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21st Century Literature

from the Philippines


and the World
Quarter 2 – Module 4:
Self and Peer Assessment
of a Literary Text’s Creative Adaptation

CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
21st Century Literature from the Philippines and the World
Alternative Delivery Mode
Quarter 2– Module 4: Self and Peer Assessment of a Literary Text’s Creative Adaptation
First Edition, 2021

Republic Act 8293, section 176 states that: No copyright shall subsist in any work of
the Government of the Philippines. However, prior approval of the government agency or office
wherein the work is created shall be necessary for exploitation of such work for profit. Such
agency or office may, among other things, impose as a condition the payment of royalties.

Borrowed materials (i.e., songs, stories, poems, pictures, photos, brand names,
trademarks, etc.) included in this module are owned by their respective copyright holders.
Every effort has been exerted to locate and seek permission to use these materials from their
respective copyright owners. The publisher and authors do not represent nor claim ownership
over them.

Published by the Department of Education


Secretary: Leonor Magtolis Briones
Undersecretary: Diosdado M. San Antonio

Development Team of the Module


Writers: Delia B. Tañag, Elisa Pardines, and Rodolfo C. Calimag
Editors: Lawrence B. Icasiano, Paula J. Mar
Reviewers: Abigail I. Mirabel-Agapay, Roderick O. Delmo, Julieta R. De Jesus
Diana F. delos Santos, Henry S. Grucen, and Ryann P. Maongca
Illustrator: Patrick L. Pernia, Norvin B. Taniza
Layout Artist: Marites K. Chavez, Elleden Grace L. Denosta, and Ryann P. Maongca
Management Team: Francis Cesar B. Bringas
Job S. Zape, Jr.
Ramonito Elumbaring
Reicon C. Condes
Elaine T. Balaogan
Fe M. Ong-ongowan
Raymundo M. Cantonjos
Bernadette T. Luna
Gemma G. Cortez
Leylanie V. Adao
Cesar Chester O. Relleve

Printed in the Philippines by ________________________

Department of Education – Region IV-A CALABARZON

Office Address: Gate 2 Karangalan Village, Barangay San Isidro


Cainta, Rizal 1800
Telefax: 02-8682-5773/8684-4914/8647-7487
E-mail Address: [email protected]
21st Century Literature
from the Philippines
and the World
Quarter 2 – Module 4:
Self and Peer Assessment
of a Literary Text’s Creative Adaptation
Introductory Message

This Self-Learning Module (SLM) is prepared so that you, our dear learners,
can continue your studies and learn while at home. Activities, questions, directions,
exercises, and discussions are carefully stated for you to understand each lesson.

Each SLM is composed of different parts. Each part shall guide you step-by-
step as you discover and understand the lesson prepared for you.

Pre-tests are provided to measure your prior knowledge on lessons in each


SLM. This will tell you if you need to proceed on completing this module or if you
need to ask your facilitator or your teacher’s assistance for better understanding of
the lesson. At the end of each module, you need to answer the post-test to self-check
your learning. Answer keys are provided for each activity and test. We trust that you
will be honest in using these.

In addition to the material in the main text, Notes to the Teacher are also
provided to our facilitators and parents for strategies and reminders on how they can
best help you on your home-based learning.

Please use this module with care. Do not put unnecessary marks on any part
of this SLM. Use a separate sheet of paper in answering the exercises and tests. And
read the instructions carefully before performing each task.

If you have any questions in using this SLM or any difficulty in answering the
tasks in this module, do not hesitate to consult your teacher or facilitator.

Thank you.
What I Need to Know

Most Essential Learning Competency


Do self- and/or peer assessment of the creative adaption of a literary text, based
on rationalized criteria, prior to presentation.

This module was designed and written with you in mind. It is here to help you master
the sequence of events in a story. The scope of this module permits it to be used in
many different learning situations. The language used recognizes the diverse
vocabulary level of students. The lessons are arranged to follow the standard
sequence of the course. But the order in which you read them can be changed to
correspond with the textbook you are now using.

This module also aims to engage you in appreciation and critical study of 21st
Century Literature from the Philippines and the World, encompassing their various
dimensions, genres, elements, structures, contexts, and traditions. This module
allows you to embark on a journey from Philippine regions to the different parts of
the world through various literary encounters.

After going through this module, you are expected to:


1. understand the concept of literary text adaptation;
2. appreciate the importance of peer and self-assessment in improving one’s
learning; and
3. perform assessment of the adaptation literary forms using self- and peer-
assessment based on rationalized criteria.

1 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
What I Know

A. MULTIPLE CHOICES
Directions: Choose the letter of the correct answer. Write the chosen letter on a
separate sheet of paper.

1. It is the adapting of a literary source (e.g., a novel, short story, poem) to


another genre or medium, such as film, stage play, or video game.
a. literary text c. self-assessment
b. peer-assessment d. literary adaptation

2. It is a piece of written material, such as a book or a poem that has the purpose
of telling a story or entertaining, as in a fictional novel. Its primary function
as a text is usually aesthetic, but it may also contain political messages or
beliefs.
a. literary text c. self-assessment
b. peer-assessment d. literary adaptation

3. It is the assessment of students' work by other students of equal status.


Students often undertake peer assessment in conjunction with formal self-
assessment. They reflect on their own efforts and enrich this reflection by
exchanging feedback on their own and their peers' work.
a. literary text c. self-assessment
b. peer-assessment d. literary adaptation

4. It is a process where students are directed to assess their performance


against pre-determined standard criteria. It involves the students in
goal setting and more informal, dynamic self-regulation and self-
reflection.
a. literary text c. self-assessment
b. peer-assessment d. literary adaptation

5. `What kind of assessment task is it when students reflect on their own


performance?
a. a quiz c. peer assessment
b. a unit test d. self-assessment

2 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
B. TRUE/FALSE

Directions: Read each statement carefully. Write True if the statement is Correct,
otherwise False if incorrect.

______ 1. Peer and self-assessment encourage students to be responsible for


their own learning.

_______2. Peer and self-assessment make student’s learning inactive.

_______3. Peer and self-assessment change one’s perception that learning is a


passive process.

_______4. Peer and self-assessment allow students to better understand


assessment expectations that would lead to improving ones’
performance.

_______5. Literary adaptation is a process of adapting literary sources into a new


genre or medium.

_______6. Literary adaptation can be assessed using standard criteria.

_______7. Loose adaptation is concerned with highlighting the universality of the


theme.

_______8. Transformative adaptation is concerned with keeping the few elements


of the literary source.

_______9. Artful adaptation is concerned with finding balance between true to its
own as work of art.

_______10. Museum adaptation is concerned with preserving every possible detail


of the literary source.

3 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
LESSON Self and Peer Assessment
of Creative Adaptation
1 of a Literary Text
This lesson focuses on performing a self and peer assessment of a creative
adaptation of a literary text. Literature expresses human thoughts, feelings,
sensations, and imaginations. It recreates situations, relates experiences and records
events and history. As you go through this lesson, you will be given the time to
express your own perceptions, feelings, creativity, and judgment by making an
adaptation of a literary text using multimedia and ICT skills. You will also learn how
to evaluate and assess these literary adaptations.

Literary adaptation is a process of adapting a literary source (e.g. a novel,


short story, and poem) to another genre or medium such as a film, stage play, or
even video games. It involves adapting the same literary work in the same genre or
medium just for different purposes, e.g. to work with a smaller cast, in a smaller
venue (or on the road), or for a different demographic group (such as adapting a story
for children).

At the end of this lesson, you are expected to do a self- and/or peer assessment
of the creative adaptation of a literary text based on rationalized criteria.

What’s In

Studying literature can be very easy with the right amount of knowledge
gained from your studies in the past. Can you still recall your previous topic on
creative presentation of literary text by applying multimedia? It was highlighted that
every technological breakthrough adds up life to literature. Meaning, with
technology, literature becomes more accessible than that of yesterday. Televisions,
tablets, computers, and even smart phones can now be your best literature buddy
as you explore the wide array of literature all over the world. More so, the existence
of technology gives prevalent skills to learners to easily capture the meaning the
literature intends to express due to its visual aesthetics, audio programming, and
virtual kinesics.

For this next lesson, you will be acquainted with another skill which will
require you to think critically in exhibiting assessment of an adapted literary piece.
This will surely make your learning experience more exciting.

4 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
Notes to the Teacher
This module targets a specific Learning Competency (LC).
At the end of this lesson, the student is expected to do a
self- and/or peer assessment of the creative adaptation of
a literary text, based on rationalized criteria.

What’s New

In this module, you will learn more about exhibiting your skill in assessing creative
adaptation of a literary text based on rationalized criteria. You will be reading a flash
fiction entitled “Jake” by Jim Bartlett, who has written a number of stories from flash
to novella which are all featured in Fiction on different platforms such as The Web,
Crime Spree Magazine, Short-Storyme, Fairlight Books, and other publications. As a
flash fiction story goes, the author tells a loving, gentle story of love, loss, and longing
with an unexpected ending.

Activity 1
Read and learn more about the story, after reading the story, rate it in your own
simple assessment using the rubric given below. Indicate your score on the space
provided.

JAKE
by Jim Bartlett

Jake’s eyes snap open, and he quickly turns to the side. But like his aching
heart, the spot where Max always sat on the couch remains empty. He takes in a
long, deep breath – really more of a sigh – and squeezes his eyes closed, hoping
that by slipping into the darkness of a nap, he will temporarily mask his sorrow.
For fifteen years they were inseparable. Always side by side. The walks on
the beach with the gentle waves calling, the seagulls cawing. All those hikes on
the trail where the trees canopied over like arches, wrapping them in a soft cool
shade on a hot sunny day. Even just a ride to the grocery store for something
Martha may have forgotten, they always went together.

5 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
Though he knows that in some ways he should be thankful for just having
their time together – those moments forever etched in his heart – and that the
sickness took Max quickly rather than dragging out the pain for weeks, maybe
even months, he still feels cheated. That somehow, he is missing years that could
have been.
Unable to sleep, he looks around the all too empty room, letting his gaze fall
upon the leash, which still hangs from the peg by the door. It seems to wait
patiently, ever ready for that next big adventure. As his eyes well up, he realizes
for the first time how much his grief weighs, how hard it is to even rise with such
a heaviness inside.
It is then he hears a shuffle from behind and turns to see Martha standing
in the doorway, her shoulder resting against the frame.

.
“I thought you might be in here,” she says. She looks down at him for only
a moment before her stare drifts to the couch. “I miss him, too, Jake. More than
you’ll ever know.”
There’s a faraway melancholy tone to her voice, but he knows that her
heart, like his, has a hole too big to fill. His head drops and he gives off another
long sigh, which seems to prompt her to come over and kneel down onto the carpet
beside him. She slides a hand under his chin and lifts it up, then tucks back his
long, floppy ears, such that their teary eyes can meet.
“I guess you do know, don’t you, Jake.”

6 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
Flash Fiction Grading Rubric
CATEGORY Exceptional (4) Good (3) Fair (2) Poor(1)

Nature of Reads like Reads like a Reads somewhat Though flash


Flash Fiction narrative (story), narrative (story), like a story may fiction is brief,
contains may contain contain this is too brief,
characters, characters, tension, Interesting not developed or
tension, and some and mystery or reading, though carried through.
mystery or surprise. There is writer tells too There could have
surprise. not a clear twist at much and shows been more added
Often there is the end, a clear too little. The to make the story
unease present at payoff. The story story is not more interesting.
the end, a sweetly may contain ninety- ninety-nine words
ambiguous or nine words or less. or less
implicit end. Clear
payoff. The story is
ninety-nine words
or less.

Plot An internal conflict An internal conflict An internal There is no


Development is clearly is partially conflict is internal
described. Event(s) described. present, but it is conflict.
in the story Event(s) in the unclear what the The character
fully explain(s) how story conflict is about. does not
the partially explain(s) The character change in the
internal conflict how appears story.
changes the the internal conflict to change
character(s). changes the somewhat but
character(s). not very much.

Writing Devotes a lot of Devotes sufficient Devotes some Devotes little time
Process time and effort to time and effort to time and effort to and effort to the
the writing process the writing process the writing writing process.
(prewriting, (prewriting, process but was Doesn't seem to
drafting, reviewing, drafting, reviewing, not very care.
and editing). and editing). Works thorough. Does
Works hard to and gets the job enough to get by.
make the story done.
wonderful.

Language Sensory details are Sensory details are Sensory details There are no
Used vivid and the present and help are confusing and descriptions or
readers can easily readers get a the reader does sensory details.
imagine what general not know There is no
is being described. idea of what is what to imagine. identifiable
A distinct mood is being described. It is unclear mood.
conveyed There is an throughout
consistently identifiable mood, most of the story
throughout the but it is not what
story. conveyed the mood is.
consistently
throughout the
story.

https://www.rcampus.com/rubricshowc.cfm?sp=yes&code=Z7398A&

Total out of 20___________

7 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
Comments:
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________

How was your experience in assessing the short story? Were you able to capture the
author’s message? If yes, what was it? If not, what hindered you to capture the
author’s message?
Explain your answer.
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________

That was a remarkable start!


Now, let us try presenting the story in a different form as you do the next activity.

Activity 2
Directions: Make a comic strip about the story of Jake. Follow the steps in creating
a comic strip. Then, assess your work using the rubric below.

Steps in Creating a Comic Strip

1. Go back to the story, “Jake”.

2. Identify the sequence of the story that you will use in your comic strip.

3. Write your ideas for your comic

4. Use basic shapes to draw

5. Add in the speech and lettering

6. Add detail to your cartoon

Do a self-assessment of your output, fill out the rubric table below to check
your score. Also, do a peer-assessment; you may send your output to a friend and
ask him or her to rate your output using the same rubric. Enjoy!

8 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
Level
Points to Consider
5 4 3 2 1

The output is able to preserve


the details of the literary text.

The output is able to balance


the author's message and the
student's interpretation.

The output is able to keep the


flash fiction’s idea.

The output is able to highlight


the universality and
timelessness of the story’s
theme.

The output is able to utilize


ICT and multimedia.

How is your experience in assessing the presentation? What level of observance


ratings did you put in the points to consider? Explain your answer.
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________

9 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
What is It

Earlier in our lesson, you evaluated a flash fiction and assessed it by using the given
rubric. In your own simple way, you were able to produce an adaptation of the flash
fiction when you transformed it into a comic strip. You also made a self-assessment
and peer-assessment of it using the given criteria.

Let us keep going then. Know more about the lesson as you read the following facts
and information:

What is the importance of Peer and Self-Assessment?

As a student, it is important that one must know how to do peer and self-
assessment. Here are the reasons according to the University of Reading:

1. It encourages you to take responsibility for your learning by encouraging


engagement with assessment criteria and reflection of your own performance
and that of your peers. Through this, you can learn from your previous
mistakes, identify your strengths and weaknesses and learn to target your
learning accordingly.

2. It makes you more active in your learning which in this way, it can help to
change the perception that learning is a passive process whereby students
simply listen and absorb information for the sake of compliance. In this way,
students are more likely to engage with their learning as participants instead
of just spectators.

3. It enables you to better understand assessment expectations and work


towards improving your own performance. Getting yourself more actively
involved in your assessment can make assessment itself a means by which
you can develop.

Thus, Peer and Self-assessment are important to learn for a student like you,
and in order to achieve this, it is essential that your assessment criteria are clear
and fully described through the help of your teacher. Taking this step further and
allowing you to contribute to the assessment criteria can serve to transfer ownership,
fostering deeper engagement with the assessment and learning.

10 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
What is literary text adaptation?
Literary adaptation is a process of adapting a literary source (e.g. a novel,
short story, and poem) to another genre or medium such as a film, stage play, or
video game. It involves adapting the same literary work in the same genre or medium
just for different purposes, e.g. to work with a smaller cast, in a smaller venue (or on
the road), or for a different demographic group (such as adapting a story for children).

Personally, a good example of this is the “Hana Yori Dango” a manga series
written by Yoko Kamio. It was set in Tokyo, Japan, and told the story of a middle-
class teenage girl named Makino Tsukushi who starts attending a prestigious high
school called Eitoku Academy. The school is *ruled* by F4 (aka Flower Four), a group
of hot guys from the country's richest families! The group's leader Domyouji Tsukasa
bullies her and later develops feelings for her, but Tsukushi falls for his BFF
Hanazawa Rui instead. The rest of the F4 members are named Nishikado Sojirou
and Mimasaka Akira. As the years have gone by, several adaptations were made for
this manga.

The following are its adaptations:

Year Title Country of Origin

1996 Hana Yori Dango Japan

2001 Meteor Garden Taiwan

2005 Hana Yori Dango Japan

2009 Boys Over Flowers Korea

2018 Meteor Garden China

2021 F4 Thailand Thailand

What do we want in a literary adaptation?


According to Watts (2020) in the article entitled “What do we want in a literary
adaptation?”, there is complexity and difficulty to commit as regards to determining:
What makes a good adaptation? Which matters more: the quality of the film itself, or
how “accurate” it is to the book it’s based on? Literary text and literary adaptation are
different art forms such as in the case for instance between novels and films. Instead,
she noticed four different types or “levels” of adaptation. Each has varying degrees of
adherence to their source material.

1. The “Museum” adaptation. This type is concerned with preserving every


possible detail of the book exactly how it exists in the book, just transferred
to the film as a medium.

11 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
2. The Artful adaptation. It is concerned with finding balance between being
true to its own as a work of art. Accordingly, it is like a conversation between
the book and audience. Rather than preserving every detail like a museum,
an Artful Adaptation finds the essential elements of the book and interprets
them in ways that meaningful for the audience.

3. The Loose Adaptation. This type is concerned about keeping a few elements
or some semblance of the premise of the book it’s based on, but then more or
less does its own thing with them. Often, this type of adaptation is discussed
in negative terms, as if its lack of exact similarity to its source material is
somehow a failure.

4. The Transformative Adaptation. This type of adaptation seeks to highlight


the timelessness and universality of their source works’ messages and themes.

What’s More

Activity 3
Directions: Do you love watching movies? Look for a movie that is an adaptation from
a novel e.g. “Harry Potter (2001-2011)”, “The Da Vinci Code (2008)”, “The Lord of Ring
and “The Hobbit (2001-2014)”. Then, compare and contrast the movie and the novel
(the literary text where the movie is based on) using a Venn Diagram.

Title of the movie: ________________ Title of the Novel: ____________________

Director: ________________________ Author: ____________________________

Synopsis: _______________________ Synopsis: __________________________

12 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
How is your experience with this activity? Is there a major difference or similarity
between the movie and the novel? Explain your answer.

__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________

13 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
What I Have Learned

Activity 4
Directions: Answer the following questions briefly and meaningfully:

1. What do you think is the importance of peer and self-assessment to


improve one’s understanding of the lesson?
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

2. Do you think setting criteria is important in the assessment? Why? Why


not?
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

3. Do you agree that making an adaptation of a literary text deepens your


understanding of the literary work? Why? Explain your answer.
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

14 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
What I Can Do

Activity 5
Directions: Make an adaptation of a poem using multi-media and ICT skills. Assess
your own work using the given criteria below. After the self-assessment, you will also
ask a classmate to assess the same video using the same criteria.

Follow the guidelines below:

1. Produce a 3-minute or 180-seconds spoken word poetry video by interpreting


the poem,
2. Rise, by Sagar Yasav.
3. Upload your video in our google classroom. (Ask your teacher for further
instructions.)
4. Assess your own work using the given assessment tool below.
5. Let a classmate assess your work using the same assessment tool.

Rise
By Sagar Yadav (2007)

I will rise
After every fall.
I will rise
And stand tall.
I will rise
Over the wall.
I will rise
Above them all.

Like the sun,


Which never dies.
Though sets every night,
Every day it does rise.
Like the ocean
Whose tides

Many times they are down,


But invariably they rise.

15 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
Like the trees,
From seeds they arise,
And heights great
They rise and rise.

After falling once,


Twice and thrice,
Again and again
I will rise and rise.

I will rise
After every fall.
After every fall
I will rise.

Assessment Tool for Peer and Self-Assessment

Level

Points to Consider

5 4 3 2 1

The adaptation is able to preserve


the details of the literary text.

The adaptation is able to balance


the author's message and the
student's interpretation.

The adaptation is able to keep the


poem's idea.

The adaptation is able to highlight


the universality and timelessness
of the poem's theme.

The adaptation is able to utilize ICT


and multimedia.

Total Score (25 POINTS): ___________________________

16 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
Share something here.

How did you rate yourself?

__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________

What about your peer’s assessment of your adaptation?

__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________

Comparing the scores, were the points close? What are your thoughts?

__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________

17 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
Assessment

A. MULTIPLE CHOICES
Direction: Choose the letter of the best answer and encircle it.

1. It is a process where students are directed to assess their performance against


pre-determined standard criteria. It involves the students in goal setting and
more informal, dynamic self-regulation and self-reflection.
a. literary text
b. peer-assessment
c. self-assessment
d. literary adaptation

2. It is the adapting of a literary source (e.g. a novel, short story, poem) to another
genre or medium, such as a film, stage play, or video game.
a. literary text
b. peer-assessment
c. self-assessment
d. literary adaptation

3. It is the assessment of students' work by other students of equal status.


Students often undertake peer assessment in conjunction with formal self-
assessment. They reflect on their own efforts and enrich this reflection by
exchanging feedback on their own and their peers' work.
a. literary text
b. peer-assessment
c. self-assessment
d. literary adaptation

4. It is a piece of written material, such as a book or a poem that has the purpose
of telling a story or entertaining, as in a fictional novel. Its primary function
as a text is usually aesthetic, but it may also contain political messages or
beliefs.
a. literary text
b. peer-assessment
c. self-assessment
d. literary adaptation

5. What kind of assessment task is applied when students reflect on their own
performance?
a. a quiz
b. a unit test
c. peer assessment
d. self-assessment

18 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
B. TRUE/FALSE
Directions: Read each statement carefully and write True if the statement
is Correct otherwise False if incorrect.

______ 1. Peer and self-assessment change one’s perception that learning is a


passive process.

_______2. Loose adaptation is concerned with highlighting the universality of the


theme.

_______3. Peer and self-assessment encourage students to be responsible for their


own learning.

_______4. Literary adaptation can be assessed using standard criteria.

_______5. Artful adaptation is concerned with finding balance between true to its
own as work of art.

_______6. Peer and self-assessment allow students to better understand


assessment expectations that would lead to improving ones’
performance.

_______7. Museum adaptation is concerned with preserving every possible detail


of the literary source.

_______8. Transformative adaptation is concerned with keeping the few elements


of the literary source.

_______9. Peer and self-assessment make student’s learning inactive.

_______10. Loose adaptation is concerned with highlighting the universality of the


theme.

19 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
Additional Activities

You have learned the skill in doing a self- and/or peer assessment of the creative
adaptation of a literary text, based on rationalized criteria. This time, you will apply
what you have learn by writing a blog entry about the flash fiction entitled JAKE by
Jim Bartlett.

In the blog entry, include the following: the reason why you liked the story, how it
made you feel; what message you gleaned from it; and how it affects your
appreciation of literature. Please be guided with the rubric below.

Performance
1 2 3 4
Area

Content of the blog The content of The content of the The content of the
is non-substantive the blog is blog manifests blog exhibits
and does not show somewhat vague accurate knowledgeable,
knowledge of the
and limited in knowledge but relevant,
Content subject
substance limited substantive and
development of thorough
the subject. development of the
subject.
The blog is poorly The blog The blog is The blog clearly
organized, ideas contains somewhat choppy stated/ supported
with serious confusing ideas incomplete and the idea. It shows a
problems involving
and loosely organized well-organized and
the progression of
the topic disconnected. It but the main logical sequencing
Organization
lacks logical ideas are clearly in the introduction,
sequencing and laid down. Ideas body and
development are logical but conclusion
incomplete
sequencing
The blog of the The blog of the The blog of the The blog of the
student does not student has student has student
show mastery of frequent errors occasional errors demonstrates
conventions,
of spelling, of spelling, mastery of
dominated by
errors of spelling, punctuation, punctuation, conventions and
Mechanics
punctuation, capitalization, capitalization, few errors of
capitalization, paragraphing paragraphing but spelling,
paragraphing meaning not punctuation,
obscured capitalization,
paragraphing

20 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
Module 4
CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS 21
Assessment What’s New?
What I Know
A. Multiple Choice Activity 1 and 2
1. C A. Multiple Choice
2. D Answer may Vary
3. B 1. D
4. A 2. B
5. D 3. B
What’s More 4. C
B. TRUE OR FALSE 5. D
1. TRUE
Activity 3
2. FALSE B. TRUE or FALSE
3. TRUE Answer may vary
4. TRUE 1. TRUE
5. TRUE 2. FALSE
6. FALSE What I have learned? 3. TRUE
7. FALSE 4. FALSE
8. FALSE Activity 4 5. TRUE
9. TRUE 6. TRUE
10. TRUE 7. TRUE
Answer may vary
8. FALSE
9. FALSE
10. TRUE
What I can do
Activity 5
Answer may vary
Answer Key
References

Bartlett, Jim. “Jack.” Last modified February 10, 2019.


https://spillwords.com/jack/.

Department of Education – SOCCSKSARGEN Learning Resource Management


System (LRMS). Retrieved from URL https://fnhs.online/wp-
content/uploads/2020/11/21st-CENTURY-LITERATURE-Q1_Module-5.pdf

http://hgms.psd202.org/documents/lthomas/1506604611.pdf. Retrieved August


17,2021.
https://www.rcampus.com/rubricshowc.cfm?sp=yes&code=Z7398A&.Retried
August 19, 2021

University of Reading (n.d.). Engaged in assessment. Retrieved on October


29, 2020, from https://www.reading.ac.uk/engageinassessment/peer-and-
self-assessment/eia-peer-and-self

Uychoco, M. T. (2016). 21st Century Literature. Manila: Rex Publishing.

22 CO_Q2_2CLPW SHS
Module 4
For inquiries or feedback, please write or call:

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Ground Floor, Bonifacio Bldg., DepEd Complex


Meralco Avenue, Pasig City, Philippines 1600

Telefax: (632) 8634-1072; 8634-1054; 8631-4985

Email Address: [email protected] *


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