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1

TALKING ABOUT A PICTURE

I

What are the children in the picture doing?

What time of the year do you think it is? Give the reason for your answer.

What is growing in the garden?

This garden was once an old dumping ground near the school.

Tell what you think the children did first.

How did they get their soil ready for planting?

Tell what they had to do all through the spring and

summer.

What do you think the boys and girls will do with their crops?

II

How many of you have ever had a garden? What did you raise?

What advantage is it to you to have a garden? to your family? to the outside world?

Have you ever learned how to can the things you raised?

Tell how you did it.

Why is it a good thing to have gardens?

Write a paragraph about your own garden or about the garden in the picture.

Here are some suggestions that may help you.

1. My lettuce bed.

2. How I made my peas grow.

3. What I like best to raise.

4. Getting ready for planting.

5. Why I decided to have a garden. 6. How I disposed of my vegetables. 7. Why I decided to raise

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Here is a proud young gardener with two fine specimens of eggplant. Perhaps they will take a priz

Where might he exhibit his eggplants?

Who might offer a prize?

Have you ever seen an exhibition of vegetables or fruit?

Where was it?

What kind of prize was given?

Make a story about the boy who won a prize.

Vote for the best story.

3

REVIEWING WORD FORMS

SEE, SAW, HAVE SEEN

Two of you may read aloud the conversation between Jack and his mother, using the correct form of the word see where it is omitted.

I Fred's garden this morning, mother.
Did you, Jack? Then you must have
prize eggplants that I have heard so much about.
Yes, I

them. I have

those

fine ones before, but

such big ones as Fred's.

I have never

And I have never

better tomatoes than those

he brought me the other day.

See and sees show present time.

Saw shows past time.

Seen shows that the action is completed.

Remember that seen must be helped by have, has, or had to show that the action is completed.

Remember also that saw is never helped by any other 'ord.

Make a new conversation, using these words. Read your conversation to the class.

You may think that you know these troublesome little words saw and seen because you can select the right one for the blank. But you do not really know them unless the habit of using them correctly is so firmly fixed that you never send one to do the work of the other.

The class, working together, will make conversations for the word forms that follow. Write the conversa

[blocks in formation]

Two of you may read each of the conversations.

4

TALKING ABOUT A POEM

ROBIN REDBREAST

Good-by, good-by to summer!
For summer's nearly done;
The garden smiling faintly,
Cool breezes in the sun;
Our thrushes now are silent,
Our swallows flown away,-
But Robin's here in coat of brown,
And scarlet breast-knot gay.

Robin, robin redbreast,

O Robin dear!

Robin sings so sweetly

In the falling of the year.

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