English Instructional Plan – Cross-cultural Literary Analysis
- Subject:
- English
- Reading
- Material Type:
- Lesson Plan
- Author:
- VDOE Project Team
- Date Added:
- 04/18/2022
English Instructional Plan – Cross-cultural Literary Analysis
A quick guide to note pages for self-monitoring reading, and a list of journal prompts to reflect on daily independent reading.
A list of journal prompts for daily independent reading
A list of journal prompts for daily independent reading
This resource provides a simple, focused grading tool to assess literature analysis. It can be applied to demonstrations of skill through writing or speaking.
Title: Narrative Elements LessonTopic: Narrative ElementsEducational Standards: SOL 9.4Subject Area: English 9
Students will learn about abstraction by building a model computer and then breaking a classic story down into simple components.
1.)Literature should be puzzling, magical and mystifying. The best literature hinders easy interpretation and compels return visits. Poetry serves this purpose perfectly. Poetry is not meant to be solved. The ambiguous nature of the poem is one of the reasons it is not a favorite of the majority of class, but rather the minority.Poetry allows me to teach my students how to write, read, and understand any text. It also provides a healthy outlet for swelling teenage emotions. Some of the most empathetic and trusting moments in the classroom community for me over the past twenty years has come from students sharing their original work, to say nothing of the speaking and listening SOLS that are often overlooked in high school English. This lesson is for the discovery of poetry.