CAARP
CAARP
School
Teacher JOHN RED GADON VENUS Learning Area ENGLISH
II. CONTENT Judging the Relevance and Worth of Ideas, Soundness of Author’s
Reasoning, and the Effectiveness of the Presentation
III. LEARNING
RESOURCES
A. References PIVOT 4A pg. 118 of 349
MELC pg. 140
1. Teacher’s Guide Pages
2. Learner’s Materials Pages
3. Textbook pages
4. Additional Materials from Power point Presentation, Chalk, Bond paper, YouTube
Learning Resource (LR)
Portal
B. Other Learning Resources
IV. PROCEDURES Prayer
Greetings
Checking of Attendance
Very Good. This activity helps you to unlocked the vocabulary that
you will encounter in our today’s lesson. This activity also boost your
solving skills with a little integration of basic math keeping it
engaging and fun.
C. Presenting WHAT’S WRONG? (Individual)
examples/instances of the
new lesson Instructions: Read the conversation of Marie and Clara and answer the
following questions.
Clara: Have you read the Facebook post circulating online since April
2? It was confirmed that serial killers are roaming around our
neighboring town. According to my friend, who resides in the
mentioned town, there are four victims in the different Barangays. I
am worried about my relatives there. I hope they are fine.
Marie: I think you are worrying for nothing, because earlier today, I
have read some news from Frontline Pilipinas published by news
correspondent Justinne Punzalan. Based on the article, Manila City
Mayor, Honey Lacuna and Manila Police District had clarified the
said issue. According to them, it is not true that there are serial killers
roaming around in their town and it is just a FAKE NEWS!
Questions:
1. Which statements are more convincing? Clara’s or Marie’s?
- Marie’s statements are more convincing.
Finally, while evaluating any source, whether online or print, take into
account the date of publication or latest update. Even high-quality
items might become out of date and unsuitable for certain tasks.
Put on your thinking caps and use the CAARP (Currency, Accuracy,
Authority, Relevance, and Purpose) to help you evaluate
information sources.
Source #1:
A blog post titled "Why Vaccines Are Dangerous" written by an
anonymous author. It has no references or scientific evidence and was
last updated in 2015.
Source #2:
An article titled "Climate Change and Its Impact on Oceans"
published in 2023 by National Geographic. The author is a marine
biologist with a Ph.D., and the article includes references to scientific
studies.
Source #3:
A social media post claiming that drinking lemon water cures all
diseases. The post has no scientific references and was shared by a
fitness influencer with no medical background.
Source #4:
A government website titled "Healthy Eating Guidelines for Teens",
published in 2022 by the Department of Health. It includes evidence-
based information and practical tips.
Source #5:
An online article titled "Top 10 Ways to Lose Weight Fast", published
on a website that sells diet supplements. The article promotes its
products without scientific evidence.
This activity will help the students to have self-reflection and self-
realization about how social media platforms affects their skills in
grammar. In addition, this activity aims to help them comprehend and
analyze what they’re reading.
H. Making generalizations and General Genius
abstractions about the lesson
Instructions: Everyone will stand. The teacher will ask the questions,
and the students will answer. The first student to answer correctly will
be seated.
How can CAARP help you analyzing the text you’re reading if it is
fact or fictitious?
- CAARP helps by checking a text’s Accuracy for factual details, the
author’s Authority for credibility, and its Purpose to detect bias or
fiction.
I. Evaluating Learning QUIZLET
Instructions: Read each question carefully and choose the best answer.
4. Which criterion assesses how well the information fits your specific
needs?
A. Currency
B. Relevance
C. Purpose
D. Accuracy
V. REMARKS
VI. REFLECTION
A. Number of learners who
earned 80% on the formative
assessment.
B. Number of learners who
require additional activities
for remediation.
C. Did the remedial lessons
work? Number of learners
who have caught up with the
lesson.
D. Number of learners who
continue to require
remediation.
E. Which of my teaching
strategies worked well? Why
did this work?
F. What difficulties did I
encounter which my
principal or supervisor can
help me solve?
G. What innovation or localized
materials did I use/discover
which I wish to share with
other teachers?
Prepared by:
JOHN RED GADON VENUS
Practice Teacher
Checked by:
MARY RUTH L. GAPIZA JENALYN H. PATALEN
Cooperating Teacher Cooperating Teacher
Noted by:
VERNANDINA B. BAGSIT
HEAD TEACHER III Approved by:
RICKY A. APOSTOL
PRINCIPAL IV