Discuss in class | Class 10 English Notes
By ConceptScroll Team · Published on 17 July 2026 · 4 min read
Discuss in class – this guide gives you a concise, exam-ready overview of Discuss in class from Class 10 English, written by ConceptScroll editors and reviewed against the latest NCERT textbook.
Thinking about the Text (A Baker from Goa)
This section invites students to critically engage with the text about the Goan baker by evaluating statements for their accuracy and interpreting the author’s tone. It encourages reflection on the baker’s social significance, the continuity of the profession, and cultural practices surrounding bread in Goa. The tone analysis helps students understand the author’s nostalgic yet hopeful attitude towards traditional bread-making. The writing exercise guides students to organize information about the baker’s profession into a structured paragraph, reinforcing comprehension and writing skills. The comparison activity contrasts two texts on Goan bakers, highlighting differences in style and content, and encouraging students to analyze how facts are presented. The group discussion topics extend learning by connecting the traditional profession to contemporary changes and the decline of craft-based vocations, fostering awareness of cultural heritage and economic shifts.
📊 Diagram: No diagrams; the section is text-based with comprehension and writing activities.
🧪 Activity: Oral comprehension checks, writing exercises, text comparison, and group discussions on traditional crafts.
🔗 Connection: Leads to the next section on Coorg, continuing the theme of regional cultural exploration.
Frequently asked questions
Collect information about tea, e.g. its evolution as a drink, its beneficial qualities. You can consult an encyclopedia or visit Internet websites. Then form groups of five and play the following roles: Imagine a meeting of a tea planter, a sales agent, a tea lover (consumer), a physician and a tea-shop owner. Each person in the group has to put forward his/her views about tea. You may use the following words and phrases. - I feel ... - It is important to know ... - I disagree with you ... - I think that tea ... - I would like you to know ... - I agree with ... - It is my feeling ... - I suggest ... - May I know why you ... - I am afraid ...
This is a role-play activity designed to encourage discussion and exchange of views about tea. Each participant should prepare their points based on their role:
- Tea planter: Discuss the cultivation, challenges, and importance of tea farming.
- Sales agent: Highlight marketing strategies, sales figures, and consumer preferences.
- Tea lover (consumer): Share personal preferences, health benefits experienced, and social aspects of tea drinking.
- Physician: Explain the medicinal properties, hea
You are the sales executive of a famous tea company and you have been asked to draft an advertisement for the product. Draft the advertisement using the information you collected for the role play. You can draw pictures or add photographs and make your advertisement colourful.
Draft an advertisement highlighting the unique qualities of the tea brand, such as its rich aroma, health benefits, and origin. Include catchy slogans, attractive visuals, and persuasive language to appeal to consumers. For example:
"Experience the Magic of Nature in Every Sip! Our premium Assam Tea brings you freshness, health, and happiness. Brew a cup, relax, and rejuvenate. Available at all leading stores."
Add colorful pictures of tea gardens, steaming cups of tea, and happy customers to
(i) Find, in the first stanza, three things that cannot happen in a treeless forest. (ii) What picture do these words create in your mind: “... sun bury its feet in shadow...”? What could the poet mean by the sun’s ‘feet’?
(i) The three things that cannot happen in a treeless forest as per the first stanza are:
- No bird could sit.
- No insect could hide.
- No sun could bury its feet in shadow.
(ii) The phrase “sun bury its feet in shadow” creates the image of sunlight being blocked or shaded by the trees, as if the sun has feet that are hidden or covered by the shadows cast by the trees. The poet uses this metaphor to describe how the presence of trees creates shade, preventing direct sunlight from reaching the
(i) Where are the trees in the poem? What do their roots, their leaves, and their twigs do? (ii) What does the poet compare their branches to?
(i) In the poem, the trees are inside the house, specifically on the veranda floor. Their roots work all night to disengage themselves from the cracks in the veranda floor. The leaves strain toward the glass, and the small twigs are stiff with exertion.
(ii) The poet compares the branches (boughs) to newly discharged patients who are half-dazed and moving to the clinic doors. This simile suggests that the branches are slowly and awkwardly moving out of the house.
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Clear NCERT-aligned notes on T he S ermon at for Class 10 English.