Teacher Guide: Figurative Language

Grade 3 ELA | FAST Success Kit | FL B.E.S.T. Standards

Florida B.E.S.T. Standard

ELA.3.R.3.1

Identify and explain similes, metaphors, alliteration, onomatopoeia, personification, and hyperbole in text.

What Students Need to Know

Third graders must be able to identify SIX types of figurative language AND explain what they mean. Students should understand that figurative language uses creative comparisons and expressions that aren't meant to be taken literally.

Types of Figurative Language

Simile

Definition: Compares two things using "like" or "as"

Example: "Her smile was as bright as the sun."

Clue words: like, as

Metaphor

Definition: Says one thing IS another thing (without like/as)

Example: "The classroom was a zoo today."

Clue: No "like" or "as"—direct comparison

Personification

Definition: Gives human qualities to non-human things

Example: "The wind whispered through the trees."

Clue: Objects/nature doing human actions

Hyperbole

Definition: Extreme exaggeration (not meant literally)

Example: "I'm so hungry I could eat a horse!"

Clue: Over-the-top, impossible statements

Alliteration

Definition: Repeating the same beginning sound

Example: "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers."

Clue: Multiple words start with same sound

Onomatopoeia

Definition: Words that sound like what they mean

Example: "The bacon sizzled in the pan."

Clue: Buzz, pop, crash, splash, boom, hiss

Common Misconceptions

Misconception 1: Confusing similes and metaphors

Reality: Both compare things, but SIMILES use "like" or "as." If there's no "like" or "as," it's a metaphor. "She IS a star" = metaphor. "She shines LIKE a star" = simile.

Misconception 2: Thinking all comparisons are figurative language

Reality: "This apple is bigger than that one" is a literal comparison, not a simile. Figurative language compares UNLIKE things creatively, not similar things literally.

Misconception 3: Not understanding personification vs. real actions

Reality: "The dog ran across the yard" is literal (dogs can run). "The sun smiled down on us" is personification (the sun can't really smile).

FAST Assessment Question Types

Question Type Example Stem What It Tests
Identification "Which sentence contains a simile?" Recognizing the type of figurative language
Explanation "What does the author mean by 'time flies'?" Understanding the meaning behind figurative language
Purpose "Why did the author use this metaphor?" Understanding author's craft
Classification "What type of figurative language is used in line 5?" Naming the specific type
Effect "How does this personification help the reader?" Understanding impact on meaning

FAST-Style Question Stems

Use these stems for practice and assessment:

"Which sentence from the passage contains a [simile/metaphor/etc.]?"
"What does the author mean when they write '[figurative expression]'?"
"What type of figurative language is used in the sentence '[quote]'?"
"The author uses personification to—"
"Which words from the passage are an example of alliteration?"
"The hyperbole in paragraph 2 shows that the character feels—"

5-Day Lesson Plan

Day 1: Introduction & Similes 45 min

Day 2: Metaphors & Personification 45 min

Day 3: Hyperbole & Alliteration 45 min

Day 4: Onomatopoeia & Review 45 min

Day 5: Assessment & Review 45 min

Teaching Strategies

Anchor Chart with Examples

Create a classroom anchor chart with each type, its definition, and 2-3 examples. Use color-coding (similes = yellow, metaphors = blue, etc.) for quick reference.

Sound It Out

For onomatopoeia, have students make the sounds! For alliteration, practice tongue twisters. Physical engagement helps memory.

Picture It

Have students draw what figurative language would look like if taken literally. "Raining cats and dogs" = draw cats and dogs falling from the sky. This helps them understand figurative vs. literal.

Find It in Books

During read-alouds, pause when you encounter figurative language. Have students identify the type and explain what it means.

Materials in This Kit

Resource Description When to Use
Student Concept Worksheet Introduces all six types with examples and matching activities Day 1 introduction
Practice Worksheet 14 questions covering all figurative language types Days 2-4 practice
FAST Practice Quiz 10-question assessment mirroring actual FAST format Day 5 assessment
Parent Activity Guide Home activities for finding figurative language in everyday texts Ongoing home support
Answer Keys Complete answers with explanations for all worksheets Teacher/parent reference