Lesson Plan For Types of PIC-LITS: Simile & Metaphors Level 1
OBJECTIVE:
Writing similes and / or metaphors is a great way to interact creatively with the photographs on piclits.com. We hope to better understand the object being compared by comparing it to something else.
Definitions of Metaphor and Simile:
A simile is an explicit comparison between two unlike things which uses “like,” “as,” “seems,” or “resembles” to make the comparison.
For example, there is a simile in Richard Wilbur’s poem “Mind” in which the mind is compared to a bat.
He writes, “Mind in its purest play is like a bat /That beats about in caverns all alone.”
The mind that is playing, creating, imagining is like a bat that uses its sonar to navigate unknown territory.
A metaphor is a figure of speech in which a comparison is made between two unlike things. For example, in Robert Frost’s “Nothing Gold Can Stay”-a poem about the positive and negative qualities of nature’s short-lived beauty- he develops a metaphor.
The first line is “Nature’s first green is gold.” (line 1).
In essence, the reader is presented with a metaphor that green is gold. Green is obviously not gold, but it works because it is not saying the green is the color gold or a gold stone; it is saying that the bright green of early spring is precious.
So, we will select an amazing photo, think creatively, and generate either a simile or a metaphor in the DRAG-N-DROP mode on piclits.com.
MODEL PIC-LIT SIMILE:
MODEL PIC-LIT METAPHOR:
GUIDED PRACTICE WRITING PROMPT:
- Go to piclits.com
- Sign in with your e-mail and password
- Select a picture from the gallery of pictures
- In DRAG-N-DROP mode, write a simile or metaphor to enhance the viewer’s understanding of the object being compared. (There are the words “like” and “as” in the Universal words list.)