My big focus over the past year has been providing students with multiple ways to show they are learning in my classroom. For example, when students read Of Mice and Men in class, they have the option to take a multiple choice quiz, a short answer quiz, or the cartoon "Did you read?" quiz.
Currently, students are reading The Crucible in my class and have a choice of how they would like to SHOW their understanding of the play.
1. Chapter questions (BOOOOORIIIIING - but a handful of students still choose them.)
2. Reciprocal teaching (summarize, question, predict, connect.)
3. Note-taking (You earn points based on the number of notes you take as well as the quality of your notes, focusing on the development of plot, characters, and major themes.)
4. The 5 W's (Who, what, when, where, why?)
I really don't like the 5 Ws. They are tough to grade and leave a lot of gaps for ME. I'm not always quite sure that the student is completely GRASPING the concept fully. I'm not opposed to doing the cartoon "Did you read?" But these acts are VERY long and detailed - I would rather use those quizzes for times where students only had a small chunk of reading to do for homework.
Any suggestions for an activity I could use to replace the 5? Thanks!!
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A plot graph can be quite enlightening for students as they begin to experience the text visually. Students identify key scenes in the text and plot them on the x axis against their emotional intensity on the y. This gives them a sense of the structure and movement of the play as well as providing a handy plot summary.
If you want to extend this to a class activity, each student can take one scene of the play and plot this in more detail (you need to agree on levels of emotional intensity beforehand - eg what kind of situation is 1 and what kind is 5). The results are strung together as a frieze around the room. Students can then find images that evoke the mood or tone of particular scenes and stick these on the frieze. The visual effect of the changing mood can be quite startling and bring out aspects of the play that students find difficult to identify.
Thank you!! These are all some excellent recommendations! I am planning on making some changes to the unit for next year, but I probably won't have time to make these considerations until after finals (it doesn't help that I'm expecting my first child in June!!)
I will be sure to reply and upload anything I design - I love that I can probably take ALL of these suggestions and apply them to other works of literature we read in class.
And I love the emotions chart. I think we will do it with the entire class. THE CRUCIBLE is such an emotionally draining piece that I usually read a scene and then show the same scenes from the movie because I think students MISS how emotional all of these characters are when they are just reading out of a play book (even with all of Miller's stage instructions).
Thanks again! :)
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