The Art of Biography

CONTENTS OF CURRICULUM UNIT 13.03.07

  1. Unit Guide
  1. Context
  2. Rationale
  3. Guiding Question
  4. My Biography Assumptions
  5. Objective
  6. Curricular Plan
  7. My biography reeducation
  8. Using pictures to tell the story
  9. Walt Disney
  10. Basic Structure of Class Time
  11. Strategies
  12. Activities
  13. Bibliography
  14. Appendix
  15. Notes

A picture is worth a thousand words: Rediscovering biography

Audra K. Bull

Published September 2013

Tools for this Unit:

Guide Entry to 13.03.07

Like a painter, a quality biographer paints a portrait of his/her subject. The biographer strives to convey an interesting and meaningful story. This unit will teach students to dig beyond the facts to a more revelatory exploration. This unit will employ four key lessons from the seminar. First of all, a quality biography, more than a simple recitation of facts, is a portraiture of a life presented in such a way to have relevance to the reader. In addition a biography, technically a non-fiction piece of text, is written with the elements of fiction: characters, setting, plot and theme. The biographer is a storyteller, yet not all aspects of a life are worth telling so the biographer must decide what stories to preserve and what to prune. Lastly, a biographer must remember there is no right or wrong way to write a biography. This unit will begin by analyzing iconic pictures representing historic events of the 20th century as a method of revealing the story behind the picture. We will then transition to studying Walt Disney with the purpose of discovering the story behind his success. The unit will conclude with a living history presentation of a biographical subject.

(Developed for Reading, grades 6-8; recommended for Reading, English, and Language Arts, grades K-12)

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