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Prestwick House Sample Pack Pack Literature Made Fun! Lord of the Flies by William GoldinG Click here to learn more about this Pack! Click here to find more Classroom Resources for this title! More from Prestwick House Literature Literary Touchstone Classics Literature Teaching Units Grammar and Writing College and Career Readiness: Writing Grammar for Writing Vocabulary Vocabulary Power Plus Vocabulary from Latin and Greek Roots Reading Reading Informational Texts Reading Literature

Pack Literature Made Fun! by Erich Maria Remarque Copyright 2006 by Prestwick House, Inc., P.O. Box 658, Clayton, DE 19938. 1-800-932-4593 www.prestwickhouse.com Permission to copy this unit for classroom use is extended to purchaser for his or her personal use. This material, in whole or part, may not be copied for resale. ISBN 978-1-60389-189-9 Item No. 301649

Table of Contents Pre-Reading WWI Timeline...4 Predicting Themes I...8 Predicting Themes II...12 Interviewing a Veteran...14 Chapters One-Twelve Chapter Titles...18 Chapters One-Nine Creative Writing...22 Chapter One Point of View...24 Chapter Two Caricature...26 Making Inferences...28 Chapter Three Advertisements...34 Chapter Four Recognizing Figurative Language...36 Chapters One Four Reading Quiz...42 Chapters One Five Crossword Puzzle...44 Chapter Six Debate...46 Point of View...50 Characterization...52 Chapters Six Twelve Analyzing Poetry...54 Chapters Five and Seven Letter Writing...66 Chapter Seven Point of View...68 Landscape Sketch...70 Copyright 2006, Prestwick House, Inc. 2

Chapter Eight Creative Writing...72 Chapters Five Eight Reading Quiz...74 Chapter Nine Collage...78 Causes of WWI...80 Chapter Ten Using Descriptive Details...82 Chapter Eleven Creative Writing: Poetry...84 Chapter Twelve Symbolism...86 Chapters Nine Twelve Reading Quiz...90 Wrap-Up Designing a Book Cover...92 Identifying Irony...94 Creative Writing...98 Characterization...100 Obituary Writing...102 Letter to the Author...104 Writing a Review...106 Comprehension...108 Appendices Terms and Definitions...120 Directions for a Debate...123 Directions for Interviews...124 Writing Poems...125 All references come from the Ballantine Books edition of, published 1982. 3 Copyright 2006, Prestwick House, Inc.

Pre-Reading WWI Timeline Objective: Understanding the historical context of World War One was a brutal, bloody war. In a small group, use the Internet and resources from your school library to create a timeline of the war. Include information about the countries involved, major events and battles, and the number of casualties on either side. You can use the form on the following page to organize your research. Once you have conducted your research, use large white paper to construct your timeline. Organize the timeline by year, and within each year, briefly describe the major events and battles. Be sure to save room on the paper to list the countries involved and casualty figures. Make your timeline visually interesting by adding color and pictures. Be prepared to share your timeline with the class. S - 5

Chapters One Nine Creative Writing Objective: Identifying and expanding on a main idea or theme of the novel through poetry Write a poem based on one of the words listed below from the first nine chapters of the novel that reveals to the reader either your feelings about war or the plot of the novel so far. Your poem should be at least twelve lines long and contain some literary terms, such as simile or metaphor, personification, onomatopoeia, etc. Underline each literary term you include and write the name of the term at the end of the line. We have done one for you as an example. List of words to choose from: death fear youth lost friend kill strength lucky lies blood Example: Friendship The friends of my youth recede from my mind Each shell that crashes and booms sends them away Each bomb Each gun Each wound Pushes them like dust from my mind As a child, they were my life Now what? My heart is a stone; My friends now just soldiers Thrown together by chance, A few against my billion enemies, Yet, when I lose one friend Death both cries and laughs within me. ONOMATOPOEIA ANAPHORA SIMILE METAPHOR HYPERBOLE PERSONIFICATION S - 23

Chapter Three Advertisements Objective: Relating literature to life Just as a company advertises for people it needs to hire, the armed services have to recruit soldiers. Review the employment want ads in your local newspaper or some of the Internet websites that post jobs. Identify the information that is consistent in most of the advertisements, such as skills needed, hours, wages, and benefits. Create an advertisement that the U.S. Army might have published in your newspaper to recruit soldiers to fight during World War I. In addition to the standard information found in most advertisements, be sure to include any special information unique to being a soldier. S - 35

Chapters Six Twelve Analyzing Poetry Objective: Recognizing similarities between the novel and selected poems Identify connections between and various poems. Poets such as Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen spent much of their careers writing about World War I. For this activity, you will read the poems assigned by your teacher; then you ll complete an analysis chart by writing a few sentences connecting each poem to a part in the novel. S - 55

Chapter Eight Creative Writing Objectives: Manipulating the text to create poetry Identifying poetic language Create a found poem using Chapter Eight. One type of poetry is called a found poem. This type of poetry allows anyone to write a quality poem. Found poems are constructed by taking portions of writing and putting them together in poetic form to end up with a complete poem. For this activity, you should take sentences, phrases, or words from Chapter Eight and arrange them into a poem. The poem does not have to rhyme, although it certainly may. Play around with and separate Remarque s words as much as you like, but do not deviate from them part of the fun of this exercise is in creating something new from something that was already there. Your poem should be at least twelve lines long. An example created from Chapter Seven follows. You may make your poem read as you see fit. Remember to give your poem a title. Example: Dreams Cheerful, We stretch our legs: Chattering talk, loaves of bread; It is evening. Embrace me; With the booming laugh, Little brunette dreams of a miracle, Her bewildering eyes. My eyes close. Terror, fall from me: I am going away And there is a distance, A veil between us. S - 73

Chapters Nine Twelve Reading Quiz Objective: Understanding the main events Answer the following questions. 1. Why are the men very busy cleaning? 2. Paul volunteers to go on the patrol with the other men, but then he experiences some disorientation. Why? 3. Why does Paul feel bad about killing Gerard Duval? 4. Why is the scene in Chapter Ten in which the men prepare dinner strangely amusing? 5. At the hospital, why is Paul afraid of being chloroformed? 6. What happens to Franz Wachter and Peter? 7. What happens to Detering in Chapter Eleven? 8. At the end of Chapter Twelve, what happens to Paul? S - 91