Beth, Patrick and Kim are sitting around their tables in a classroom. Jeanie is teaching at the front.
JEANIE: Ok kids鈥 today we are going to learn about syllables. Syllables are the things that make up different parts of a word. Like my name, Jeanie, it has two syllables 鈥橨ean鈥 and 鈥檈e鈥 But your name, Beth, has one syllable, 鈥橞eth鈥. To find syllables we have to listen very carefully, it鈥檚 like a beat鈥 鈥楯ean鈥欌 鈥榚e鈥欌 鈥楤eth鈥. What about this, how many syllables does this have?
Jeanie holds up a pencil.
JEANIE: To work it out, why don鈥檛 you say the word out loud to yourself and clap your hands every time you think there is a syllable. Why don鈥檛 you try Patrick.
PATRICK: Uhhh鈥 Pe鈥n鈥il
Patrick claps for three syllables.
JEANIE: Very close Patrick. But pencil actually only has two. 鈥橮en鈥 and 鈥檆il鈥.
Jeanie claps out the two syllables. We see the word 'pen-cil' written in lowercase, separated to show the two syllables, above a picture of a pencil.
JEANIE: So, now that we know how to count syllables, why don鈥檛 we all play a game? Let鈥檚 go outside and work together to find three different things with one, two and three syllables!
Outside the three kids search for things. One of them finds something.
PATRICK: I鈥檝e found one, I鈥檝e found one!
KIM: What is it?
PATRICK: It鈥檚 a rock! Rock鈥 that鈥檚 one syllable.
The word appears above a picture of a rock, it is one syllable.
The kids go back to searching for something. As Beth stands underneath a tree thinking hard, an acorn drops beside her. She points down at the acorn.
BETH: A鈥orn, A鈥orn. Acorn! I found one I found one.
She says the syllables out loud while the syllables 鈥檃鈥 and 鈥檆orn鈥 appear above a picture of an acorn.
PATRICK: Let鈥檚 work together to find the last one.
They put their hands together in the circle and lift them in unison. They lift up the lid to the sand pit. We see them from the inside of the sandpit, from behind a toy dinosaur that鈥檚 embedded in the sand. Kim's eyes light up and she reaches in and grabs it. The word appears on screen above a picture fo a dinosaur, it is seaparated into the three syllables 'din-o-saur'.
KIDS: Din - o - saur!
INTERIOR CLASSROOM - We鈥檙e back inside. On three tables are three baskets with different labels on them, 鈥橭ne鈥 鈥檛wo鈥 and 鈥檛hree鈥.
JEANIE: Great work everyone. Now why don鈥檛 we sort them into their own buckets! What do we have for one syllable?
Patrick proudly steps forward.
PATRICK: We have this鈥 rock!
Patrick walks over and chucks it in the number one basket.
BETH: We found this! An Acorn.
Beth also places the acorn in the appropriate basket.
JEANIE: Amazing! Now last but certainly not least. What did we find three syllables?
Kim walks forward. She鈥檚 holding something behind her back.
KIM: Eh hemm鈥 We found a din-o-saur!
She dramatically swings it round to hold it in front of her. When speaking it she dramatically emphasises the three syllables.
JEANIE: Wow! Can we all clap out the syllables for dinosaur together? 鈥橠ine鈥 鈥橭h鈥 鈥橲aur鈥.
Kim sets the toy dinosaur in the basket and everyone claps it out together.
End.