Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Different Approaches to the Same Task


 This lesson was focused on poetry in an AP Literature classroom.  



I gave small groups of students an envelope with 19 slips of paper in it.  The slips were individual lines of the poem The Death of a Toad by Richard Wilbur--plus the title.


Then, based on what we had learned about poetry in terms of syntax, rhyme scheme, structure, point of view, & more, students were to fit the "puzzle" of the poem together.  (NOTE: I did NOT cut the papers such that the students could actually fit the lines together puzzle-style...and I told them this.)


This year, my students were so thoughtful about their approach to solving the puzzle, that I just had to share it with you.


Here are some direct quotes from their conversations:


  • After reading over the poem "let's organize it before & after his death." (Focusing on PLOT & STRUCTURE)

  • "Let's look at all of the periods so then we can figure out how full sentences fit together" (Focusing on SYNTAX & STRUCTURE)

  • "How does the rhyme scheme work? Is it AA BB or is it AB AB...?" (Focusing on RHYME SCHEME & STRUCTURE)
There were more, but these were the few I jotted down as they worked.  I was so impressed with them--pulling together all the things they knew and had learned about poetry in order to figure out how this poem "worked."

Monday, March 28, 2022

Everything I Need to Know About Teaching I Learned From Supermarket Sweep

Okay, okay...so I didn't learn everything from Supermarket Sweep, but the show WAS an inspiration for a recent lesson.



Students were about to embark on their Shakesperience, and to introduce a variety of topics related to Shakespeare, his life, and works, I created a trivia game for my students.  I told them that their success in the trivia game would directly correlate with their success on another game tomorrow.

Here's what I did:

1. Teams with the highest scores got additional minutes for a Scavenger Hunt throughout the school.
2.  All of the clues were written in "Shakespearean language"--with a textual example, integrated properly, of course.

3. For example: The place you go to let your “candied tongue lick absurd pomp” (III.ii.50) Here, you may buy food during a tournament of men and quench your thirst and hunger.

4. Here are the time allowances I provided:
High Score: 2:00 lead time for the hunt
Next Score: 1:30
Next Score 1:00
Everyone else: released after the one minute was up


Ultimately, the times didn't matter all that much. The kids with the least amount of time won...they just did better with the clues.  However--the gradual release time was super helpful in not having all them racing to the same spot at the same time.

In the end:








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