Descriptive writing lesson involving tasks that scaffold the student to be able to write descriptively independently. Follows the ‘I do, we do, you do’ model leading on from the previous lesson or works as a stand alone lesson. Involves improving a piece of writing as a class, then independently improving some writing. This helps encourage them to be able to spot the qualities of good descriptive writing which they can apply in their own. They have the opportunity to get creative and there are prompts provided. The lesson finishes with them evaluating one another’s creative pieces.
Lesson on Act 1 Scene 2.
Involves a sorting starter task to get the students thinking about characters and loyalty. Then an opportunity to read and/or watch the scene. Then close analysis of the scene through annotating the extract.
Modeling is used to prepare them to answer a question. You can explode the quote with the class in relation to the question and then let them write their own PEAL paragraphs. The lesson finishes with an evaluation task where students can swap books and edit.
Lesson on Act 1 Scene 4. Involves a starter which acts as a recap as well as provides the opportunity for students to make predictions.
Read the scene and then an extract is provided. Print out and give to students and allow them time to analyse and answer the questions on the slide. Then run through the extract as a class annotating the literary techniques. A model answer is provided which can be printed and annotated. Then a formal writing task to finish with answering the question; How does Shakespeare convey Romeo’s love sickness?
Lesson on Romeo and Juliet Act 1 Scene 3. Involves a clip and the opportunity to read the scene as a class. Then an extract focusing on Juliet is provided can be annotated by the students individually before feeding back as a class. I provided an example model answer that could also be printed off and could be turned into an exercise where they could annotate it. Then the lesson finishes, like the others in this series, with independent PEAL paragraph writing on how Shakespeare conveys progressive ideas on women’s rights. Prompts are provided and key terms to include.
Lesson on Act 1, Scene 5. The lesson takes the students through the scene by including extracts on the slides which can be annotated as a class. Questions are provided to assist the students with their exploration of each extract from the scene. The extracts include romeo and Juliet’s first meeting, Romeo’s first sight of Juliet and Tybalt and Lord Capulet’s confrontation.
A model answer and writing task is used to finish the lesson and consolidate their learning.