大班故事教案

《大班故事教案》属于幼儿园大班教案中比较优秀的内容,欢迎参考。

大班故事教案

第1篇大班故事教案

  教学目标

  1、不管什么时候都不疏远任何人。

  2、听故事知道爱干净是对的。

  教学准备

  1、小兔手偶

  2、《爱干净的小兔白白》故事

  教学过程

  1、老师扮演小兔手偶说话

  我是小兔白白,前几天在我身上发生了一件事,我来跟小伙伴说说吧!(小兔手偶讲故事)

  2、小兔白白前几天为什么不和小鹿、小猴、小羊玩啊

  小兔因为踢球弄得自己身上泥了臭。

  小兔因为躲躲藏藏脏,不卫生。

  3、为什么不愿意帮刺猬婆婆运果子啊

  小兔因为刺猬婆婆又脏又臭。

  4、发生什么事了小兔白白才知道自己之前错了

  小兔掉水泥沟里了,小鹿、小猴、小羊、和刺猬婆婆把它救上来没怕它脏。

  5、小结

  小朋友们爱干净是对的,但不能嫌弃任何人脏,嫌弃别人是不对的还不礼貌。我们不应该学小兔自私怕脏,就不去帮助别人。

第2篇大班故事教案

  【活动目标】

  1、感受家庭和友情的温暖。

  2、能感知理解故事的主要内容。

  【活动准备】故事。

  【活动过程】

  1、观察图片,看看猜猜图中的意思。

  2、教师运用图片有感情地讲故事1-2遍。

  3、用问题帮助幼儿感受和理解故事。

  ――谁迷路了?

  ――小鸭子找不到家,着急不着急?它是怎么说的?一起学一学鸭子讲话。

  ――谁帮助了小鸭子?兔妈妈是怎么帮助小鸭子的?

  ――第二天,兔妈妈帮小鸭找到了家,鸭妈妈是怎么说的`?一起学鸭妈妈讲话。

  附故事《迷路的小鸭》

  冬天的一个晚上,刮大风,下大雪,天气冷极了。一只小鸭找不到家了,他一边走,一边叫:“嘎嘎!我的肚子饿,我的身上冷啊!”

  忽然,他看见一间小房子,这是兔妈妈的家。兔妈妈带着小兔睡觉哩。小鸭敲着门说:“我是小鸭,我找不到家了。让我进来暖和暖和吧!”兔妈妈开门说:“快进来吧!小鸭。”

  兔妈妈给小鸭喝了热粥,还让他睡在暖和的被窝里。

  第二天,兔妈妈帮小鸭找到了家,鸭妈妈说:“兔妈妈,太谢谢您了!”

第3篇大班故事教案

  once upon a time...

  there lived a king who was deeply in love with a princess, but she could not marry anyone, because she was under an enchantment. so the king set out to seek a fairy, and asked what he could do to win the princess"s love. the fairy said to him:"you know that the princess has a great cat which she is very fond of. whoever is clever enough to tread on that cat"s tail is the man she is destined to marry."

  the king said to himself that this would not be very difficult, and he left the fairy, determined to grind the cat"s tail to powder rather than not tread on it at all.

  you may imagine that it was not long before he went to see the princess, and puss, as usual, marched in before him, arching his back. the king took a long step, and quite thought he had the tail under his foot, but the cat turned round so sharply that he only trod on air. and so it went on for eight days, till the king began to think that this fatal tail must be full of quicksilver it was never still for a moment.

  at last, however, he was lucky enough to come upon puss fast asleep and with his tail conveniently spread out. so the king, without losing a moment, set his foot upon it heavily.

  with one terrific yell the cat sprang up and instantly changed into a tall man, who, fixing his angry eyes upon the king, said:

  "you shall marry the princess because you have been able to break the enchantment, but i will have my revenge. you shall have a son, who will never be happy until he finds out that his nose is too long, and if you ever tell anyone what i have just said to you, you shall vanish away instantly, and no one shall ever see you or hear of you again."

  though the king was horribly afraid of the enchanter, he could not help laughing at this threat.

  "if my son has such a long nose as that," he said to himself, "he must always see it or feel it; at least, if he is not blind or without hands."

  but, as the enchanter had vanished, he did not waste any more time in thinking, but went to seek the princess, who very soon consented to marry him. but after all, they had not been married very long when the king died, and the queen had nothing left to care for but her little son, who was called hyacinth. the little prince had large blue eyes, the prettiest eyes in the world, and a sweet little mouth, but, alas! his nose was so enormous that it covered half his face. the queen was inconsolable when she saw this great nose, but her ladies assured her that it was not really as large as it looked; that it was a roman nose, and you had only to open any history to see that every hero has a large nose. the queen, who was devoted to her baby, was pleased with what they told her, and when she looked at hyacinth again, his nose certainly did not seem to her quite so large.

  the prince was brought up with great care; and, as soon as he could speak, they told him all sorts of dreadful stories about people who had short noses. no one was allowed to come near him whose nose did not more or less resemble his own, and the courtiers, to get into favor with the queen, took to pulling their babies" noses several times every day to make them grow long. but, do what they would, they were nothing by comparison with the prince"s.

  when he grew sensible he learned history; and whenever any great prince or beautiful princess was spoken of, his teachers took care to tell him that they had long noses.

  his room was hung with pictures, all of people with very large noses; and the prince grew up so convinced that a long nose was a great beauty, that he would not on any account have had his own a single inch shorter!

  when his twentieth birthday was passed the queen thought it was time that he should be married, so she commanded that the portraits of several princesses should be brought for him to see, and among the others was a picture of the dear little princess!

  now, she was the daughter of a great king, and would some day possess several kingdoms herself; but prince hyacinth had not a thought to spare for anything of that sort, he was so much struck with her beauty. the princess, whom he thought quite charming, had, however, a little saucy nose, which, in her face, was the prettiest thing possible, but it was a cause of great embarrassment to the courtiers, who had got into such a habit of laughing at little noses that they sometimes found themselves laughing at hers before they had time to think; but this did not do at all before the prince, who quite failed to see the joke, and actually banished two of his courtiers who had dared to mention disrespectfully the dear little princess"s tiny nose!

  the others, taking warning from this, learned to think twice before they spoke, and one even went so far as to tell the prince that, though it was quite true that no man could be worth anything unless he had a long nose, still, a woman"s beauty was a different thing; and he knew a learned man who understood greek and had read in some old manuscripts that the beautiful cleopatra herself had a "tip-tilted" nose!

  the prince made him a splendid present as a reward for this good news, and at once sent ambassadors to ask the dear little princess in marriage. the king, her father, gave his consent; and prince hyacinth, who, in his anxiety to see the princess, had gone three leagues to meet her was just advancing to kiss her hand when, to the horror of all who stood by, the enchanter appeared as suddenly as a flash of lightning, and, snatching up the dear little princess, whirled her away out of their sight!

  the prince was left quite inconsolable, and declared that nothing should induce him to go back to his kingdom until he had found her again, and refusing to allow any of his courtiers to follow him, he mounted his horse and rode sadly away, letting the animal choose his own path.

  so it happened that he came presently to a great plain, across which he rode all day long without seeing a single house, and horse and rider were terribly hungry, when, as the night fell, the prince caught sight of a light, which seemed to shine from a cavern.

  he rode up to it, and saw a little old woman, who appeared to be at least a hundred years old.

  she put on her spectacles to look at prince hyacinth, but it was quite a long time before she could fix them securely because her nose was so very short.

  the prince and the fairy (for that was who she was) had no sooner looked at one another than they went into fits of laughter, and cried at the same moment, "oh, what a funny nose!"

  "not so funny as your own," said prince hyacinth to the fairy; "but, madam, i beg you to leave the consideration of our noses--such as they are--and to be good enough to give me something to eat, for i am starving, and so is my poor horse."

  "with all my heart," said the fairy. "though your nose is so ridiculous you are, nevertheless, the son of my best friend. i loved your father as if he had been my brother. now he had a very handsome nose!"

  "and pray what does mine lack?" said the prince.

  "oh! it doesn"t lack anything," replied the fairy. "on the contrary quite, there is only too much of it. but never mind, one may be a very worthy man though his nose is too long. i was telling you that i was your father"s friend; he often came to see me in the old times, and you must know that i was very pretty in those days; at least, he used to say so. i should like to tell you of a conversation we had the last time i ever saw him."

  "indeed," said the prince, "when i have supped it will give me the greatest pleasure to hear it; but consider, madam, i beg of you, that i have had nothing to eat today."

  "the poor boy is right," said the fairy; "i was forgetting. come in, then, and i will give you some supper, and while you are eating i can tell you my story in a very few words--for i don"t like endless tales myself. too long a tongue is worse than too long a nose, and i remember when i was young that i was so much admired for not being a great chatterer. they used to tell the queen, my mother, that it was so. for though you see what i am now, i was the daughter of a great king. my father----"

  "your father, i dare say, got something to eat when he was hungry!" interrupted the prince.

  "oh! certainly," answered the fairy, "and you also shall have supper directly. i only just wanted to tell you----"

  "but i really cannot listen to anything until i have had something to eat," cried the prince, who was gettin

  g quite angry; but then, remembering that he had better be polite as he much needed the fairy"s help, he added:

  "i know that in the pleasure of listening to you i should quite forget my own hunger; but my horse, who cannot hear you, must really be fed!"

  the fairy was very much flattered by this compliment, and said, calling to her servants:

  "you shall not wait another minute, you are so polite, and in spite of the enormous size of your nose you are really very agreeable."

  "plague take the old lady! how she does go on about my nose!" said the prince to himself. "one would almost think that mine had taken all the extra length that hers lacks! if i were not so hungry i would soon have done with this chatterpie who thinks she talks very little! how stupid people are not to see their own faults! that comes of being a princess: she has been spoiled by flatterers, who have made her believe that she is quite a moderate talker!"

  meanwhile the servants were putting the supper on the table, and the prince was much

  amused to hear the fairy who asked them a th

第4篇大班故事教案

  九年义务教育人教版第5册的课文《一个小村庄的故事》。这篇课文讲述了一个美丽的小村庄,由于村里的人们不加节制地砍伐树木,周围环境遭到了严重的破坏,最后受到了大自然严厉的惩罚整个小村庄都被咆哮的洪水卷走了,那个美丽而宁静的小村庄从此消失的无影无踪。它告诉了人们要爱护树木,保护大自然的生态环境。

  整组课文都是围绕着保护环境为主题,通过质朴、深蕴的语言,优美真实的课件演示,将学生带入了一个全新的视野窗口,从这个窗口里他们看到了历史环境的巨大变迁,激发了他们内心强烈的的情感共鸣,深深感受到环境保护的重要性,从而深化了主题。下面我把它从教材、教法与学法、教学过程、以及教学板书这个方面进行说课。

  一、教材分析

  首先我说说教材。根据新课程标准,本组课文训练的主要意图,和学生的实际,我们确定了本课的教学目标。

  知识目标:有感情的朗读课文,通过朗读,交流、体会含义深刻的句子,悟出课文中蕴含的道理。

  技能目标:培养学生结合句子联系上下文理解词语的能力

  情感目标:教育学生从小热爱大自然、保护大自然。

  发展目标:培养学生爱护家园、保护环境、为后人造福的忧患意识。

  二、教学重点:

  它采用了设置悬念的方式,引发学生的创造思维,因此我们认为这篇课文的教学重点是了解小村庄变化的原因。

  三、教学难点:

  体会课文中蕴含的道理是本课的教学难点。

  四、教法和学法:

  在这堂课中,我们综合了观察法、谈话法、讨论法、随机通达教学、自上而下教学设计及情境性教学方法来引导学生自学、讨论、交流。

  五、教学过程

  在本课的教学中,我们采用了自主学习、合作探究的教学方式,实践与想象充分结合的教学方法,为学生营造了一个新型的良好的课堂氛围。为达到本课的教学目标,主要从四个方面进行教学。

  (一)、创设情境,激活情感

  在这里,一个山清水秀、鸟语花香的小村庄在老师的故事中娓娓而来,通过直观画面,直接刺激学生的视觉思维,首先学生感受到美的氛围。然后画面急剧变化,突如其来的洪水毁掉了这个美丽的村庄,从声音、画面方面激活学生潜在的情感。让他们的思维处于一种张开的状态,在他们幼小的心灵里,感受到村庄从美丽到毁灭的`过程给他们带来的那种震撼心灵的感觉。第一次与大自然进行心灵碰撞为他们理解村庄的消失奠定了情感基础。

  (二)、模拟调查,渗透新知

  在学生自由读课文的基础上,深入了解小村庄变化的原因。并且采用新颖而独特的教学方法激发学生的兴趣和强烈的求知欲。在教学中,课件演示让学生看到了一个色彩斑斓的情感画卷。在这个时候,学生的心里一定有很多的疑问,很多的想法,再运用模拟调查的方式,首先激起学生的兴趣,小学生的情感极易受环境气氛和他人情感的感染而产生共鸣,学生通过刚才的课件观看,听老师逐步深入的引导,拉近了学生与课文之间的时空距离。学生心里那么多的问号就会在他们自己的探索中一步一步的清晰、明显。

  (三)、自主释疑,知识反馈。

  《新课程标准》提出,小学语文教学,应立足于促进学生的发展,使他们成为语文学习的主人,在这课里,要引导学生根据单元训练目标,让学生提问,把学习的主动权放给学生,这样做,为学生指明了方向,也体现了教师的主导作用。在这个教学步骤中,我们以课堂为主阵地,始终将分组讨论、合作交流作为一种激活课堂信息交流、促进学习目标达成的有效教学方式。首先是讨论前留出足够的时间给学生,让学生开展观察思考,比如:什么都没有了所有靠斧头得到的一切包括那些锋利的斧头。。学生经过有目的地观察和有意识地思想,有针对性去讨论,对问题产生了独特的想法,才能充分、深刻地发表自己的见解。弄明白所有靠斧头得到一切不仅仅指前面提到的用斧头得到的房子、家具还有靠斧头得到的所有不错的生活。讨论中学生都有各不相同的想法,有的是成熟的见解,有的仅仅是幼稚的疑问。这些想法,都使学生有一种一吐为快的心理需求,此时,正是讨论的最佳时机。讨论时,引导学生有序地发言,特别注意让只习惯于说的学生有听的耐心,使羞于发言的学生有讲的信心,从而使每个学生都能有条理地将自己的意见充分表露,使课堂讨论呈现一种个性思想展现,交流意识浓厚的良好氛围。讨论后,再引导学生进行整理,对于这些意见的联结点,让学生从中归纳出正是因为这些村民乱砍乱伐,造成了对周围环境的破坏,最终受到了大自然的惩罚,由此看出保护环境的重要性。然后让学生通过多种形式的读,来体会文章中所蕴含的深刻道理。

  (四)、发展思维、深化主题

  孩子们对大自然总是有一种莫名的亲近,而且还有着意想不到的创造潜能。学完全文后,采用记者采访的形式,让学生谈谈自己的感受来发展学生的创造性思维。古人说:感人心者,先莫乎于情。在这种引放的教学方式下,教师始终通过充沛的情感,用生动语言掀起学生情感的波澜,使自己和学生的情感融为一体。

  六、板书设计:

  这堂课的板书设计非常简单但又层层进入,从直观上一目了然但又意义深远,从而深化了整个主题。

  内容概括:这篇介绍了关于《一个小村庄的故事》说课设计,一个小村庄的故事,希望对你有帮助!

第5篇大班故事教案

  活动目标:

  1、学习角色对话,知道蓝鲸是世界上最大的动物。

  2、初步尝试阅读,体验阅读的快乐。

  活动准备:

  1、桌面教具一套:动物图片(小蚂蚁、小鸡、小猫、小狗、小熊、小象就、蓝鲸)背景图(森林、大海)

  2、每个幼儿一只动物图片。

  3、大的图书《最大的动物》

  活动过程:

  一、导入

  今天森林里真热闹,来了许多动物,它们正在讨论:它们中谁最大?宝宝,你们来看看呢,它们谁最大?谁最小?

  二、 看大书,学习角色对话

  1、出示图书

  动物们也不知道谁大谁小,你们看,动物们都跑到书本里来找答案了,我们也来看看这本书,到书里面来找找答案。

  2、我们要准备看书了,“叮咚”你看到了谁?小蚂蚁看到小鸡说:“小鸡、小鸡,你长得真大!”小鸡笑着说:“叽叽叽,我不大,小猫比我大。”小鸡怎么说的?(请幼儿集体说)

  3、分角色练习对话 我来做小蚂蚁,你们来做小鸡,练习角色对话。

  4、“汪汪汪”谁来了?小狗和小猫比谁大?小猫会怎么说?

  5、还有什么动物比狗还要大?(幼儿猜)看看谁大?

  小狗会怎么说?

  6、“咚咚咚”是谁呀?脚步声这么响,来的一定是个庞然大物,大块头,是谁呢?(幼儿猜)

  小象真的很大很大,它的身体像座山,腿粗的像四棵大树。小熊会怎么说?

  7、你还看到谁?(小蚂蚁)很小很小的小蚂蚁抬着头,才能和小象说话“小象、小象,你一定是世界上最大的动物。”小象笑着说:“我不大,有种动物比我大多了,它才是世界上最大的动物。”(翻书)

  8、它的名字叫蓝鲸,宝宝,世界上最大的.动物是谁?(蓝鲸)蓝鲸生活在哪里?它每天快乐的在海洋里游来游去,捉小鱼小虾吃,蓝色的海洋就是蓝鲸的家。

  三、游戏

  1、我们来玩个找朋友的游戏,找比我大的动物朋友。小动物的后面有个小口袋,我们的小手伸在小口袋里。我们先从小椅子底下把动物图片轻轻拿出来,套在小手上,看看你戴的是什么动物?宝宝,你是谁呀?请几个宝宝来说一说。

  2、请一个宝宝来找朋友,找到朋友碰一碰,你找了谁呀?说一说谁比我大。

  3、宝宝们,你们也来找比你大的动物朋友,碰一碰,拉拉小手,说一说,谁比我大。

  4、宝宝们,比你们都要大的动物是谁呀?(出示蓝鲸的图片)世界上最大的动物是蓝鲸。

第6篇大班故事教案

  教学目标:

  1、知识目标:结合实例和具体活动,感知镜面对称现象。掌握镜子内外图形对称、左右错位的`规律,能利用镜子寻找对称轴(特别是不能对折的物体)。

  2、能力目标:引导学生观察、探索、发现、交流,经历探索镜面对称现象特征的过程,使学生学会从数学的角度解释生活,发展学生的空间观念和创新能力。

  3、情感目标:感受数学与生活的密切联系,激发学生的学习兴趣,使每个学生都能在活动中体验成功的喜悦。

  教学重点:

  探索镜面对称的一些特征。

  教学难点:

  感知镜面对称现象,发展空间知觉和空间观念。

  教学准备:

  课件,镜子。

  教学过程:

  一、讲故事,引入新课

  1、讲《猴子捞月》的寓言故事。猴子在路边散步,看到天空高挂一轮圆月;猴子走到井边,发现井边有一轮圆月,猴子以为天上的月亮掉到了井里;猴子大声叫喊,同伴扛来长长的网兜。众猴子怎么也捞不出“月亮”。问题:“这是什么原因?”(不是月亮掉到井里,而是井水倒映出月亮。)“在生活中,你们好有没有发现类似的现象?”(照镜子时,出现的现象;光滑的地板也会出现倒影等。)

  2、揭示课题。

  (1)总结,说明以上几种现象的特征。

  (2)板书课题:镜子中的数学。

  二、组织活动

  1、教师示范。

  (1)在黑板上贴一个大的黑体字——“王”的一半。

  (2)把镜子放在虚线上(对称轴),让全班学生观察镜子里的图形和整个图形。

  (3)让学生说一说看到了什么?有什么发现?(看到“王”字,镜子里的图形是镜子外图形的对称图形。)

  (4)让学生试一试。

  2、试一试。

  第(1)题:让学生把镜子放在虚线上,看看镜子里的图形和整个图形。说一说,看到了什么。在书上画出对称图形。说一说,这条虚线在对称图形中称什么?

  第(2)题

  (1)镜子中的小女孩是举起了左手,小女孩其实举起的是哪只手?

  (2)从镜子你能知道现在是几点吗?

  (3)小组讨论:你发现了镜子中有什么数学学问?究竟小女孩照镜子时是几时?

  (4)小组代表汇报小组讨论的成果。

  3、小游戏

  模拟照镜子的游戏。

  师:假设苏老师站在镜子前,谁来做镜子中的苏老师呢?

  (师生表演。)

  采访镜子中的人:你为什么能做得这么准确?

  (同桌互相做游戏,请一组学生全班展示。)

  三、归纳小结,提升认识

  师:今天同学们有什么收获?你的心情怎样?

  (评析引导学生学会反思,培养学生的总结归纳能力,关注学生情感。)