Main content
2nd grade reading & vocabulary
Course: 2nd grade reading & vocabulary > Unit 3
Lesson 3: Close reading: fictionMessages and morals | Reading
Morals are lessons about how to treat other people. Many stories have these lessons embedded in them. Let's learn how to dig them out!
Want to join the conversation?
- Hair and hare have same pronounce but different spelling.(11 votes)
- Sorry i made some RUDE comments i'm Just having a bad day but i have no ecuses(6 votes)
- But you just made an excuse.....(9 votes)
- What happen to the hare when she lost the race to the tortoise!?(9 votes)
- This is so good 😊(8 votes)
- The hare could win if ate the cookies.(7 votes)
- The hare wouldn't win, because he'd get diabetes.(3 votes)
- what was the first ever fairy tell?🤔🧐(8 votes)
- The fairy says she's flying around the woods running errands for the Titania the Fairy Queen—errands like painting flowers and hanging the morning dew on them.
Missing: 🤔 🧐(0 votes)
- Dang it, I'm 14 and still reviewing elements of fiction in my english class.(3 votes)
- Maybe hare was to tired?(6 votes)
- Wow but how bunny's have good hearing so it could hear the turtle(5 votes)
- why does people tell fairy tales ?(4 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] Hello, readers. Today I'd like to talk to you about The Moral of the Story. Which story? Well, we'll get to that. First, what is a moral? It's a lesson, usually about how you're supposed to treat other people. I think that we can say
that if a story has a moral, it's trying to teach you
how to be a good person. "Aesop's Fables" are full of these. There's the story of "The
Tortoise and the Hare", which I'll tell you very
quickly, if you're unfamiliar. The slow loving tortoise
and the speedy hare have a foot race. And the hare is so sure that
she'll beat the tortoise, that she stops to take
a nap during the race. Meanwhile, the tortoise
slowly and steadily continues onwards, and
crosses the finish line, while the hare is sleeping. That's confetti, as the tortoise
crosses the finish line. The moral of the story is, slow and steady wins the race. You can beat an overconfident person, even if they're more talented than you, if you try really hard and
take it slow but steady. But it's not just old
stories from ancient Greece that have morals. The stories around us are full of lessons about how to treat one another. So, how do you figure out
what the moral of a story is? Good question. One way to do it is to ask
yourself what the problem of the story is, or how
the problem was solved. From the hare's
perspective, the problem in "The Tortoise and the Hare"
is that she lost the race. What could she have done
to avoid that happening? Well, she probably shouldn't
have stopped to take a nap. From the tortoise's perspective,
the problem is solved. He won the race. And how did he do that? By maintaining a slow, steady
pace for the whole race. And then you take that lesson
that the characters learned and you say, "Okay, so
this is true for everyone". It's not just that hares
should make sure not to nap during foot races, it's that
people who are good at stuff shouldn't get so confident
about their skills that they don't try as hard. The hare is really good
at running quickly, so she thinks she doesn't
need to try so hard against a tortoise. Because that is what morals do, they are lessons in stories
that we can apply to our lives. What's true for the hare and
what's true for the tortoise are true for you and me, because those stories were
invented to teach people stories, not just tortoises and hares. You can learn anything. David out.