Much Ado Blockbusters

Similar documents
Death of Tybalt. Talk to Writing. Scaffolding ways to develop talk on how bias works and how it can be developed around a topic.

STAGING IT. Much Ado About Nothing

Much Ado About Nothing

CONTENTS Registered charity no Royal Shakespeare Company

Much Ado About Nothing Notes and Study Guide

Sketch Outline. I: Introduction A: Romeo and Juliet as a romantic paragon. B: Beatrice and Benedick having a rougher but truer version of love.

Instant Words Group 1

Romeo & Juliet Study Guide Questions

This is a vocabulary test. Please select the option a, b, c, or d which has the closest meaning to the word in bold.

Transfer your answers to the answer sheet

This project and its actions were made possible due to co-financing by the European Fund for the Integration of Third-Country Nationals

Contents. What the words tell us Page 2 Using language as a weapon Page 3 Antithesis: love and hate Page 5 What is iambic pentameter?

Directing Romeo and Juliet

How the Beggar Boy Turned into Count Piro

VOCABULARY MATCHING: Use each answer in the right-hand column only once. Four answers will not be used.

Section I. Quotations

The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, Act II William Shakespeare

Romeo and Juliet. a Play and Film Study Guide. Teacher s Book

He has been acting like an ape ever since his girlfriend left him.

Commonly Misspelled Words

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

All the World Still a Stage for Shakespeare's Timeless Imagination

Coolios gangster paradise came out when rap and hip hop was were taking over

Student Worksheet The Merchant of Venice By William Shakespeare

ROMEO AND JULIET Study Questions

Complete the sentence using words in the box. disappeared, wasted, miserable, appeared, appeared. to begin to be seen

Year 8 Drama. Unit One: Think Quick Unit Two: Let s Act TEACHER BOOKLET

Ch. 2: Nice to Eat With You: Acts of Communion 3. Complete this sentence about communion breaking bread together is an act

Romeo & Juliet Act Questions. 2. What is Paris argument? Quote the line that supports your answer.

Romeo and Juliet Chapter Questions

Mr Ralph Cecilio: an educator who dared to be different Antonio F Moreno SJ 08 September 2010

a. perceptions b. underparts c. dieticians 2- People in the city try to create a/an.view in their gardens. a. organic b. naturalistic c.

Approximately 40 minutes (including 5 minutes transfer time)

Complete all the questions and tasks in green.

Romeo and Juliet. a Play and Film Study Guide. Student s Book

ALL INSTRUCTIONS ARE TO BE GIVEN IN ENGLISH

bed Support Pack for b-d-p Letter Confusion Letter orientation Strategies First the bat and then the ball.

A Midsummer Night s Dream

Stowaway on the Pony Express

דגם תשובות לשאלון באנגלית, שאלון ד' ספרות, LITERATURE MODULE D

Look Mom, I Got a Job!

1. jester A. feeling sad you are not with people or things. 4. together D. something that is the only one of its kind

ACT 1. Montague and his wife have not seen their son Romeo for quite some time and decide to ask Benvolio where he could be.

FEEDBACK TUTORIAL LETTER. 1st SEMESTER 2017 ASSIGNMENT 1 ENGLISH IN PRACTISE EPR511S

The Memoir Medley: Where Prose meets Poetry

RUNEMARKS READERS GUIDE. Joanne Harris.

Illustration Quentin Blake

Weekly Homework A LEVEL

The Bombs That Brought Us Together

Where the word irony comes from

English 9 Romeo and Juliet Act IV -V Quiz. Part 1 Multiple Choice (2 pts. each)

Test Review - Romeo & Juliet

The History and the Culture of His Time

Scene 1: The Street.

- Act 2, Scene 1. Romeo was feeling depressed because he had to leave Juliet at the end of Act 1.

The University of Calgary Summer Opera Workshop Jacques Offenbach s Island of Tulipatan Performances: June 25/26

Name. A Boy Called Slow Reading Vocabulary Study Guide Reading is Fundamental

That's OK. I thought it was the horse

0:40 CONVENTIONS. year. Use 2B or HB pencil only SESSION 1. Time available for students to complete test: 40 minutes

KNOCKED UP POSTER ANALYSIS BY CRAIG TURNER

Macbeth is a play about MURDER, KINGS, ARMIES, PLOTTING, LIES, WITCHES and AMBITION Write down in the correct order, the story in ten steps

Quick Assessment Project EDUC 203

SUMMER READING ASSIGNMENTS 2018

I ve worked in schools for over twenty five years leading workshops and encouraging children ( and teachers ) to write their own poems.

Preparing to Write Literary Analysis

NAME: Study Guide Language Arts Part I: Directions: Read the poem below and answer the questions that follow it. Type vs.

Teacher s Notes. Level 4. Did you know? Pearson English Kids Readers. Teacher s Notes. Summary of the story. Background information

NAME: PERIOD: DUE DATE: 5/20/14

Summer Reading for Freshman Courses--2014

Pink Elephants Running Amuck

REINTERPRETING SHAKESPEARE with JACKIE FRENCH Education Resources: Grade 9-12

GREETINGS. When you enter a room, see someone you know or meet someone new, it is polite to greet him or her. To greet someone, you:

2016 Twelfth Night Practice Test

Nicolas ROMEO AND JULIET WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE : Ppppppp

Way Original idea Paraphrased idea. Successful people are perseverant to achieve their goals.

STUDY GUIDE. a midsummer night's dream William Shakespeare

Text copyright Michael Morpurgo, Illustrations copyright Emma Chichester Clark, Courtesy of HarperCollins Children's Books.

Lesson 12: Infinitive or -ING Game Show (Part 1) Round 1: Verbs about feelings, desires, and plans

Literary Devices Figurative Language and Beyond

The Crucible. Remedial Activities

The Alchemist By: Ben Jonson

MODEL ACT SYNOPSIS AND ANALYSIS TOOL

Puss in Boots. Ideas Packet. Prepared for the Blackfriars of Agnes Scott College Production of Puss in Boots Adapted by Madge Miller

Roman Road Primary School

The Tragedy of Macbeth, Act 1. Shakespeare, 10 th English p

The Hunchback in the Park

Homework Monday. The Shortcut

Name: ( /10) English 11/ Macbeth Questions: Act 1

Ireti Eda. Episode 18. Characters

Prout School Summer Reading 2016

Stamford Green Primary School. Presentation Policy. Agreed at (please indicate with a * ):

used to think, on account of my somewhat strange start in life, I suppose, that I was unlike everyone else. In one way I am. After all, I am now 130

John Cleese's most extravagant purchase: "my third wife"

Reader s Log Romeo & Juliet

Of Mice and Men Essay 2012: Style Rooted in Theme

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge Primary Checkpoint

Dilworth Elementary Character Education: Honesty (November)

Romeo. Juliet. and. When: Where:

Biography Project Step 1: Report Due: Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Activity Pack. by William Shakespeare

Transcription:

uch Ado Blockbusters Developed by iz Haslam and Zoe Taylor at the Rochdale Shakespeare workshop in December 2006. The webaddress for this activity is: ast updated 2nd February 2007 OABORATIVE EARNING PROJET Project Director: Stuart Scott Supporting a cooperative network of teaching professionals throughout the European Union to develop and disseminate accessible teaching materials in all subject areas and for all ages. 17, Barford Street, Islington, ondon N1 0QB UK Phone: 0044 (0)20 7226 8885 ebsite: http://www.collaborativelearning.org BRIEF SUARY OF BASI PRINIPES BEHIND OUR TEAHING ATIVITIES: The project is a teacher network, and a non-profit making educational trust. Our main aim is to develop and disseminate classroom tested examples of effective group strategies across all phases and subjects. e hope they will inspire you to develop and use similar strategies in other topics and curriculum areas. e run teacher workshops, swapshops and conferences throughout the European Union. The project publishes a catalogue of activities plus lists in selected subject areas, and a newsletter available on the internet: PAPERIPʼ. *These activities were influenced by current thinking about the role of language in learning. They are designed to help children learn through talk and active learning in small groups. They work best in mixed classes where children in need of language or learning support are integrated. They are well suited for the development of speaking and listening. They provide teachers opportunities for assessment of speaking and listening and other formative assessment. *They support differentiation by placing a high value on what children can offer to each other on a particular topic, and also give children the chance to respect each otherʼs views and formulate shared opinions which they can disseminate to peers. By helping them to take ideas and abstract concepts, discuss, paraphrase and move them about physically, they help to develop thinking skills. *They give children the opportunity to participate in their own words and language in their own time without pressure. any activities can be tried out in mother tongue and afterwards in English. A growing number of activities are available in more than one language, not translated, but mixed, so that you may need more than one language to complete the activity. *They encourage study skills in context, and should therefore be used with a range of appropriate information books which are preferably within reach in the classroom. *They are generally adaptable over a wide age range because children can bring their own knowledge to an activity and refer to books at an appropriate level. The activities work like catalysts. *All project activities were planned and developed by teachers working together, and the main reason they are disseminated is to encourage teachers to work effectively with each other inside and outside the classroom. They have made it possible for mainstream and language and learning support teachers to share an equal role in curriculum delivery. They should be adapted to local conditions. In order to help us keep pace with curriculum changes, please send any new or revised activities back to the project, so that we can add them to our lists of materials.

uch Ado Blockbusters Teachers' Notes This is an introduction to some of the ideas which are important to the play. It is designed so that it can be played when the pupils know little or nothing about the play, but it could be used at any time. It can be played in different ways, but here is the way iz and Zoe chose to do it: Three people play together, one of them is the asks the questions. Players can take turns for this role There are four kinds of questions on shown on the shapes by different capital letters : *About women s status () * About Shakespeare s language () About comedy () * About masks. () iz and Zoe colour coloured the shapes, but we have gone for a black and white version to make it easier for you to produce multiple copies. All the information needed to answer the questions is provided here. Either use the large information sheets and stick these onto a game board with the blockbuster shapes in the middle or enlarge the small version to A3 or just use the answer sheets if you want to make it more difficult. This will need to be laminated. The questions should be cut out and put in 4 piles. You will need counters in four different colours. Alternatively, and this works better in the longer game, players can mark the shapes with initials in dry wiper pens. In this case of course you will need to laminate the board which isn't a bad idea anyway since A3 card is hard to come by. There are answer sheets for the questions which can be left at the front in case anyone gets stuck.

How to Play uch Ado Blockbusters This game is for three players and one extra person to ask the questions. You are going to cross the board from left to right. Take it in turns to choose a letter from the first row. The person who asks picks a question from the pile that matches the letter. If you answer the question correctly, you can put your coloured counter on the hexagon. hoose any hexagon which touches this one when it is your turn again. If you cannot find the answer, try a different letter on the first row when it is your next turn. For a short game, the winner can be the first person to cross the board. A ORE DIFFIUT GAE The longer game is better. For this one, the players double back and keep crossing the board until they have covered all the shapes. The first two to manage this are joint winners.

omen anguage In Elizabethan times women were seen legally as property. Fathers owned daughters until they married. Fathers gave or received money (dowry) for their daughters, so it was important that they married as rich a husband as possible. A woman had to keep her good reputation and virginity. It was important that she did not have sex before marriage. If she did she would risk being dishonoured, unable to marry and shunned by her family. As a result, people often married very young and very quickly. They did not always marry for love. They sometimes married a person that their family chose for them. It would be almost unheard of for rich to marry poor. In this play, Hero should marry laudio, but Don John's secret plan stops this from happening. laudio believes that Hero has had sex and he doesn't want to marry her any more. In Shakespeare's time it was the fashion to talk very cleverly and make clever jokes. This was called wit. Some characters in the plays show how clever they are by teasing each other. The audience thought this was funny. Beatrice and Benedick have a love hate relationship. They show this by teasing each other but sometimes they hurt each other too much. They use their wit to hide their true feelings and protect their pride. The audience would have found the misunderstandings in the play very funny. For example Benedick overhears some people saying that Beatrice is in love with him. He believes this and decides to fall in love with her. Beatrice is an excellent example of Shakespeare using clever language to entertain the audience For example, she make fun of the messenger because he is very serious. She asks how many people Benedick has killed at war because she has promised to eat all he has killed. Shakespeare wrote his plays four hundred years ago when the English language was different. For example, 'an' meant 'if', 'meet' meant 'right' and 'hath' meant 'has'. The theatre would not have had modern lighting or special effects so Shakespeare had to set his seen with his words. e have special effects and we have film, so we can look at scenery,costumes and lighting as well as listen to the actors. In Shakespeare's time the special effects were the words the actors spoke. Shakespeare uses language full of images. These are word pictures, e.g. ' I had rather hear a dog bark at at crow than a man swear he loves me.' any of these are metaphors.eg. 'Is it possible Disdain should die while she hath such meet food to feed it, as Signor Benedick. In this example, Beatrice pretends that Benedick is good food for disliking men. There are also similes, e.g. 'O ord, he will hang upon him like a disease.' In this example, Beatrice says people can catch Benedick like they catch a disease. Oxymorons are words which cannot go together, e.g. 'a hot January'. There are many examples of double meanings as well. Beatrice and Benedick spend much of the day quarrelling and their merry war uses many jokes.these jokes would keep the audience entertained. For example Benedick teases Beotrice with the line 'I would that my horse had the speed of your tangue.'

omen In Elizabethan times women were seen legally as property. Fathers owned daughters until they married. Fathers gave or received money (dowry) for their daughters, so it was important that they married as rich a husband as possible. A woman had to keep her good reputation and virginity. It was important that she did not have sex before marriage. If she did she would risk being dishonoured, unable to marry and shunned by her family. As a result, people often married very young and very quickly. They did not always marry for love. They sometimes married a person that their family chose for them. It would be almost unheard of for rich to marry poor. In this play, Hero should marry laudio, but Don John's secret plan stops this from happening. laudio believes that Hero has had sex and he doesn't want to marry her any more. In Shakespeare's time it was the fashion to talk very cleverly and make clever jokes. This was called wit. Some characters in the plays show how clever they are by teasing each other. The audience thought this was funny. Beatrice and Benedick have a love hate relationship. They show this by teasing each other but sometimes they hurt each other too much. They use their wit to hide their true feelings and protect their pride. The audience would have found the misunderstandings in the play very funny. For example Benedick overhears some people saying that Beatrice is in love with him. He believes this and decides to fall in love with her. Beatrice is an excellent example of Shakespeare using clever language to entertain the audience For example, she make fun of the messenger because he is very serious. She asks how many people Benedick has killed at war because she has promised to eat all he has killed. anguage Shakespeare wrote his plays four hundred years ago when the English language was different. For example, 'an' meant 'if', 'meet' meant 'right' and 'hath' meant 'has'. The theatre would not have had modern lighting or special effects so Shakespeare had to set his seen with his words. e have special effects and we have film, so we can look at scenery,costumes and lighting as well as listen to the actors. In Shakespeare's time the special effects were the words the actors spoke. Shakespeare uses language full of images. These are word pictures, e.g. ' I had rather hear a dog bark at at crow than a man swear he loves me.' any of these are metaphors.eg. 'Is it possible Disdain should die while she hath such meet food to feed it, as Signor Benedick. In this example, Beatrice pretends that Benedick is good food for disliking men. There are also similes, e.g. 'O ord, he will hang upon him like a disease.' In this example, Beatrice says people can catch Benedick like they catch a disease. Oxymorons are words which cannot go together, e.g. 'a hot January'. There are many examples of double meanings as well. Beatrice and Benedick spend much of the day quarrelling and their merry war uses many jokes.these jokes would keep the audience entertained. For example Benedick teases Beotrice with the line 'I would that my horse had the speed of your tangue.' asks This happened at parties. People covered their faces with masks. en chose women to dance with. asks allowed people to keep their identities secret. This meant people could make mistakes or behave badly. They could hide what they had done. They could pretend to be someone else. Don Pedro pretended to be laudio. Beatrice pretended not to recognise Benedick. In this play people are confused just like a masked ball confuses people. There are secret plans. Don Pedro had a secret plan to make Beatrice and Benedick fall in love. Don John had a secret plan to make laudio hate Hero. haracters make mistakes. They believe lies. haracters listen to each other in secret, and they are tricked by what they hear. Beatrice heard Hero and Ursula telling lies about Benedick, and she believed them.

omen In Shakespeare s time, what was the legal position of women? omen hat was a dowry? omen hy were there so many rules about what women could or could not do in Elizabethan times? omen hat happened to women who were discovered to have had sex before they were married omen hy did laudio decide not to marry Hero? omen ho invented the plot to stop laudio and Hero from getting married? hich two characters tease each other a lot in the play? ho overhears people saying that Beatrice is in love with him? hat kind of relationship do Benedick and Beatrice have at the start of the play hat does Beatrice say about Benedick in the war? hat does wit mean in Shakespeare s plays? Give one example of something the Elizabethan audience would have found funny. asks hat was a masked ball? asks ho made a secret plan so that Beatrice and Benedick would fall in love? asks ho pretended to be laudio asks hy did people enjoy going to masked balls?

asks ho pretended not to recognise Benedick? asks hy is the masked ball an important image of this play? anguage Say this in simple modern English: He that hath a beard is more than a youth and he that hath no beard is less than a man. anguage Give one important difference between Shakespeare s theatres and our theatres today. anguage hat kind of imagery is in this quote: Is it possible Disdain should die when she hath such meet food to feed it? anguage Is He will hang upon him like a disease a simile or a metaphor? anguage hat kind of imagery is in a merry war? anguage Translate this into simple modern English: I would my horse had the speed of your tongue.

anguage Answers rite this in simple modern English: He that hath a beard is more than a youth and he that hath no beard is less than a man. Answer: If he has a beard, he is more than a boy and if he has no beard he is less than a man. There are other ways of putting it, so any sentence which means the same as this one would be right. Give one important difference between Shakespeare s theatres and our theatres today. Answer: All 3 of these are right: they did not have lighting effects or special effects as we know them today. Boys played the female roles. hat kind of imagery is in a merry war? Answer: This is an oxymoron because these two words do not belong together war is associated with misery. Is He will hang upon him like a disease a simile or a metaphor? Answer: It is a simile, because it uses the word like. hat kind of imagery is in this quote: Is it possible Disdain should die when she hath such meet food to feed it? Answer: It is a metaphor, because Shakespeare was pretending that disdain was a person who could be fed meaning that nobody could like Benedick so he made disdain grow strong. Translate this into simple modern English: I would my horse had the speed of your tongue. Answer: Anything that means nearly the same as: I wish my horse could run as fast as you can give clever comebacks

hat kind of relationship do Benedick and Beatrice have at the start of the play? Answer: They have a love-hate relationship. They tease each other too much and sometimes their feelings are hurt. They hide their true feelings. They are too proud to be honest. Answers hat does Beatrice say about Benedick in the war? Answer: She asks how many men he has killed, and says she has promised to eat every one. hich two characters tease each other a lot in the play? Answer: It is Beatrice and Benedick Give one example of something the Elizabethan audience would have found funny. Answer: any of these would be right- the jokes and teasing, the misunderstandings, the characters pretending to be other people. hat does wit mean in Shakespeare s plays? Answer: It means talking cleverly and making clever jokes ho overhears people saying that Beatrice is in love with him? Answer: It is Benedick. Don Pedro made a secret plan so that Benedick would overhear people saying how much Beatrice loved him

asks ho pretended to be laudio? Answer: It was Don Pedro. He pretended to be laudio so that he could help laudio to impress Hero. asks Answers asks ho made a secret plan so that Beatrice and Benedick would fall in love? Answer: It was Don Pedro. asks ho pretended not to recognise Benedick? Answer: It was Beatrice. She pretended not to know that she was talking to Benedick so that she could say a lot of unkind things about him. This hurt his feelings asks hy did people enjoy going to masked balls? Answer: Any of these would be right They could make mistakes without getting into trouble. They could behave badly and nobody would know. They could pretend to be someone else. asks hy is the masked ball an important image of this play? Answer: Any of these would be right- In the play, people are confused, just like a masked ball confused people. There are secret plans and a masked ball keeps people s names secret. People are tricked by secrets in the play, and a masked ball is like a big trick. asks hat was a masked ball? Answer: Everyone covered their faces so nobody could tell who they were, then the men chose women to dance with.

omen In Shakespeare s time, what was the legal position of women? Answer: omen were property. They were owned by their fathers until they got married. omen Answers omen hy did laudio decide not to marry Hero? Answer: Because he thought she had had sex with somebody omen hat was a dowry? Answer: This was the money a new husband gave to his wife s father. Fathers wanted their daughters to marry rich husbands so that they could get a lot of money. omen hy were there so many rules about what women could or could not do in Elizabethan times? Answer: Either of these would be correct - Because the woman s behaviour affected how much money the family would get when she got married. Because they believed it was against their religion for women to do some things. omen ho invented the plot to stop laudio and Hero from getting married? Answer: It was Don John. omen hat happened to women who were discovered to have had sex before they were married? Answer: They would lose their honour and nobody would want to marry them. They would probably be thrown out of the family.