Lesson Plan 2.4 - Character Traits and Characterization


Overall Expectations 

1. Reading for Meaning: students read and demonstrate an understanding of a variety of literary, informational, and graphic texts, using a range of strategies to construct meaning;                            

2. Understanding Form and Style: recognize a variety of text forms, text features, and stylistic elements and demonstrate understanding of how they help communicate meaning;                          

3. Reading With Fluency: use knowledge of words and cueing systems to read fluently;                 

4. Reflecting on Skills and Strategies: reflect on and identify their strengths as readers, areas for improvement, and the strategies they found most helpful before, during, and after reading.            

5. Listening to Understand: listen in order to understand and respond appropriately in a variety of situations for a variety of purposes;                      

Specific Expectations

READING: 1.3 identify the most important ideas and supporting details in texts as they relate to character and characterization; 1.5 extend understanding of texts by making rich and increasingly insightful connections between the ideas in them and personal knowledge, experience, and insights; CRITICAL LITERACY: 1.8 identify and analyze in detail the perspectives and/or biases evident in texts, including complex and challenging texts, commenting with understanding and increasing insight on any questions they may raise about beliefs, values, identity, and power 

Learning Skills (Where applicable):


Learning Goals 

This lesson will provide students with the analytical tools to discuss and write sophisticated and thoughtful character analyses. 

Update: Students will be introduced to Assignment #3 The Swimmer and will begin their topic selection and brainstorming

Update: Students will share their AS Learning Freytag's Pyramid Assignment with the class

By the end of this lesson you are able to discuss and write sophisticated and thoughtful character analyses using the tools and examples covered in the lesson.

Materials and Resources

Annotation PPTX

A Perfect Day for Banana Fish by J.D. Salinger

Celia is Back by Amy Hempel

Five Facts of Fiction PPTX

Steven King on Writing

The Story of An Hour by Kate Chopin

X by Lois Gould



Timing

(min)

Lesson


5

TODAY'S ICEBREAKER 

Tell us about the last English language movie that you saw and liked. What did you like about it?

3

INTRODUCTION VIDEO    Done

Journaling reminder

Deep Reading and annotating

Reminder to keep reading The Swimmer by John Cheever for the OF LEARNING exam in Lesson #7 – last for the unit. 

15

Short Quiz: (AS Learning) 1 mark for each answer  Done

5 Simple Answer Questions

15

Video Lecture #1  Done

Teacher reads Celia is back. Pause this lecture and open a copy of Celia is Back found in the Unit Resource file [PROP Jello-)

The next Activity is to answer the questions at the end of the story

37

Activity #1                                                                                                                   Re-Read the short story Celia is Back by Amy Hempel and answer the questions at the end the story.

15

Video Lecture #2  Done

  • Touch on some of the answers to the questions following the story
  • Impressionism and Understatement
  • Psychoanalytical factors – Character Flaws 
  • This story o the opposite of Chekhov’s A Day in the Country who is the caregiver – role reversal
  • Next students read The Story of An Hour

35

Activity #2  Done

The Story of An Hour by Kate Chopin

When and where do you think this story is set and when was it written? What is its historical significance? (psychological and sociological factors)

15

Video Lecture #3   Done                                                                                                     

  • Follow up Chopin’s story. When did she live (feminist perspective Kate Chopin (1850–1904). At the time women could not vote, own a house, married women would not be hired, have their own bank account. Chopin is an American writer best known for her stories about the inner lives of sensitive, daring women. Her novel The Awakening and her short stories are read today in countries around the world, and she is widely recognized as one of America’s essential authors. 
  • Note about A Doll’s House by Henrich Ibsen
  • What you can look for in stories – perspectives Feminism…. Conflict (Marxist) …. Colonialism (Dead Man’s Path by Chinua Achebe) … Sociological/Political.
  • As a teacher I look for a range of critical perspectives.
  • The portrayal of male characters in stories VS Women (psychological and sociological factors). --- we will meet this again in The House on Mango Street.
  • Remember to look for Archetypes

Chinua Achebe (Colonial 1930-2013) was a Nigerian novelist, poet, professor, and critic. His first novel Things Fall Apart (1958), often considered his masterpiece is the most widely read book in modern African literature. 

40

Activity #3: 

Read Dead Man’s Path by Chinua Achebe and consider the types of conflict that arise. How was Michael Obi, the new headmaster acting in terms of our list of character traits such as logically, sensually, intuitively, etc.

This story will be part of this lesson’s Discussion Forum.

25

Discussion Forum:                                                                                                                   

Kate Chopin's story and Chinua Achebe’s stories both deal with social and inner conflict? Do you agree? What are they?

Update: Intro to Assignment #3 The Swimmer; Requirements, Expectations and Reviewing of making Annotated Notes

Assignment FOR Learning / Homework

Read the short story entitled X. A Fabulous Child's Story by Lois Gould

Write a short paragraph of between 75-100 words explaining at least three reasons why the parents made the decision to name their baby X.

Exit Card

Please answer a few short reflection questions based on Lesson #3 on the Exit Card on the Moodle Course Page

Assessment Strategies

Check all that apply (Teacher may modify the list)

For Learning

As Learning

Of Learning

Student product:

  • Diagnostic tests
  • Practice quiz
  • Pop quizzes
  • Homewor
  • Class notes
  • Peer feedback
  • Practice questions
  • Practice tests

Observation:

  • Class discussions
  • Peer feedback

Conversation:

X Student teacher conferences

X Small group discussions

Student product:

  • Learning logs         Self-assessment sheet

X Homework

□ Self-analysis sheet

□ Peer-analysis sheet

Observation:

Whole class discussions

 Group discussions

Conversation:

X Student teacher conferences

X Small group discussions

  • Pair work
  • Quiz

Student product:

  • Assignments
  • Tests
  • Exam
  • Case studies
  • Business report

Observation:

□ Student-led discussion/debate

  • Presentation
  • Performance tasks

Conversation:

□ Student teacher conferences

□ Question and answer session

Lesson Tools

Check all that apply (Teacher may modify the list)

Direct Instruction

Structured overview

Lecture

Compare & contrast

Socratic method

Demonstrations

Indirect Instruction

□ Problem solving

Case studies (short stories)

Reading for meaning

Inquiry

Reflective discussion

Writing to inform

Concept formation

□ Concept mapping

Concept attainment

Instructional Skills

Explaining

□Demonstrating

□Questioning

Interactive Instruction

PowerPoint

□Video clip

□ Debates

□ Role playing

□Brainstorming

□ Peer partner

□ Learning/analysis

Discussion

□ Laboratory groups

□ Cooperative learning 

□ Groups

□ Jigsaw

□ Problem solving

□ Conferencing 

Independent Study

□Essays

Computer assisted 

□ instruction

Journals

□ Learning logs

□ Reports

Learning activity packages

□ Correspondence lessons

□ Learning contracts

Homework

□ Research projects

Assigned questions

□ Learning centers

Experiential Learning

□ Field trips 

□ Conducting 

□ Experiments

□ Simulations

□ Games

□ Story telling

□ Focused imaging

□ Field observations

□ Role-playing

□ Model building

□ Surveys

□ Case studies


Last modified: Tuesday, 28 September 2021, 10:19 PM