Readers Theater Worksheets
Greek Myths Series Audio Lesson E05 Prometheus and Pandora's Box | Greek Mythology
Greek Myths Series Audio Lesson E05 Prometheus and Pandora's Box | Greek Mythology
Couldn't load pickup availability
This lesson is E05 within the Greek Myths Series. These are curriculum-style audio mini-lessons built for real classrooms, with ready-to-use assessments that line up with ELA and social studies literacy standards. Press play, then discuss or assign the flexible worksheet and assessments—no extra prep.
Myth Focus: A Titan’s risky gift of fire, a king of gods determined to protect his power, and a sealed jar whose opening fills the world with both suffering and hope.
Key Figures: Prometheus | Zeus | Epimetheus | Pandora | Hermes | Athena | Aphrodite | Heracles | Hope (Elpis)
Big Idea: The myth of Prometheus and Pandora’s Box shows how daring acts of compassion and moments of temptation can unleash lasting consequences, yet also plant the hope and resilience people need to live with hardship.
Perfect for upper elementary and middle school ELA, listening centers, morning meeting, sub plans, early finishers, or intervention/ELL—with built-in vocabulary, discussion prompts, and multiple ways to show understanding.
This stand-alone episode, “Prometheus and Pandora’s Box,” takes students from the cold, fireless homes of early mortals to the bright flame Prometheus steals from Olympus, and into the quiet room where Pandora struggles with her curiosity about the forbidden jar. Students hear how Prometheus’s defiance lifts humans out of darkness even as it draws Zeus’s harsh punishment, how the gods shape Pandora as part of a larger plan, and how one choice to lift a lid sends invisible evils racing across the world. They also see Hope enter the story, changing the way mortals face pain without erasing it.
WAIT! How do I know this will meet my needs?
[FREE DOWNLOAD] Audio Lesson E01 Daedalus and Icarus | Greek Mythology
What’s included
- MP3 episode (10–15 minutes)
- Teacher’s guide and answer key (PDF/DOCX)
- CCSS alignment section for Grades 6–8 and CCRA (also suitable for Grades 9–12 depending on your classroom needs)
- Themes & discussion prompts: 5 open-ended themes designed for whole-class or small-group talk
- One-page graphic organizer (cause & effect)
- 5 SAT-level vocabulary words in context
- Short answer questions (1–5): focused on recall and basic reasoning
- Challenge questions (6–12): focused on application, inference, creative response, historical connection, and civic/modern connection
- 20-question multiple-choice self-graded exit quiz
What makes Greek Mythology Audio Lessons different?
- Short on time, big on thinking: each episode is a complete myth mini-lesson in about 11–15 minutes of audio, built around one clear mythic moment and its consequences.
- Designed for listening stations and full-class use: calm pacing, clear vocabulary, and printable supports that work whether you play it whole-class or at a single Chromebook station.
- Flexible assessments, one myth at a time: from verbal discussion to organized notes, from short answers to multiple-choice, you can scale rigor up or down without rewriting materials.
- Offline-friendly: load the MP3 to an old phone, tablet, or computer and use it even if Wi-Fi is unreliable.
Classroom use ideas
Whole-class lesson
- Press play during ELA or humanities, pausing at key moments to answer the short answer questions.
- Use the Main Ideas & Themes questions to get hands in the air and push students beyond simple plot summary.
- Have students complete the graphic organizer and/or worksheet individually or in pairs.
Listening center / stations
- One device + headphones + worksheet = an independent mythology station.
- Great for early finishers, small-group rotations, or mixed-level classes where some students need more listening practice.
Make-up lesson / home learning
- Send the audio and worksheet home for students who missed the lesson.
- They can listen once, fill in the organizer and questions, and come back ready to join discussion.
What to expect
- Fits real schedules: use in a single class period, during morning meeting, as a station, or as a ready-made sub plan.
- Micro-lesson design: one episode, one big myth, clearly explained with built-in vocabulary and structured follow-up.
- Easy to use: audio, teacher’s guide, discussion prompts, graphic organizer, short-answer and challenge questions, and a 20-question MC quiz are all aligned and ready to print.
- Differentiated assessment: verbal (discussion), visual (graphic organizer), written (short answer and challenge), and recognition-based (MC quiz) options built around the same core story.
- No internet required: download once; play anywhere.
If you’re looking for an engaging, classroom-ready way to explore courage, curiosity, and consequences in Greek mythology, this Episode 5 “Prometheus and Pandora’s Box” audio lesson offers a complete, offline-ready mini-lesson. Students see how compassion and temptation can unleash lasting hardships while also discovering why hope remains inside the story.
Share
