Teaching Fantasy--complete with Lesson Plans! (Ellen Jensen Abbott)
Many of us have started out posts this month lamenting the
absence of YA in high school classrooms or pointing out that our books are not
really contenders for the Common Core curriculum. As a high school teacher
myself, I understand the tension teachers feel between teaching the hot book
that will engage the students and teaching the book students should read before going to college—not
that these are mutually exclusive! Add in the fact that your average English
teacher is teaching approximately 6-8 books per year of the thousands published
through history and is further limited by what full class sets are available in
the book closet. This reality means that the most current YA authors are hoping
for is their books to make it onto the list of suggested summer/enrichment reading
or onto the personal shelves of those English teachers who buy books and lend
them to students.
And yet, like most authors, I took the time to write a teachers’
guide for my first book, Watersmeet—a
fantasy. (If you think it’s tough to get your contemporary YA taught in
schools, try fantasy! Aside from The
Giver, Animal Farm, and 1984, very little fantasy is taught,
despite its enduring popularity.) Why did I bother? Because fantasy offers such
a wealth of learning opportunities! I came up with a list of projects students
could do that targeted a variety of learning styles, learning modalities, and
cross curricular tie-ins. Below are a few sample projects built around my
novel, but they are easily translatable to other fantasy/sci fi books, and even
realistic fiction.
Projects/Activities
(cross-curricular tie-ins and specific intelligence*
noted):
Ø
Build a model or draw a map of one of the novel’s settings: Vigar's
garden, Vranille, Watersmeet, the battlefield, one of the homes in a Sylvyad,
the Council chamber. How are the values of the community expressed in the way
these communities are built/designed? (History/civics,
Art; Spatial, Bodily-Kinesthetic,
Interpersonal)
Ø
Write a constitution or a set of laws for Vranille or Watersmeet. You will want to
consider what kind of government each community has. Look at nations from
history or current events to help you design your government. (History/Civics; Linguistic, Logical Mathematical,
Interpersonal)
Ø
Reenact the Watersmeet Council meeting allowing students to imagine possible
reasons for and against stopping the villain, Charach. Have some students play
roles of characters in the book, trying to stay in character even if the debate
changes from the book. Other students can imagine their own characters and
their particular opinions given imagined histories, backgrounds. (History/civics; Linguistic, Logical-Mathematical, Bodily-Kinesthetic,
Interpersonal, Intrapersonal)
Ø
Investigate herbal remedies—how they've been used in the past, how they
are used today, and the controversy surrounding their use. (Science; Logical-Mathematical,
Naturalist)
Ø
Many of
the creatures from Watersmeet are
familiar from other stories or mythology: fauns, centaurs, minotaurs, hags,
dwarves, fairies, trolls, dragons, the Green Man, naiads, dryads. Design
your own creature or adapt one you know from elsewhere in a new way. You
might look at other novels, in books of folklore, or on the Web. Write about or
draw this creature. (Art; Linguistic, Spatial, Interpersonal,
Naturalist)
Ø
Research the celebration of Midsummer as it's been used in other cultures and in
other time periods. (History;
Linguistic, Interpersonal)
Ø
Make a model of Abisina’s necklace using clay or wire or other appropriate
materials (Art; Spatial, Bodily-Kinesthetic)
Ø
Design your own ritual to celebrate an important event in your
community or in the natural world and have your class participate in it. (Linguistic, Bodily-Kinesthetic, Musical,
Interpersonal, Naturalist)
Ø
Create the music of the fairies or the fauns, or write one of the songs sung
in the Midsummer festival. (Music;
Musical, Linguistic)
Ø
Write a scene from Watersmeet from another point of view. How would Rueshlan look to some of the Vranian refugees? How would Haret
describe finding Abisina at the bottom of the ravine outside Vranille? How
would Corlin view Abisina? How would Lilas view Charach? (Linguistic, Interpersonal)
Ø
Write a legend from your own community—it may be a story your grandmother has told, a
family story that has become "famous," a story from first grade that
you and your classmates still remember vividly. (Linguistic, Interpersonal, Intrapersonal)
Ø
Interview a member of your family or larger
community about legends and stories
they were told as children. (Linguistic,
Interpersonal, Intrapersonal)
Ø
Write one of the stories you might find in the Watersmeet library. (Linguistic)
You can find my full teachers’ guide for Watersmeet and Book group guides for Watersmeet, The Centaur’s Daughter, and The Keeper at my website: www.ellenjensenabbott.com
* I refer
here to Howard Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences, described in his
book Frames of Mind: The Theory of
Multiple Intelligences [(1983) New
York: Basic Books]. I particularly used Thomas
Armstrong's book Multiple Intelligences
in the Classroom, 2nd Ed. [(2000) Alexandria, Virginia:
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development]. The eight intelligences
at that time were Linguistic, Logical-Mathematical, Spatial,
Bodily-Kinesthetic, Musical, Interpersonal, Intrapersonal, Naturalist.
GREAT ideas.
ReplyDeleteThese are wonderful ideas!! Howard Gardner's theories are my favorites and lend themselves to so many terrific ways to engage students!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! I modified this to use with any YA fantasy novel for my Independent Study students! Thank you so much for sharing.
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