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ENG301A-PEP-CN Primary

【人教版】小学英语 三年级 上册

本课程是为人教版小学英语三年级上册(一年级起点)配套设计的教学体系。涵盖了自我介绍、身体部位、食物、宠物、衣服及生日等六大主题单元,旨在通过听说读写多模态互动,培养学生的语言感知能力、沟通技巧以及对英语学习的兴趣,并初步引入自然拼读法(Natural Phonics)。

4.8
15h
617 students
0 likes
K12 Language

Course Overview

📚 Content Summary

This course is a teaching system designed to complement the PEP (People's Education Press) Primary English Grade 3, Volume 1 (Starting from Grade 1). It covers six major thematic units: self-introductions, body parts, food, pets, clothes, and birthdays. It aims to cultivate students' language perception, communication skills, and interest in English learning through multi-modal interaction in listening, speaking, reading, and writing, while also introducing Natural Phonics.

Embark on a new starting point for English learning and enjoy listening, speaking, reading, and writing in fun scenarios.

Author: 人民教育出版社 课程教材研究所 英语课程教材研究开发中心, (加拿大) 灵通教育有限公司

Acknowledgments: 本书经教育部2013年审定。版权归人民教育出版社与Lingo Learning Inc.共同所有。

🎯 Learning Objectives

  1. Identify and use core greeting patterns to exchange names, ages, and class information.
  2. Extract information from short texts (like letters and ID cards) to complete profile templates.
  3. Recognize and produce short vowel sounds (specifically /æ/, /e/, /ɒ/, /ʌ/) within CVC word patterns.
  4. Identify and Name: Students will accurately label human body parts (head, arm, leg, foot/feet) and animal-specific parts (tail, paw, wing).
  5. Express Physical States: Students will use the phrase "What's the matter?" and respond with "My [body part] hurts" to describe ailments.
  6. Phonics Mastery: Students will recognize, blend, and read words containing the short /e/ sound (e.g., jet, bed, red).
  7. Identify and describe personal health status and physical ailments using the structure "My [body part] hurts."
  8. Recognize and spell CVC (Consonant-Vowel-Consonant) words focusing on short /æ/, /e/, and /ɪ/ sounds.
  9. Extract specific details (age, ailment) from a targeted reading passage about Jane.
  10. Identify and correctly use the names of the twelve months and significant holidays.

🔹 Lesson 1: All About Me: Greetings and Profiles

Overview: This lesson focuses on foundational social interactions and self-identification for third-grade students. It transitions from oral greetings and chants to reading and writing personal profiles, including name, age, and class details. Students also explore English phonics (short vowel CVC patterns) and cultural nuances regarding naming conventions in China versus English-speaking countries.

Learning Outcomes:

  • Identify and use core greeting patterns to exchange names, ages, and class information.
  • Extract information from short texts (like letters and ID cards) to complete profile templates.
  • Recognize and produce short vowel sounds (specifically /æ/, /e/, /ɒ/, /ʌ/) within CVC word patterns.

🔹 Lesson 2: Exploring My Body: Parts and Phonics

Overview: This lesson guides Grade 3 students through identifying human and animal body parts, expressing physical discomfort using specific sentence patterns, and mastering the short /e/ phonics sound. Students will move from simple labeling to identifying body parts within a narrative context, specifically through the "A Bad Day" story and the "Blind Men and the Elephant" fable.

Learning Outcomes:

  • Identify and Name: Students will accurately label human body parts (head, arm, leg, foot/feet) and animal-specific parts (tail, paw, wing).
  • Express Physical States: Students will use the phrase "What's the matter?" and respond with "My [body part] hurts" to describe ailments.
  • Phonics Mastery: Students will recognize, blend, and read words containing the short /e/ sound (e.g., jet, bed, red).

🔹 Lesson 3: Review 1: Healthy Habits and Word Books

Overview: This review lesson consolidates students' ability to describe physical health conditions, masters phonics patterns for short vowels (a, e, i), and applies reading comprehension skills to a narrative context. The lesson culminates in a creative project where students synthesize their learning by constructing a personalized word book.

Learning Outcomes:

  • Identify and describe personal health status and physical ailments using the structure "My [body part] hurts."
  • Recognize and spell CVC (Consonant-Vowel-Consonant) words focusing on short /æ/, /e/, and /ɪ/ sounds.
  • Extract specific details (age, ailment) from a targeted reading passage about Jane.

🔹 Lesson 4: Celebrating Birthdays: Months and Invitations

Overview: This lesson guides students through the transition from story-based character descriptions to the functional use of English for celebrating birthdays. Students will master the twelve months of the year, learn to inquire about and state birthday dates, and develop the literacy skills required to read and write party invitations. Additionally, the lesson reinforces foundational phonics by focusing on short vowel sounds (a, e, i, o, u).

Learning Outcomes:

  • Identify and correctly use the names of the twelve months and significant holidays.
  • Ask and answer questions about birthdays using "When is your birthday?" and "It's in [Month]."
  • Extract specific information (time, place, activities) from an invitation and draft a simple personal invitation.

🔹 Lesson 5: Review 2: Phonics Mastery and Animal Parties

Overview: This lesson serves as a comprehensive consolidation of phonics patterns (CVC words), animal descriptions, and birthday-themed social interactions. Students will review physical descriptions and months through the "Monkey’s Birthday" and "Animal Party" contexts, while mastering the spelling of word families ending in -ot, -ox, -un, -ut, and -at. The unit concludes with a narrative story about choosing the perfect pet, emphasizing the use of "too + adjective."

Learning Outcomes:

  • Identify and describe animals using months, colors, and physical traits (e.g., "It has a big tail. Its birthday is in June.").
  • Decode and spell CVC words belonging to the -ot, -ox, -un, -ut, and -at phonics families.
  • Express preferences and suitability using the "too + adjective" structure (e.g., "No, it's too big!") in a birthday gift context.