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The Rodriguez Brothers Circus

The Rodriguez Brothers Circus

The Rodriguez Brothers Circus

The Rodriguez Brothers Circus

Level

Elementary to Pre-Intermediate (A1–A2)

Time

30–40 minutes

Skills Focus

  • Reading comprehension
  • True/False practice
  • Comparatives and superlatives in context

Lesson Objectives

By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:

  1. Read and understand a short story about a circus.
  2. Identify and use comparatives (stronger, bigger, longer) and superlatives (the longest, the oldest, the most popular).
  3. Answer true/false comprehension questions.
  4. Talk about people, animals, and objects using comparisons.

Lesson Procedure

1. Warm-Up (5 minutes)

  • Show a picture of a circus (tent, animals, clowns).
  • Ask: What do you usually see at the circus?
  • Write some student answers on the board.

2. Reading: The Rodriguez Brothers Circus (10 minutes)

  • Give each student the reading text.
  • Students read silently (or take turns reading aloud).
  • Pre-teach any tricky vocabulary: performer, juggle, highlight, audience, energy, trucks.

3. Comprehension Check: True or False (10 minutes)

Students complete the worksheet questions:

  1. The circus comes to the town twice a year. → False
  2. There are not many animals in the circus. → True
  3. People don’t come to the circus because of the animals. → False
  4. Leopold and his father work in the circus together. → False
  5. Leopold’s father is the strongest. → False
  6. Clara’s hair is longer than her daughter’s hair. → True
  7. Sue-Ellen wants to be a clown in the circus. → False
  8. Pit is the father of the other two clowns. → False (Pat is the father)
  9. The three clowns wear identical shoes. → False (Pat’s shoes are the longest)
  10. Everyone is very tired on the day that the circus leaves town. → True

4. Grammar in Context: Comparatives & Superlatives (10 minutes)

Highlight examples from the text:

  • Leopold is stronger than his father. (comparative)
  • Clara has the longest hair in the world. (superlative)
  • Pat is the oldest clown in the country. (superlative)

Students write 3 comparative and 3 superlative sentences about the circus.

Examples:

  • Sue-Ellen’s hair is shorter than Clara’s hair.
  • Pat’s shoes are longer than Pit’s and Pot’s shoes.
  • The clowns are the most popular act in the circus.

5. Speaking Extension (5 minutes)

Ask students:

  • Who is the funniest person you know?
  • What is the most interesting thing about your family?
  • Are you taller than your best friend?

Encourage students to use comparatives and superlatives in their answers.


Learning Outcomes Recap

By the end of the lesson, students will have practiced:
✅ Reading for comprehension
✅ Using true/false statements
✅ Building sentences with comparatives and superlatives
✅ Speaking confidently about people and things

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