Hero image

Diving Bell Education

Average Rating3.67
(based on 3 reviews)

Read the blog on www.divingbelleducation.com

252Uploads

68k+Views

2k+Downloads

Read the blog on www.divingbelleducation.com
The Great Gatsby: Unit of Work
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

The Great Gatsby: Unit of Work

(0)
Fitzgerald’s novel about ‘careless people’ and avarice in the modern era is an established favourite for senior students. This 30-page unit of work has been tested successfully with a mixed-ability class and provides material for a full 10-week school term. Pre-reading research tasks introduce students to the Roaring 20s, before the bulk of the unit focuses on close textual analysis. There is a mixture of tasks which get students writing analytically, personally, and creatively, helping them to build up a their own unique interpretation to the work, and eventually express this in a formal essay. There is a brief, student-friendly explanation of what a close reading is and how to perform it, followed by a sample close reading of the opening passage. Each chapter has a single-page task sheet comprising three higher-order tasks: a close reading of a nominated passage, an extended response to develop interpretative thinking, and a choice of creative writing tasks which springboard from the language and ideas in the chapter. Ten senior-level essay questions offer a choice of arguments about character, theme, language, and context, and a sample essay discusses whether we can think of the novel as a tragedy. FREE 4 Contextual research tasks Explanation of close reading method Sample close reading 9 chapters with close reading, writing at length, and creative writing tasks FREE 10 essay questions suitable for senior students Sample essay
Unit of Work: John Hersey, Hiroshima
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

Unit of Work: John Hersey, Hiroshima

(0)
John Hersey’s Hiroshima is one of the narratives that have shaped our world, and is a great core text for a study of journalism, modern non-fiction, or life-writing. This extensive unit comprises: An introductory section on the event Six sections on each of the work’s parts An extra/extension section on short films about nuclear issues A bibliography of the influence of Hersey’s journalism A close-reading exercise which compares Hersey’s style in 1946 and 1985 A list of long-form analytical and creative responses Several contextual texts including the JapaneseImperial Rescript of Surrender and the Renouncing of Imperial Divinity; poetry by other survivors, and other American essays justifying the military’s decision This unit was tested with a mixed-ability Year 10 class (age 15-16) and a lower-ability Year 11 (age 16-17) class.
Poetry Study Worksheets - Oodgeroo, China poems
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

Poetry Study Worksheets - Oodgeroo, China poems

7 Resources
This suite of poems from Oodgeroo Noonuccal (Kath Walker)'s collection on China offers a glimpse into several famous landmarks seen through the eyes of this famous indigenous poet. The poems are linguistically and structurally very simple and can be read and studied by students from a variety of language and ability levels. Poems studied are: China…woman The Past Sunrise on Huampu River Entombed Warriors Lake within a Lake Reed Flute Cave Visit to the Sun Yat Sen Memorial Hall Each poem is examined in a separate worksheet, with questions structured around Bloom’s taxonomy of lower-to-higher-order tasks. There is also a link to another poem by Chinese or Australian poets which allows teachers to discuss differences in the manner of presenting the same place or idea. Teachers often buy these worksheets together with: the Close Reading Notes (a complete reading of each poem), and the sample essay to a senior question for this topic. Please note - because of copyright costs the poems themselves must be downloaded free from the NESA website.
19th Century Poetry and Novel: Twin Units of Work
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

19th Century Poetry and Novel: Twin Units of Work

2 Resources
Victorian poetry regularly makes the top ten poems in public surveys, and much of our conception of what makes ‘good’ poetry was shaped by poets like Tennyson, Browning, Rossetti, and Arnold. This period formed the emotional and social attitudes which linger today – even in post-modern texts which claim to have moved beyond them. While the Romantics were read by the literati, the Victorian poets in this unit formed the core of public poetry consumption. An understanding of this period is essential for students who will read Edwardian and Modernist literature in later terms, by showing them what these writers and artists reacted against. The unit is designed to be taught over an 8-10 week term, and contains: Introduction to Victorian Britain – an easy research task which students can do together or individually, drawing on readily-available online resources about the nineteenth century. Seven poetry-focused modules: o The Poet Laureate: Alfred, Lord Tennyson o The Pre-Raphaelites: Dante Gabriel and Christina Rossetti o Celebrity Marriages: Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning o Personal Piety: Matthew Arnold and Gerald Manley Hopkins o Nonsense Poetry: Edward Lear and Lewis Carroll o The Poetry of Empire: Rudyard Kipling and Thomas Hardy o America: Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson A short list of films, documentaries, and series which students can watch for context. An essay-based assessment task suitable for students aged 15-16 TOGETHER WITH SILAS MARNER A thorough study of each chapter in Eliot’s short masterpiece Silas Marner. Each chapter is annotated with a short precis of the chapter’s events, so that students can quickly locate the right section, and a thematic table at the beginning lays out some of the complex philosophical and literary ideas which underpin Eliot’s morality tale. Language and narrative techniques are carefully explained, and each chapter is accompanied by a selection of quotations to strengthen students’ understanding of evidence-based arguments.