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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.
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Tone Worksheet 1 Directions: Read each poem and then answer...
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Here’s another single-sided text structure worksheet with six nonfiction passages. This worksheet is themed around amnesia and memory loss. Students determine the main idea and text structure of each passage and then come up with an appropriate title.
This series of worksheets will help students learn to identify and respect the mood and tone of a body of work.
Here is an animated PowerPoint slideshow teaching students about TONE. It gives students definitions, examples, and helpful tips about how to interpret and describe the speaker's tone. Also, there is a five question practice activity after the lesson. This is a great way to start a unit on tone.
Mood and tone are elements of literature that contribute to the overall atmosphere, emotional impact, and author’s attitude in a literary work. These examples demonstrate how mood and tone in literature contribute to the emotional and atmospheric qualities of a work and shape the reader’s interpretation and experience.
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.
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Mood refers to the audience’s feeling toward the subject of the writing. Authors work hard to create specific tones and moods in their writing, and the job of a careful reader is to “hear” the tone and mood—not just to read the words on the page. Tone and mood are often subtle.