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This series of worksheets will help students learn to identify and respect the mood and tone of a body of work.
Circle the letter of the word that most clearly expresses the tone in each passage. If you are unfamiliar with any of the words, look them up before you select the correct answer. Often you feel you’ve done nothing when you’ve actually done a lot.
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Here are some worksheets and resources to give students practice with identifying tone. Each worksheet has four poems. The speaker in each poem expresses a certain tone. Students must read the poems, determine the speakers' tones, and explain their answer using text.
Every text has a tone. You just need to know what clues to look for to find it. In this lesson, students will learn what tone is, how it's different from mood and how to analyze a text's word choice and word connotations to infer the author's or speaker's tone.
Free lesson plans and resources to help you teach your students to identify and define tone. Students will be able to analyze different types of texts to identify tone, write tone statements, and discuss shifts in tone.
The style of a written work is the way in which it is presented to the reader. An author's style should be consistent with their goals and purpose for writing the piece. The style should remain consistent throughout the work. The tone of a piece is the overall attitude of a piece.
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Tone: Connotation, Diction, Figurative Language, Imagery, Irony, and Theme What Should I Learn In This Lesson? I can explain the relationship of tone, connotation, and diction in a text. (RL/RI 4). I can choose an appropriate tone word for a passage and support it with individual diction choices. (Rl/RI4)