Lesson 8 teaching slides
This deck contains all the slides you need to teach both the language and culture parts of Mega Greek Lesson 8. In addition, comprehensive teacher notes and a lesson plan guide you through the teaching.
Lesson 8 teaching slides
Lesson 8 student worksheets
All the worksheets your students need for both the language and culture parts of Mega Greek Lesson 8.
Lesson 8 student worksheets
What’s coming next
Text about the rest of the course that is coming up
Let Zeus, king of the Olympian gods and goddesses, show you how English speakers still use Ancient Greek words today. Then let him take you on a tour of his fellow gods and goddesses, with a quiz about their powers and a match-up game to make.
Goddess of wisdom Athena will take you through lesson 2, which looks at science. After working on our Greek alphabet skills and looking at some Englisg science words with Greek roots, we’ll investigate the ancient science of astronomy and star maps.
The (slightly crazy) mathematician Pythagoras is your guide for lesson 3, where we’ll look at some maths root words, work some more on writing the Greek alphabet. After that, we’ll explore one of Pythagoras’ greatest interests, triangles with a snip-along class experiment.
Greek art and architecture continues to be highly influential in modern times, as the craftsman god Hephaistus shows us in lesson 4. We also get the chance to be artists ourselves and create a clay acroterion.
Nike is the Greek goddess of victory (and, yes, where the shoes get their name). In this lesson’s language focus, we look at present tense verbs. With Nike as our guide, we then move on to explore the original Olympics.
Our guide for this lesson is Persephone, goddess of nature and reluctant queen of the Underworld. After looking at singular nouns in the language part of the lesson, we then go on to explore the myth of Persephone and the role of nature myths.
The epic poet Homer takes us on a tour of the various forms of entertainment enjoyed by the Ancient Greeks, and we end up in the theatre (Greek root word!) making masks. In the language learning, we put nouns and verbs together to make sentences.
Wife of Zeus and queen of the gods, Hera introduces us to some aspects of home life – specifically food. After the language work (translating sentences), there’s a quiz about Greek food plus an optional tasting and recipe to make.
The final lesson in the Mega Greek course gets philosophical, with Plato telling the tale of Gyges and leading an ethical debate. In language work, we learn how to turn Greek sentences negative.