Hero background

The Three Little Pigs

English (ELA) • Year 2 • 20 • 24 students • Created with AI following Aligned with Common Core State Standards

English (ELA)
2Year 2
20
24 students
10 February 2025

Teaching Instructions

Create ELA lesson plan on the three little pigs book with standards "CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.2.6: Acknowledge differences in the points of view of characters, including by speaking in a different voice for each character when reading dialogue aloud. CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.2.5: Describe the overall structure of a story, including describing how the beginning introduces the story and the ending concludes the action." Include considerations for learner variability and academic language development. Include student actions/learning activities

The Three Little Pigs

Curriculum Area: English Language Arts (ELA)

Grade Level: Year 2 (Second Grade)
Standards:

  • CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.2.6: Acknowledge differences in the points of view of characters, including by speaking in a different voice for each character when reading dialogue aloud.
  • CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.2.5: Describe the overall structure of a story, including how the beginning introduces the story and the ending concludes the action.

Lesson Objective

By the end of this 20-minute lesson, students will:

  • Identify and compare the points of view of different characters in The Three Little Pigs.
  • Use different voices to distinguish characters while reading dialogue.
  • Recognize and describe the beginning, middle, and end structure of the story.

Materials Needed

  • A large picture book copy of The Three Little Pigs
  • Pre-made character masks (or character name cards) for the pigs and the wolf
  • Chart paper and markers
  • Printable story sequencing cards for small-group work
  • A brief script with key story dialogue for student role-play

Lesson Breakdown (20 Minutes)

1. Warm-Up Activity (4 Minutes) – "Expressive Voices"

  • Invite students to think about how different characters in stories might sound.
  • Model using distinct voices for each character (e.g., a high-pitched, nervous voice for Pig #1, a confident voice for Pig #3, and a deep, growling voice for the Wolf).
  • Ask for two volunteers to say “Hello!” in different character voices and encourage the class to guess which character they are mimicking.

2. Read-Aloud & Character Dialogue (6 Minutes)

  • Read a short section of The Three Little Pigs, pausing to model distinguishing character voices.
  • Assign students to play the roles of the pigs or the wolf. While reading, have students take turns reading dialogue in character-specific voices.
  • Ask:
    • “How do you think the wolf feels when he’s trying to blow down the houses?”
    • “What do you notice about how the pigs speak? Are they scared, confident, or something else?”

3. Story Structure Discussion (5 Minutes) – "Build the Story"

  • On a large chart paper, draw three sections: Beginning, Middle, End.
  • Ask:
    • “How does the story start? Who do we meet?” (Guide students to understand the introduction.)
    • “What happens in the middle?” (Discussion of the wolf’s actions.)
    • “What happens at the very end? What changes for the characters?”
  • Distribute printable story sequencing cards and have students work in small groups to arrange them in correct order.

4. Closing Activity (5 Minutes) – "Character Hot Seat"

  • Select one student to sit in the “Hot Seat” as a character (Pig #1, Pig #3, or the Wolf).
  • The class asks the “character” questions (e.g., "Pig #1, why did you build your house out of straw?").
  • Guide students to acknowledge different points of view: “Pig #1 might say this, but what would Pig #3 think?”
  • Wrap up by reinforcing how we can show character differences with voices and how the structure of a story helps us understand what happens.

Learner Variability & Academic Language Supports

  • For English Language Learners (ELLs): Provide visual story maps to support comprehension. Offer key vocabulary (e.g., "straw," "bricks," "huff," "puff") with picture cues.
  • For Students Needing More Support: Allow students to participate by holding up a sequencing card rather than verbally responding. Use sentence starters (e.g., "At the beginning, the pigs...").
  • For Students Ready for Extension: Have them create and voice a new character (e.g., a fourth pig with an unusual house material).

Assessment & Reflection

  • Observation during role-play – Are students changing their voices appropriately?
  • Monitoring discussion responses – Can students describe how the beginning introduces characters and the ending resolves the action?
  • Reviewing sequencing activity – Do students correctly order events in the story?

Teacher Reflection

  • Were students engaged with using different voices?
  • Did students grasp the beginning-middle-end structure?
  • Which students may need a follow-up lesson to reinforce these skills?

This lesson combines performance, discussion, and hands-on activities to make The Three Little Pigs interactive and engaging while meeting key Common Core standards. Students leave with a deeper understanding of character perspectives and story structure in a way that feels fun and exciting! 🚀 👏

Create Your Own AI Lesson Plan

Join thousands of teachers using Kuraplan AI to create personalized lesson plans that align with Aligned with Common Core State Standards in minutes, not hours.

AI-powered lesson creation
Curriculum-aligned content
Ready in minutes

Created with Kuraplan AI

🌟 Trusted by 1000+ Schools

Join educators across United States