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Up to six 50-minute sessions

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| Overview |
Designed to explore the hero and the heroic in literature, this
lesson provides a sequence of activities, which range from a class discussion
defining heroism to using character maps and Venn diagrams to compare multiple
characters from one or more works of literature.
While the various activities
are designed to build upon one another, this lesson is designed to be flexible,
and most of the activities can stand on their own.
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| From Theory to Practice |
As Rodrigues and Badaczewski explain
in their section on “Involving
Students with Character” (59-68), students often need structured activities
to help them analyze the fine detail of characters, even stereotypical characters,
within the context of their specific text. Brian Moon explains, “Like
cars, computers, clothing, and other consumer goods, written texts are products
of culture; as cultural artifacts, these things are made to fit into people’s
lives and to support certain ways of thinking and acting” (30). This lesson
plan asks students to combine their analysis of the fine details of the text
with cultural awareness of how those details are “cultural artifacts” that
tell us about the time and place in which they were written.
The following activities are designed to encourage students to explore the hero
and the heroic not as fixed ideas but concepts dependent upon contexts such as
situation, culture, gender, expectations, etc. The activity in Session Four:
Word Portraits is derived from the "Qualities of Character" reproducible in Rodrigues
and Badaczewski’s A Guidebook for Teaching Literature.
Further Reading
Moon, Brian. Studying Literature: New Approaches to Poetry and Fiction.
The
NCTE
Chalkface
Series. Urbana, IL: NCTE, 2000.
Rodrigues, Raymond J., and Dennis Badaczewski. A Guide
Book for Teaching Literature. New York: Allyn and Bacon, 1978.
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| Student Objectives |
Students will
- develop an understanding of how texts establish character
- explore the concept of the hero and the heroic in a variety
of texts and/or cultures
- work collaboratively to negotiate interpretations of texts
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| Instructional Plan |
Resources
Preparation
- Preview lesson and decide which activities you wish to use
and how much time you wish to spend. The lesson is designed to be flexible.
You may just wish to use a single session, or you may decide to never have
your students come together as a whole class to share their results, etc.
Adapt the lesson to fit your class.
- Make copies of the Word
Portrait Handout and, if desired, the Reader’s
Log for each student.
- Make an overhead of the Labeled Venn Diagram, if desired. Alternately,
you could draw this diagram on the board or chart paper.
- Test the 2-circle or 3-circle Venn
Diagram and the Literary
Elements Map on
your computers to familiarize yourself with the tools and ensure that you
have the Flash plug-in installed. You can download the plug-in
from the technical support page.
Instruction and Activities
Session One: Define Heroic Traits
- Divide the class into small groups, and ask them to list as
many heroic and unheroic traits as they can.
- Ask each group to share their ideas. As students list their traits, write
them on the board, chart paper, or an overhead transparency so that you have
a class list of traits. Ask students to copy the traits down for later
use.
- Ask the class to infer any heroic traits based
upon unheroic traits or vice versa.
- Ask the class to discuss why these various traits are
heroic or unheroic. Make a point of identifying which traits the class
agrees on and which there is some question about. It is fine if there is disagreement.
The
point
with
this exercise is not to create consensus but to explore the idea of heroism
which is a culturally constructed concept.
- If desired, as preparation for the next session,
you may ask your students to read about some heroes on the Web. Two useful
sites are the Heroes
of the New Millennium and the Mythology
WebQuest.
Session Two: Define Hero
- Ask students to name heroes—historical, contemporary, or
fictional. List the names students share on the board, an overhead, or chart
paper.
- Ask students to name some villains—historical, contemporary,
or fictional. Again, list the names students share on the board, an
overhead, or chart paper.
- Once you have a good list, ask the class to discuss the
individuals on the board, using the following questions to guide the conversation:
- Do we agree on who is or isn’t a hero?
- When we disagree about whether someone is a hero, what are we considering?
Why do we disagree?
- What makes the heroes heroes?
- And what makes the villains villains?
- After
the discussion, make any adjustments or revisions to the class list
of heroic and unheroic traits.
- Ask to return to their small groups and arrange the heroes whose names
they gathered at the beginning of the session into categories other than
historical, contemporary, and fictional.
- Come back together as a class, and ask each group
to explain what categories they created and who they listed in each.
- Ideally,
as this discussion progresses, students may begin to speculate that heroes
and heroism are not fixed terms. To
introduce or reinforce this notion, share the short article about British and
American lawyers holding a mock trial on July 20, 2000, in which George
Washington was tried for treason. From an American
perspective, George Washington is clearly a heroic figure, but from the British
perspective, George Washington’s role in the American Revolution was nothing
less than treason.
- If you want to explore this idea of heroes and heroism as being culturally
determined, build upon the mock
trial of George Washington and explore other American heroes and American
valorization of outlaws, criminals, and those engaging in criminal behavior.
To get discussion started, you might share some of the following statements:
On
the one hand we have violent criminals, such as Bonnie and Clyde, and the
Jessie
James
Gang, who have been, and sometimes still are, portrayed as heroic figures.
On the other hand, most Americans today consider the abolitionists who ran
the
Underground Railroad or the Civil Rights leaders of the 1960s, such
as Rosa Parks and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., to be heroes and heroic figures
even though they broke the law.
Contemporary Americans such as Hillary
Clinton, Ronald Reagan, and George W. Bush are revered
by some and reviled by others.
Session Three: Establishing the Background and
Context for Reading
- If your text requires it, you may need to provide some background and
context for your students. For instance, while we rarely consider bragging
to be a heroic virtue, in the Germanic culture of Beowulf, a hero
is expected to “speak the part.” Beowulf’s boasts are, in
a very real way, his résumé.
Likewise, while we tend to value honesty and fair play in our heroes, in
Ancient Greek culture as represented by the Iliad and the Odyssey, there
is nothing wrong with Odysseus winning through trickery and deceit.
- Before
your students begin their reading, ask students to brainstorm a list of
the ways in which an author can develop the character of a hero. Common methods
include
appearance,
words,
deeds, reputation (view of others), role models, competing models, and foils.
- As
you prepare your class to read the text, ask them to keep a list of the hero’s
traits they encounter while reading, whether we consider them heroic or not,
and how we learn about those traits (description, action, dialogue, comparison
with
other
characters).
- If desired, pass out copies of the Reader’s
Log and demonstrate
how students can use the form to gather details on their text. Alternately,
display the Reader’s
Log using an overhead projector, and ask
students to recreate the columns in their notebooks or journals.
- If you plan to use the following sessions, also ask students to keep track
of the ways that the text or the culture or cultures in the text define heroism.
Session Four: Word Portraits
- Distribute the Word
Portrait handout, and explain that in creating word portraits, the class will define
the hero’s
physical, mental, social, and moral characteristics.
- Ask students to identify adjectives from the handout that best
describe the hero, working individually or in groups of 2 or 3.
- Once the
students have filled out their Word Portraits, divide the class
into groups of 4-6 students each.
- Ask each group to tally the totals of each characteristic
listed on their Portrait. If group members have added
characteristics to the Word Portrait, ask the group to decide
whether they wish to add those characteristics to their list as
well.
- Once the
characteristics are totaled, each group should rank their characteristics
from highest to lowest.
If desired, students might write their characteristics and rankings on sections
of the board or on chart paper so that the lists can be shared and compared
easily.
- Have each group share the list the members have compiled with the
class.
- There is likely to be some disagreement, and if there is, ask each
group
to defend
its list.
- If time permits, have the class combine their rankings in a single list.
Encourage students to try to come to some consensus. Not every student
need agree with the overall
class list, and those who do not should be encouraged to defend their position.
If you plan to include Session Six, save these lists for that session.
Session Five: Heroic Trait Character Map
- Use the Character Map in the Literary
Elements Map to list the
traits for the heroes in their readings. The questions in the Character Map focus on how the image of a character is shaped by appearance, actions,
and reputation.
- Using the Character Map, ask students to list the
hero’s traits. Remind them that not all heroes are perfect and, therefore,
not to forget “unheroic” traits
as well as heroic ones.
- Once each student has completed a map, divide the class
into groups of 4 to 6 students each.
- Ask each group to compare maps and to tally
their traits and create a group map, with those traits ranked from those
upon which everyone agrees to those only one group member believes appropriate.
Each group may need to negotiate their final list, and they need not
include every trait listed in individual maps.
- After each group has tallied their results, have
each group to share those results with the class. There is likely to be
some disagreement, and if there is, ask each group to defend its map.
- If time
permits, have the class combine their rankings and try to come to some
consensus and create a class map. Not every student need agree with the overall
class map and those who do not should be encouraged to defend their position.
If you plan to include Session Six, you and your students will want to
keep the maps.
Session Six: Defining Heroes in the Text
Note: This session builds on Session Five, so be sure to complete the previous session before beginning this lesson.
- Discuss the idea that
a text can present an ideal model or conception of a hero that the text’s
heroes may themselves not achieve.
For instance, while Lancelot is often
portrayed as the perfect Arthurian knight, his affair with Guinevere, which
tears the Arthurian court apart, is clearly not acceptable behavior.
- Once
your students are comfortable with the difference between a text’s
ideal characteristics and individual character’s traits, divide students
into small groups to explore the text in more detail. If students completed
a Reader’s
Log, encourage them to return to the details they recorded
as they work on this activity.
- Remind students that the text may define
its heroic ideal through both positive as well as negative portrayals.
- Using the Character Maps and lists from Session Five, ask groups to begin
defining the text’s ideal heroic character traits.
- In
addition, ask students to return to the Character Map in the Literary
Elements Map to study alternative
visions of the heroic. Ask students to map out traits of different
characters who may serve as potential role models for the hero or as competing
models
within
the text.
In many of the Arthurian stories, for instance, Gawain and Lancelot
are opposed as different models of knighthood. Likewise, while Bilbo Baggins
is clearly the hero of The Hobbit, the novel offers a number competing models
of heroism in such figures as Bard, Beorn, Thorarin, and Jane Austen’s
protagonists are always confronted with a number of men whom they might marry.
- Once your
students have their Character Map completed and printed out,
they can use the 2-circle or 3-circle Venn
Diagram, depending on the number of characters, to compare characters
with each other and/or the text’s
heroic ideal. Showing students a labeled Venn Diagram can help make this task
clearer.
Extensions
- The above activities can be used to compare heroes between
texts and cultures. For instance, an entire unit on the hero could incorporate
this lesson as a way of comparing a number of heroes. Likewise it could be
used to compare characters from fiction, drama, movies, even history.
- Have students use the Profile Publisher to create a profile for a hero. Stress to students that the profile should explore several aspects of the character; they should try to represent the hero’s complex nature instead of settling for simpler representations.
Web Resources
- George
Washington Tried for Treason—At Last!
http://www.netlondon.com/news/2000-29/40AF6832C194D49C802.html
- Brief news article on George Washington being tried for treason.
- Heroes of the New Millennium
http://www.drake.edu/journalism/CenturysEnd/heroes.html
- A short article discussing a number of heroes for the second half of the
Twentieth Century.
- English I Mythology WebQuest
http://www.chs.clayton.k12.mo.us/ACADEMIC/EngRes/MythWebQst.html
- This WebQuest provides links to a number of historical and fictional heroes.
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| Student Assessment/Reflections |
At each stage, ask students to reflect on both the process and
the results of their studies in a journal or reader’s notebook. Encourage
your
students to reflect upon the process of collaboration and negotiation involved
with group work as well as the procedure and their findings.
You may wish to incorporate the studies of heroic character into quizzes, exams,
or papers. Such formal assessment should not look for a narrow range of correct
answers but in students’ ability to support analysis of characterization with
examples from the text.
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1 - Students read a wide range of print and nonprint texts to build an understanding of texts, of themselves, and of the cultures of the United States and the world; to acquire new information; to respond to the needs and demands of society and the workplace; and for personal fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, classic and contemporary works.
2 - Students read a wide range of literature from many periods in many genres to build an understanding of the many dimensions (e.g., philosophical, ethical, aesthetic) of human experience.
3 - Students apply a wide range of strategies to comprehend, interpret, evaluate, and appreciate texts. They draw on their prior experience, their interactions with other readers and writers, their knowledge of word meaning and of other texts, their word identification strategies, and their understanding of textual features (e.g., sound-letter correspondence, sentence structure, context, graphics).
6 - Students apply knowledge of language structure, language conventions (e.g., spelling and punctuation), media techniques, figurative language, and genre to create, critique, and discuss print and nonprint texts.
9 - Students develop an understanding of and respect for diversity in language use, patterns, and dialects across cultures, ethnic groups, geographic regions, and social roles.
11 - Students participate as knowledgeable, reflective, creative, and critical members of a variety of literacy communities.
12 - Students use spoken, written, and visual language to accomplish their own purposes (e.g., for learning, enjoyment, persuasion, and the exchange of information).
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