Explaining Character in Shakespeare

CONTENTS OF CURRICULUM UNIT 15.02.06

  1. Unit Guide
  1. Introduction
  2. Rationale
  3. Demographics
  4. Essential Understanding/Questions
  5. Understanding Character in Shakespeare
  6. Strategies
  7. Teacher Resources
  8. Classroom Activities
  9. Annotated Bibliography
  10. Appendix
  11. Notes

Examining Shakespeare’s Characters, Character’s Choices and the Consequences to Make Them Relevant to Middle School

Michelle Wiedenmann

Published September 2015

Tools for this Unit:

Demographics

Conrad Schools of Science (CSS) is a unique school in the Red Clay School District housing grades from sixth to twelfth. The school is considered a magnet school with a primary focus on mathematics, science and technology. The high school courses offered are meant to lead into various pathways: Allied Health, Sports Physical Therapy, Engineering and Biotechnology. All students now have to apply and interview in order to be accepted into the school. I am currently teaching 6th grade English/Language Arts and Special Education. In the past couple years at CSS the Special-education component was served using the inclusion model. Since I am dual-certified in teaching special –education and middle school English, I would teach a group of regular education students with the special-education population in the same class. The past school year, I have co-taught in in sixth grade English/Language Arts class where I am considered the content teacher while I had another special-education teacher assist on one day while an English Language Learner (ELL) specialist would come in the next day. Going into the 2015-2016 school year, I will continue to teach 6th grade English/Language Arts in an inclusion setting.

For this curriculum unit, I will focus on my sixth grade English/Language Arts class. Since the classes will be an inclusion setting, the lesson will focus on differentiating instruction so that the gifted students as well as the classified special-education students and the ELL students in the class will be able to comprehend the material. This unit has been made to fit a block schedule of 90 minutes classes.

Comments:

Add a Comment

Characters Left: 500

Unit Survey

Feedback