Caveat Emptor… Unless It’s Free

As I have been working to create UbD plans over the last couple of days, a couple of things have become glaringly obvious to me.

The first is that the quality of available study guides and teachers’ guides varies widely.  Most of them only have a handful of “good” lesson plans.  What I mean by “good” is that I can use the plans without too much modification for my students, it is sufficiently challenging for high school, and it doesn’t involve too much of what I think of as “fluffy” work.   I am totally all for using what I can without reinventing the wheel.  My English Education professors encouraged us to steal, steal, steal.  This was back in the day when listservs were well-populated and would have been great for teachers to share ideas, but teachers weren’t on them, and it was well before the age of blogs, wikis, webquests, etc.  Our best source for ideas, if I recall, was ERIC.  I had to create entire units by myself, stealing where I could, but mostly finding I had to buy anything that was really helpful (Perfection Learning units, Shakespeare Set Free, Novel Guides, etc.)  It was a pain, and I envy new teachers for the fact that they have access to the Internet with this wealth of ideas.  It must be much easier to create plans now than it used to be.

I have found some challenge, however, in finding lessons that are sufficiently challenging.  They are indeed out there, but the best way to find them seems to be real search-engine savvy rather than anything else.  I have not often found that huge repositories of plans have too much to offer.  It’s rare for me to find something usable in those kinds of places, and those I find usually need to be modified somewhat.  Sometimes, for instance, I find parts of the assignment interesting, but most of it is “fluff.”  There seems to be a lot of Shakespeare fluff out there.  I know the current thinking is to teach through performance, and while I do some of that, I think most of the unit plans I’ve seen depend on performance for almost all assessment, and that makes me uncomfortable.  I think the biggest reason why is that I dislike roleplaying myself.  I loathe it when I’m asked to roleplay situations for professional development, for instance.  I never minded doing it for school too much, I guess, but I find lessons in which students have to dig into the language through close-reading text study more compelling.  Students are invariably not attuned enough to Shakespeare’s language to act it out, and I find sharing professional performances more valuable for their learning.

I know plenty of people will disagree with me on the performance aspect of teaching Shakespeare; it seems to be the prevailing wisdom that students need to act out the whole play, complete with costumes and promptbook, in order to understand it.  I would feel different, I’m sure, if I were a drama teacher or had a drama background.  Still, I have never had complaints about not doing performance.

A perfect case in point — something I’d never do again — was something my supervising teacher and I did together in our Romeo and Juliet unit.  It came straight out of Shakespeare Set Free: Teaching Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream.  The idea is that students create masks to wear to class and they learn an Elizabethan dance similar to one that Romeo and Juliet might have danced when they met.  To me, 10 years after I did this with a class, this seems fluffy in the extreme.  We weren’t digging into the text at all.  We weren’t reading about it or writing about it.  On the other hand, some great activities can be found in the same section of the book.  For example, a great activity which asks students to really figure out language is the Love Connection handout on p. 133 of the book.  Students not only have to interpret the text, but also what the text says about the character’s attitude or beliefs, which is a great way for students to move from simple decoding to understanding.  What I am essentially getting at (but it took me this long, blathering the whole time, to figure out how to say it) is that many assignments you’ll find online or in these kinds of unit plan books are activity-based and not authentic assessments, to borrow the language of UbD.  Students have fun, but don’t really learn what you are trying to get them to learn.  I sure had a lot of pretty masks for my bulletin board, and we had fun goofing around in a big circle, dancing, but I don’t think either activity really did much to advance our students’ understanding of Romeo and Juliet, and so many performance-based lesson plans tend to look suspiciously like that lesson.

The great thing about what is available is that you generally don’t have to pay for it, so you’re not out $20 or so after purchasing a book of useless activities.  If you are planning to buy a book, see if there’s a way to look through it to see if it’s useful before you purchase it.  It will probably be worth it if you can use some of the lessons year after year, especially if handouts are provided.

[tags]ubd, shakespeare, lesson plans, unit plans[/tags]

Macbeth Unit

After a marathon planning session I don’t think I ever would have started had I realized how long it would take, I have finally finished (I think) my UbD unit for Macbeth. Take a look at it and tell me what you think. I am not sure my performance task is exactly in line with the ideas I’ve used before for authentic tasks, but I just couldn’t wrap my head around some of the ideas I had for “authentic” tasks. They just seemed really silly. Instead, I thought my students could research the play’s various influences and come to a conclusion about why it was written in the way it was written. I actually think it will be more challenging than the “authentic” task I came up with, and it will help my students stretch their research skills.

I found some great resources while planning, one of which was A Way to Teach, a site created by Joe Scotese, a teacher at Chicago’s Young Whitney Magnet High School, and his students. A wealth of amazing handouts and lesson ideas can be found there. Registration is free!

Another resource I found is a collection of plans provided by and for UK teachers called Teachit’s English Teaching Resources.  You can still download many of the pdf’s, though access to some documents is for subscribed members only (subscription isn’t free).

[tags]english, literature, shakespeare, macbeth, lesson plan, resources, ubd, understanding by design[/tags]