Goal: To introduce children to K. Ushinsky’s fairy tale “The Trickster Cat” and analyze it. Tasks. Analysis of the work Plutishka the cat Plutishka the cat summary for the reader's diary

Ushinsky Konstantin Dmitrievich

Rogue cat

Konstantin Dmitrievich Ushinsky

Rogue cat

Once upon a time there lived a cat, a goat and a ram in the same yard. They lived together: a tuft of hay and that in half; and if a pitchfork hits the side, it will hit Vaska the cat alone. He is such a thief and robber: wherever something bad lies, he looks there. Here comes one purring little cat, a gray forehead; he goes and cries so pitifully. They ask the cat, goat and ram:

Little cat, little gray pubis! Why are you crying, jumping on three legs?

Vasya answers them:

How can I not cry! The woman beat me and beat me; she tore out my ears, broke my legs, and even had a stranglehold on me.

Why did such trouble come to you? - the goat and the ram ask.

Eh-eh! For accidentally licking the sour cream.

The thief deserves the flour, says the goat, “don’t steal the sour cream!”

Here the cat is crying again:

The woman beat me and beat me; she beat and said: my son-in-law will come to me, where will he get sour cream? Inevitably, you will have to slaughter a goat or a ram.

Here a goat and a ram roared:

Oh, you gray cat, your stupid forehead! Why did you ruin us?

They began to judge and figure out how they could get out of this great misfortune (ed.) - and decided right there: all three of them should run away. They waited until the landlady did not close the gate, and left.

The cat, the goat and the ram ran for a long time through the valleys, over the mountains, over the shifting sands; they landed and decided to spend the night in a mown meadow; and in that meadow there are stacks like cities.

The night was dark and cold: where could I get fire? And the purring cat had already taken out birch bark, wrapped the horns of the goat and told him to knock their foreheads with the ram. A goat and a ram collided, sparks flew from their eyes: the birch bark began to burn.

Okay,” said the gray cat, “now let’s warm up!” - and without thinking for long, he lit a whole haystack on fire.

Before they had time to warm up enough, an uninvited guest, a gray peasant, Mikhailo Potapych Toptygin, came to see them.

Let me in, he says, brothers, to warm up and rest; I can't do something.

Welcome, gray little man! - says the cat. - Where are you going from?

“I went to the beekeeping,” says the bear, “to check on the bees, but I got into a fight with the men, which is why I pretended to be ill.”

So they all began to while away the night together: the goat and the ram were by the fire, the little purr climbed onto the stack, and the bear hid under the stack.

The bear fell asleep; the goat and the ram are dozing; Only the purr does not sleep and sees everything. And he sees: seven gray wolves are walking, one white - and straight to the fire.

Fu-fu! What kind of people are these! - says the white wolf to the goat and the ram. Let's try the force.

Here a goat and a ram bleated out of fear; and the cat, the gray forehead, made the following speech:

Oh, you, white wolf, prince of wolves! Don't anger our elder: God have mercy, he is angry! How it diverges is bad for anyone. But you don’t see his beard: that’s where all his strength lies; He kills all the animals with his beard, and only removes the skin with his horns. Better come and ask with honor: we want to play with your little brother who sleeps under the haystack.

The wolves on that goat bowed; They surrounded Misha and started flirting. So Misha held on and held on, and as soon as there was enough for each paw of the wolf, they sang Lazarus (they complained about fate. - Ed.). The wolves emerged from under the stack, barely alive and, with their tails between their legs, “God bless your legs!”

The goat and the ram, while the bear was dealing with the wolves, picked up the little purr on their back and quickly went home: “They say, stop wandering around without a way, we won’t get into such trouble.”

The old man and the old woman were overjoyed that the goat and ram returned home; and the purring cat was also torn out for trickery.

About our smaller brothers

Answers to pages 16 - 17

Konstantin Ushinsky
Rogue cat

Once upon a time there lived a cat, a goat and a ram in the same yard. They lived together: a tuft of hay and that in half; and if a pitchfork hits the side, it will hit Vaska the cat alone. He is such a thief and robber: wherever something bad lies, he looks there. Here comes one purring little cat, a gray forehead; He goes and cries so pitifully.
They ask the cat, goat and ram:
- Kitty, little gray pubis! Why are you crying, jumping on three legs?
Vasya answers them:
- How can I not cry! The woman beat me and beat me; She tore out my ears, broke my legs, and even had a stranglehold on me.
- Why did such trouble come to you? - the goat and the ram ask.
- Eh-eh! For accidentally licking the sour cream!
“The thief’s share of the flour,” says the goat, “don’t steal the sour cream!”
Here the cat is crying again:
- The woman beat me, beat me; she beat me and said: my son-in-law will come to me, where will I get sour cream? Inevitably, you will have to slaughter a goat or a ram.
Here a goat and a ram roared:
- Oh, you gray cat, your stupid forehead! Why did you ruin us?
They began to judge and decide how to get rid of the great misfortune, and decided right there: all three of them should run away. They waited until the landlady did not close the gate, and left.

II

The cat, the goat and the ram ran for a long time through the valleys, over the mountains, over the shifting sands; they landed and decided to spend the night in a mown meadow; and in that meadow there are stacks like cities.
The night was dark and cold: where could I get fire? And the purring cat had already taken out birch bark, wrapped the goat’s horns and ordered him to collide head-on with the ram. A goat and a ram bumped into each other, sparks flew from their eyes: the birch bark began to burn.
“Okay,” said the gray cat, “now let’s warm up!” - and without thinking for long, he lit a whole haystack on fire.
Before they had time to warm up enough, an uninvited guest came to them - a gray peasant, Mikhailo Potapych Toptygin.
“Let me in,” he says, “brothers, to warm up and rest; I can't do something.
- Welcome, gray little man! - says the cat. - Where are you going from?
“I went to the beekeeping,” says the bear, “to check on the bees, but I got into a fight with the men, which is why I pretended to be ill.”

III

So they all began to while away the night together: the goat and the ram were by the fire, the little purr climbed onto a haystack, and the bear hid under the haystack.
The bear fell asleep; the goat and the ram are dozing; Only the purr does not sleep and sees everything. And he sees: seven gray wolves are walking, one is white, and straight towards the fire.
- Fu-fu! What kind of people are these! - says the white wolf to the goat and the ram. - Let's try the force.
Here a goat and a ram bleated out of fear; and the gray forehead of the cat made the following speech:
- Oh, you, white wolf, prince of wolves! Don't anger our elder: God have mercy, he is angry! How divergent it is - no one will be happy! But you don’t see his beard: that’s where all his strength lies; He kills all the animals with his beard, and only removes the skin with his horns. Better come and ask with honor: we want to play with your little brother who sleeps under the haystack.
The wolves on that goat bowed; They surrounded Misha and started flirting. So Misha steadied himself and steadied himself, and as soon as there was enough for each paw of the wolf, they sang Lazarus. The wolves emerged from under the stack barely alive and, with their tails between their legs, “God bless your legs!”
The goat and the ram, while the bear was dealing with the wolves, picked up the purr on their back and quickly went home! “It’s enough, they say, to wander around without a path, we won’t get into such trouble.”
The old man and the old woman were very happy that the goat and ram returned home; and the purring cat was also torn out for trickery.

1. What is the name of the cat in the fairy tale? Write it down.

Little rogue, purring little cat, gray forehead, little cat, little gray forehead.

2. How can you say it differently? Write it down.

To judge and to rank - to reason.
Sing Lazarus - complain, cry.
Rogue - sly, deceiver.

3. Collect the riddle ⇒ and guess. Write down the answer.

He sleeps in a den in winter
Under the huge pine,
And when will he come spring,
Wakes up from sleep. (Bear)

4. Who came to visit the cat, the goat and the ram? Write down the “first name”, “patronymic” and “last name” of the guest.

Mikhailo Potapych Toptygin.

5. Make a plan for the fairy tale (write it down or draw it). Prepare a retelling.

1. Escape of a cat, goat and ram.
2. Guest, Mikhailo Potapych Toptygin.
3. The bear's reprisal against the wolves.

6 ∗ . Complete the sentence with words from the text. How did you react to the return of the goat, ram and cat? Emphasize.

Target: Introduce children to K. Ushinsky’s fairy tale “The Trickster Cat” and analyze it.

Tasks:


  • develop reading skills (read, work with the text of a work, correctly name a work, determine the topic and genre);

  • contribute to enriching children's language vocabulary;

  • observe the expressive means of language;

  • through the lesson, to instill in students self-confidence;

  • develop elements of project activities.
Equipment:

  • Textbook L.A. Efrosinina “Literary reading grade 2”

  • Workbook L.A. Efrosinina “Literary reading grade 2” part 2

  • Leaflets for making model covers, colored pencils.

  • Presentation for the lesson.
During the classes

  1. Organizing time
(Pronouncing “click”)

One two three four five

Pens, books and notebooks

Everything is fine with us.

Those who are good at reading and writing will not be lost.

(Students say “the call” in unison while touching objects on the table.)


  1. Free reading with intermediate reading technique measurements.
Students read additional literature to themselves for five minutes; at the last minute, at the teacher’s command, they make a mark, from which, after a minute has passed, they count the number of words read and mark it in the margins with a pencil.

Raise your hand, who has improved their reading technique? Why do you think? What advice can you give to your classmates?

3. Repetition of what has been covered.

- What section are we studying? Works about animals.

Look at the cover patterns and name which works we studied in this section fit these patterns. (on the slide there are models of covers for the “story” and “poem” genres).

SLIDE

Zhukovsky "Bird"

Russian folk song

"Burenushka"

Ushinsky "Vaska the Cat"

Prishvin “Old Mushroom”

Ushinsky "Fox Patrikeevna"

Bianchi “The Hedgehog the Savior” (poems)

The task is completed on the interactive whiteboard.

What is our favorite genre that we can add a cover model to? (To the genre of “fairy tales”).


  1. D/Z check
- Reading by heart M. Dudin’s poem “Tara-bara”.

Is this an ordinary poem? How else can you call it? (Proverb)

What fairy tale is this saying suitable for?

4. Updating the lesson topic.

- Now we will check how well you know fairy tales.

Guess the fairy tale by its beginning. If the fairy tale has an author, name him.

a) “Here’s what, sons: take an arrow, go out into an open field and shoot: where the arrows fall, there is your destiny.” (Princess Frog)

b) “It was winter. It was January. In the evening, the evil stepmother opened the door, looked at how the blizzard was blowing, and then returned to the warm stove and said to her stepdaughter: “You should go into the forest and pick snowdrops there.” (“Twelve months” – S. Marshak)

c) “Santa Claus read the letter and said:

Why is it so late? You won’t have time, Snowman, to bring the children a Christmas tree for the New Year.”

(“Christmas tree” by E. Suteev.)

d) “When the old man left, he ordered the rooster to take care of the house and not look out the window. But the fox really wanted to eat the cockerel.”

("Cat, Rooster and Fox")

Now let’s find out how carefully you read fairy tales.


What or who did these heroes travel on?

a) Dunno with friends in Green City? (on the air balloon)

b) Baby on the roof ? (on Carlson)

c) Doctor Aibolit to Africa? (on the ship)

d) Little Nils in Sweden (on goose)

5. Report the topic and objectives of the lesson.

- You have shown yourself to be quite good experts on fairy tales, today we will expand our knowledge by getting acquainted with another fairy tale written by Konstantin Dmitrievich Ushinsky, and it is called “The Trickster Cat.” In the course of work, we will enrich our vocabulary, observe the expressive means of language, and improve our reading skills.

And most importantly, we must find the answer to the main question of the lesson: “What does the work we read teach us, why did the authors include it in their textbook?”

SLIDE

K. D. Ushinsky?

Konstantin Dmitrievich Ushinsky was born on February 19 in the family of a retired officer; his mother died when he was 12 years old. Konstantin Dmitrievich successfully graduated from high school and the Faculty of Law of Moscow University. He taught at the Institute of Noble Maidens in Smolny, published pedagogical magazines, wrote textbooks, was a teacher of teachers, a writer, and a philosopher. A medal named after K. D. Ushinsky was established, which is awarded to the best teachers.

Today we will get acquainted with a fairy tale that was included in his textbook “Native Word”.

6. Listening to the work.

Music plays, allowing students to plunge into the world of fairy tales.

Why is the cat called a “rogue” in a fairy tale?

The teacher reads, the children read well.


  1. Identification of primary perception.

SLIDE

Which of these little people do you think could read this fairy tale? Why?

So why is the cat in the fairy tale called a “rogue”?

How many of you remember the heroes of the work? (cat, goat, ram, bear, wolves, old man and old woman).

Which of them can we call the main characters and why? (cat, goat and ram).

8. Vocabulary work.

SLIDE.

How do you understand words and expressions?

Judge and order.

He ran through the valleys.

Birch bark.

Illness feigned.

“It’s enough to wander around without a way, we won’t get into such trouble yet.”

Open page 22, find the heading “Dictionary”. Read the explanation, interpretation of unclear words. Just recently, in a Russian language lesson, we learned what the lexical meaning of a word is. What is the name of the dictionary where the lexical meaning of words is given?

Complete task No. 1 in printed notebooks p. 15. (How can you say it differently? Write it down.)

Examination.


  1. Working with the text of the listened work.
a) learning reading.

- Now we will re-read the fairy tale. The first group of guys, those sitting in the front row, will find and underline sentences that characterize the cat. The second group - the second row - will find and underline sentences characterizing a goat and a ram. The third group will think about how to supplement the diagram (slide on the board).


  • what started the events

  • How did events develop?

  • how did the fairy tale end?

developments

? ?
the beginning of events the end of events
Physical education minute.

After reading the text, students answer questions and complete the diagram.:
a) selective reading.

Students restore the chains and diagram

Let's try to restore the schema:

Travel Dangers

developments

forced escape returning home

the beginning of events the end of events
PAGE ON THE INTERACTIVE BOARD.
cat thief and robber, good friend, resourceful, frivolous, wise.

Name the good qualities of a cat and the bad ones. Who is meant by the cat in the fairy tale?

What character traits do you value in yourself, and which ones would you like to get rid of?

The goat and the ram are reliable friends, kind, obedient, reasonable.

Support your answer with sentences from the text.

Which of the characters did you like? Why?

What helped us to more clearly imagine the heroes of the fairy tale, to understand their character? (language of a fairy tale, artistic techniques).

c) restoration of deformed text

PAGE ON THE INTERACTIVE BOARD. At the same time as working at the board, students complete the assignment in printed notebooks. (Task No. 3 p. 15)

He sleeps in a den in spring

Under the great winter

And when the pine tree comes

Wakes up from sleep.
He sleeps in a den in winter

Under the huge pine

And when spring comes

Wakes up from sleep.

- Write the answer in your notebook and complete the following task

(Task No. 4 p. 15)

Examination. Before they had time to warm up properly, an uninvited guest - Mikhailo Potapych Toptygin - came to them.

10. Observe the expressive means of language.

How is a cat's thievery described? (Whatever is lying badly, looks there.)

How does the fairy tale say about punishing a cat? (Pitchfork to the side, tore out ears, broke legs, brought a noose)

What is a cat called in a fairy tale? (cat, purr, cat)

How do the goat and the ram address the cat when they feel sorry for him? Are they angry? Try to convey it with your voice. (Cat-cat, gray pubis. You are a gray cat, your stupid forehead.)

- Read the beginning of part 3.

- What did the white wolf offer to the goat and the ram?

/ Try the power/

How did the goat and the ram behave?

/Frightened/

And the cat is a gray forehead?

/He decided to cheat, to deceive/

He deceived him and the wolves approached Misha. Read how Misha dealt with uninvited guests.

/Here Misha steadied himself and steadied himself, and as soon as there was enough for each paw of the wolf, they sang Lazarus./

How is it “a wolf for each paw.” Show.

Remember what it means to “sing Lazarus.”

/Complain, cry, moan./

How did the fairy tale end? Read it.

/...and the purring little cat was torn out for cheating./


- How did the goat respond to the cat’s complaint when he was beaten? (Flour serves the thief right.)

Can these words be called a proverb, folk wisdom?

11. Differentiated work.

PAGE ON THE INTERACTIVE BOARD

A) Read the proverbs.

B) Choose a proverb that fits the fairy tale.
Look for a friend, but if you find him, he will be girebe.

Together it’s not heavy, but apart it’s quiet.

Tough as hell.

Two boots - brine.

12. Cover modeling.

- Let's make a cover model.

- What did you listen to? Determine the genre. Show on the model. /Fairy tale/

- What or who is this tale about? Show on the model. /Brown color/

What title did the author choose for his work? /Tricky cat/

What is the name of the work? /Tale of animals by Ushinsky “The Trickster Cat”/

13. Lesson summary.

Can we now answer the main question of the lesson?

“What does the work we read teach us, why did the authors include it in their textbook?”

14. Homework.

Read this story to your parents again at home. On the back of the sheet with the cover model, will you draw how you imagine the main character?

Finish the work in your notebook.

In the next lesson, when checking the D/Z, we will make you a homemade book for your classroom library.

/The children’s pages are used to assemble a homemade book with a cover made by the teacher./

I
Once upon a time there lived a cat, a goat and a ram in the same yard. They lived together: a tuft of hay and that in half; and if a pitchfork hits the side, it will hit Vaska the cat alone. He is such a thief and robber: wherever something bad lies, he looks there. Here comes one purring little cat, a gray forehead; he goes and cries so pitifully. They ask the cat, goat and ram:
- Kitty, little gray pubis! Why are you crying, jumping on three legs?
Vasya answers them:
- How can I not cry! The woman beat me and beat me; she tore out my ears, broke my legs, and even had a stranglehold on me.
- Why did such trouble come to you? - the goat and the ram ask.
- Eh-eh! For accidentally licking the sour cream.
“Flour serves the thief right,” says the goat, “don’t steal sour cream!”
Here the cat is crying again:
- The woman beat me, beat me; she beat and said: my son-in-law will come to me, where will he get sour cream? Inevitably, you will have to slaughter a goat or a ram.
Here a goat and a ram roared:
- Oh, you gray cat, your stupid forehead! Why did you ruin us?
They began to judge and figure out how they could get out of this great misfortune (ed.) - and decided right there: all three of them should run away. They waited until the landlady did not close the gate, and left.

II
The cat, the goat and the ram ran for a long time through the valleys, over the mountains, over the shifting sands; they landed and decided to spend the night in a mown meadow; and in that meadow there are stacks like cities. The night was dark and cold: where could I get fire? And the purring cat had already taken out birch bark, wrapped the horns of the goat and told him to knock their foreheads with the ram. A goat and a ram collided, sparks flew from their eyes: the birch bark began to burn.
“Okay,” said the gray cat, “now let’s warm up!” - and without thinking for long, he lit a whole haystack on fire.
Before they had time to warm up enough, an uninvited guest, a gray peasant, Mikhailo Potapych Toptygin, came to see them.
“Let me in,” he says, “brothers, to warm up and rest; I can't do something.
- Welcome, gray little man! - says the cat. - Where are you going from?
“I went to the beekeeping,” says the bear, “to check on the bees, but got into a fight with the men, which is why I pretended to be ill.”
So they all began to while away the night together: the goat and the ram were by the fire, the little purr climbed onto the stack, and the bear hid under the stack.

III
The bear fell asleep; the goat and the ram are dozing; Only the purr does not sleep and sees everything. And he sees: seven gray wolves are walking, one white - and straight to the fire.
- Fu-fu! What kind of people are these! - says the white wolf to the goat and the ram. - Let's try the force.
Here a goat and a ram bleated out of fear; and the cat, the gray forehead, made the following speech:
- Oh, you white wolf, prince of wolves! Don't anger our elder: God have mercy, he is angry! How it diverges is bad for anyone. But you don’t see his beard: that’s where all his strength lies; He kills all the animals with his beard, and only removes the skin with his horns. Better come and ask with honor: we want to play with your little brother who sleeps under the haystack.
The wolves on that goat bowed; They surrounded Misha and started flirting. So Misha held on and held on, and as soon as there was enough for each paw of the wolf, they sang Lazarus (they complained about fate. - Ed.). The wolves emerged from under the stack, barely alive and, with their tails between their legs, “God bless your legs!”
The goat and the ram, while the bear was dealing with the wolves, picked up the little purr on their back and quickly went home: “They say, stop wandering around without a way, we won’t get into such trouble.” The old man and the old woman were overjoyed that the goat and ram returned home; and the purring cat was also torn out for trickery.

Konstantin Dmitrievich Ushinsky

Rogue cat

Once upon a time there lived a cat, a goat and a ram in the same yard. They lived together: a tuft of hay and that in half; and if a pitchfork hits the side, it will hit Vaska the cat alone. He is such a thief and robber: wherever something bad lies, he looks there. Here comes one purring little cat, a gray forehead; he goes and cries so pitifully. They ask the cat, goat and ram:

Little cat, little gray pubis! Why are you crying, jumping on three legs?

Vasya answers them:

How can I not cry! The woman beat me and beat me; she tore out my ears, broke my legs, and even had a stranglehold on me.

Why did such trouble come to you? - the goat and the ram ask.

Eh-eh! For accidentally licking the sour cream.

The thief deserves the flour, says the goat, “don’t steal the sour cream!”

Here the cat is crying again:

The woman beat me and beat me; she beat and said: my son-in-law will come to me, where will he get sour cream? Inevitably, you will have to slaughter a goat or a ram.

Here a goat and a ram roared:

Oh, you gray cat, your stupid forehead! Why did you ruin us?

They began to judge and figure out how they could get out of this great misfortune (ed.) - and decided right there: all three of them should run away. They waited until the landlady did not close the gate, and left.

The cat, the goat and the ram ran for a long time through the valleys, over the mountains, over the shifting sands; they landed and decided to spend the night in a mown meadow; and in that meadow there are stacks like cities.

The night was dark and cold: where could I get fire? And the purring cat had already taken out birch bark, wrapped the horns of the goat and told him to knock their foreheads with the ram. A goat and a ram collided, sparks flew from their eyes: the birch bark began to burn.

Okay,” said the gray cat, “now let’s warm up!” - and without thinking for long, he lit a whole haystack on fire.

Before they had time to warm up enough, an uninvited guest, a gray peasant, Mikhailo Potapych Toptygin, came to see them.

Let me in, he says, brothers, to warm up and rest; I can't do something.

Welcome, gray little man! - says the cat. - Where are you going from?

“I went to the beekeeping,” says the bear, “to check on the bees, but I got into a fight with the men, which is why I pretended to be ill.”

So they all began to while away the night together: the goat and the ram were by the fire, the little purr climbed onto the stack, and the bear hid under the stack.

The bear fell asleep; the goat and the ram are dozing; Only the purr does not sleep and sees everything. And he sees: seven gray wolves are walking, one white - and straight to the fire.

Fu-fu! What kind of people are these! - says the white wolf to the goat and the ram. Let's try the force.

Here a goat and a ram bleated out of fear; and the cat, the gray forehead, made the following speech:

Oh, you, white wolf, prince of wolves! Don't anger our elder: God have mercy, he is angry! How it diverges is bad for anyone. But you don’t see his beard: that’s where all his strength lies; He kills all the animals with his beard, and only removes the skin with his horns. Better come and ask with honor: we want to play with your little brother who sleeps under the haystack.

The wolves on that goat bowed; They surrounded Misha and started flirting. So Misha held on and held on, and as soon as there was enough for each paw of the wolf, they sang Lazarus (they complained about fate. - Ed.). The wolves emerged from under the stack, barely alive and, with their tails between their legs, “God bless your legs!”

The goat and the ram, while the bear was dealing with the wolves, picked up the little purr on their back and quickly went home: “They say, stop wandering around without a way, we won’t get into such trouble.”

The old man and the old woman were overjoyed that the goat and ram returned home; and the purring cat was also torn out for trickery.



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