘graffitied in the course of a night’?
➝ Encourage interpretation around permanence, hidden art, vandalism vs creation
-
What kind of mood or picture does "silver slime trails webbing the brush strokes" create for the reader?
-
Why do you think the poet chose famous artists like Pollock, Rothko, and Picasso to describe the children’s work?
-
Do you think the poem is serious or humorous? What words or phrases gave you that impression?
Differentiation
Support:
- Word banks provided
- Sentence stems
- Extra visual prompts (snail movement diagrams, laminated key vocabulary cards)
Challenge:
- More inference-based extension questions
- Encourage children to create their own metaphor or line inspired by the poem (e.g. describing another animal visiting the classroom)
Cross-Curricular Links
- Art: Explore artworks by Pollock, Rothko, Picasso – How would snails disrupt their styles?
- Science: Snail habitats and diet – how realistic is the poem?
WOW Teaching Tip ⭐️
👩🎨 Print out some children’s old artwork and have a few ‘graffitied’ by faux snail trails (white paint or silver glitter glue). Present them at the start of the lesson as “found evidence” to generate discussion and curiosity!
This adds a level of engagement and mystery that supports inference and evidence-based learning while delighting the children with a real-world connection to the poem.
Teacher Reflection Prompts
- Were the children able to articulate how vocabulary choices affected meaning?
- Did any children surprise you with their interpretations?
- What misconceptions about poetic language emerged that you can build on in your next session?
End of Lesson Plan