Lordoftheflies101013b Activitati
Lordoftheflies101013b Activitati
Lordoftheflies101013b Activitati
T E A C H E RS
A TEACHERS GUIDE TO
BY WILLIAM GOLDING
BY
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION.........................................................................................................................3
SYNOPSIS OF THE NOVEL......................................................................................................3
PRE-READING ACTIVITIES......................................................................................................5
INTRODUCTION
In a desolate land devastated by war, children
struggle to survive with no food, no shelter,
no grownups, and no rules. Humans turn
hunters; innocence is lost.
Fans of The Hunger Games will immediately
identify this young-adult, post-apocalyptic
scenario. Yet it actually belongs to William
Goldings 1954 debut novel, Lord of the Flies,
in which a group of young boys crash on a
deserted island and are soon faced with a
fierce struggle to survive. Written long before
todays wildly popular dystopian fare, Goldings story helped introduce the genre with a
world where adolescents descend into savagery,
power trumps reason, and the very meaning
of civilization is called into question.
In the classroom, Lord of the Flies will connect
students to the timeless themes of survival,
society versus the individual, and the savagery
possible in human nature. Students will
undoubtedly recognize the parallels between
Goldings novel and favorite contemporary titles
such as Catching Fire, Divergent, Matched, and
Kill the pig! Cut his throat, the boys hit and
scare Robert who says they need a real pig.
Jack suggests they use a littlun.
Separating himself from the group, Simon
volunteers to tell Piggy they will be delayed.
Ralph feels they all should go back to the
shelter but because of Jacks taunts continues
the quest for the beast. When they get to the
top of the mountain, the dead pilots ghostly
face rises in the wind, and all three boys run.
Chapters 8-12:
Angels and Demons
The boys return to tell Piggy and the others
what theyve seen. Jack is determined to
gather his hunters and fight the beast, but
Ralph insists the rescue fire is most important.
Jack snatches the conch, calling an assembly
without Ralphs permission. He demands that
the boys take sides, either with him or with
Ralph, whom Jack accuses of being like Piggy.
Jack calls for a vote to remove Ralph as leader,
but none of the boys raise their hands. Electing not to play any longer, Jack abandons
the group. Simon, asking What else is there
to do, believes the group should climb the
mountain and face the beast. Piggy suggests
building the fire down on the beach, and the
boys set out to do so. Eventually, they realize
that Maurice, Bill, and Roger are missing,
obviously gone to follow Jack.
The hunters find a mother boar nursing her
piglets and they attack her in a heated frenzy.
Afterwards, they leave her head as a gift for
the beast and run off to steal fire from Ralph
and the others. Meanwhile, Simon has
climbed the mountain and imagines he hears
the voice of the beast chide him for his innocence, threatening him not to spoil the hunters fun. Refusing to run away but sick with
the comprehension that the beast is not
something you could hunt and kill, Simon
loses consciousness. When he awakes, Simon
realizes the ghostly figure is actually the dead
pilot and staggers down the mountain to
reveal that the beast is harmless and horrible.
Meanwhile, the hunters are holding a feast.
Jack sits painted and garlanded, like an
PRE-READING ACTIVITIES
These activities are designed to deepen students background knowledge of literature and history
and to introduce them to the novels major themes.
I. BUILDING BACKGROUND
KNOWLEDGE IN HISTORY
AND LITERATURE
The Cold War
1. Introduce students to the pervasive and
often irrational fear prevalent in the Cold
War era of Goldings Lord of the Flies.
Explain that in the post WWII decade of
the 1950s, adults and children alike were
under constant reminder of the fear of
atomic attack. Posters, videos, and drills
were commonplace at schools, businesses,
and even at home. Using still and video
images, ask students to reflect on the role
of government and the media in shaping
this atmosphere of fear. Discussion questions might include:
What purpose does each image or video
serve? To inform? To protect? To scare?
VyyUMAZ-NlyCmBB5oOgdNQY
XqX8sNDHc
http://www.history.com/this-day-inhistory/dulles-announces-policy-ofmassive-retaliation
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/
f-news/1556858/posts
Genre Study:
Dystopian Fiction and Film
1. Using a Smartboard, Ben-Q, or other
digital projector, share with students the
definition of Dystopia provided by the
teacher site ReadWriteThink: http://
www.readwritethink.org/files/resources/
lesson_images/lesson926/Definition
Characteristics.pdf
Ask students to consider these characteristics and brainstorm dystopias and dystopian protagonists they have seen in
books or movies. Answers might include
Katniss Everdeen or Disneys WALL-E.
Ask students to look for these same characteristics as they read Lord of the Flies.
Alejandro
Lady Gaga
Creedence
Clearwater Revival
Big Brother
David Bowie
Express Yourself
Madonna
I Wear My
Sunglasses at Night
Corey Hart
Radio Gaga
Queen
SkyFall
Adele
Tightrope
Janell Monae
2. In Lord of the Flies, Golding depicts children making adult decisions and facing
adult consequences. Discuss with students the idea that individuals (including
children) are expected to adhere to societal norms or face the consequences. To
prepare students for this discussion about
Using the image-analysis template available from the National Archives, ask students to divide the photograph into
quadrants and record the details and
analysis they generate in their observation and reflection on the image. http://
www.archives.gov/education/lessons/
worksheets/photo_analysis_worksheet.pdf
10
http://www.globalethics.org/dilemmas
/The-Rules-of-the-Game/68/
http://www.haverford.edu/psych/ddavis
/p109g/kohlberg.dilemmas.html
3. Show students a short clip from The
Howling Man, an episode from the original Twilight Zone series at http://www.
youtube.com/watch?v=py6sl1X5QBI. In
this episode, a man learns that humans
repeatedly fail to recognize the devil
when they see him. Draw a circle map on
the board. In the center circle, write the
devil or evil. Ask students: What form
can evil take? Answers might include
terrorism, war, or murder. Record
answers in the large circle. To extend
students thinking, write these hints outside the circle: movies, songs, literature.
Now ask students to name some texts
where the devil or evil plays a role, and
ask them to explain the references. Students might list Jay-Zs song, Lucifer or
Roger Chillingworth from The Scarlet
Letter. Add answers to the large circle.
Explain that in Lord of the Flies, the boys
face evil but dont see it for what it is.
Challenge students to look for signs of
this theme as they read.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/tanyaprive
/2012/12/19/top-10-qualities-thatmake-a-great-leader/2/
http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb
/instructors/setups/notes/candidatecharacteristics.jsp
Qualities of a Leader
11
12
Ask students to generate one or two questions per chapter and to jot questions
down on post-it notes, one per note. At
least one question in each chapter must
be from the higher end of BRT. Post-its
are affixed to the page of text they reference. In class, students can categorize
these questions on the board or on a
13
2. In his description of the beach, the narrator says, always, almost visible, was the
heat (p. 10). Why does the author choose
to emphasize this feature? What comparison might he be suggesting for the reader?
Explain.
3. Why do the boys react to their island surroundings by stripping off their clothes?
What might their actions symbolize?
Chapters 8-12:
Angels and Demons
1. How does Jack use rhetorical structures
in his attempt to wrestle power from
Ralph (p. 126)?
2. Explain the irony in Jacks saying, Im
not going to play any longer. Not with
you (p. 127).
3. Simon climbs the mountain to face the
beast alone, asking What else is there to
do? (p. 128). Why does Simon stand and
act apart from the other boys? Why does
he not take sides? How are Simons perceptions different from Ralphs and Jacks?
4. Analyze the contrasting imagery of butterflies and blood in the death scene of
the mother pig (p. 135). What emotions
might this imagery evoke in the reader?
5. What is Simons ancient, inescapable
recognition upon speaking to the lord of
the flies (p. 138)?
6. When referring to Jack, the twins say,
Heyou knowgoes (p. 142). Why
cant they call Jack by name?
14
Reader Response
Journal Prompts
Ask students to keep a reader response journal where they reflect in writing on specific
quotations from the novel. These quotations
and responses can serve as the basis for class
discussions on authors purpose, style, diction, and themes, or as a starter for more
formal writing later.
Possible quotations for reflection include:
1. Weve got to have rules and obey them.
After all, were not savages. (Jack, p. 42)
2. The thing isfear cant hurt you any
more than a dream. (Ralph, p. 82)
3. Life is scientific, thats what it is. . . . I
know there isnt no beastnot with claws
and all that, I meanbut I know there
isnt no fear, either. . . . Unless we get
frightened of people. (Piggy, p. 84)
4. Maybe there is a beast. . . . What I mean
is . . . maybe its only us. (Simon, p. 89)
5. As long as theres light were brave enough.
But then? (Ralph, p. 125)
6. Fancy thinking the Beast was something
you could hunt and kill! (Pig Head, p. 143)
7. Hes a proper chief, isnt he? (Roger, p. 159)
8. I expect the beast disguised itself.
(Stanley, p. 161)
15
16
4. Challenge groups with the following scenario: You and your teammates have
formed a production company. Your
assignment is to scout locations, props,
cast, and more for an upcoming film
production of Lord of the Flies. You are to
share and defend your choices through a
Voicethread.com presentation, a free,
collaborative platform where students
can add digital images, video, music, and
voice narration to bring their writing to
life. The Voice Thread is similar to a student podcast, with background images
and audio added. The producer has one
rule: your team must not borrow any
ideas, pictures, or cast from film productions of the novel. Together with the
producer (the teacher), the class will
decide who receives the contract. Choose
four of the following production components to research, present, and defend in
your Voice Thread.
Setting (crash site, island, jungle,
mountain)
Casting (for one or more of the major
characters: Ralph, Jack, Piggy, Simon)
Soundtrack (music of the era, music
that is appropriate for the production)
Backstory (WWII Era England
clothing, education system, treatment
of children)
17
18
Dystopian Literature
Blade Runner. Dir. Ridley Scott. Warner, 1982.
Bradbury, Ray. Fahrenheit 451. NY: Simon
and Schuster, 1953.
Collins, Suzanne. The Hunger Games. NY:
Scholastic, 2008.
Condie, Ally. Matched. NY: Dutton, 2010.
Huxley, Aldous. A Brave New World. London:
Chatto & Windus, 1932.
Lowry, Lois. Messenger. Boston: Houghton,
2004.
McCarthy, Cormack. The Road. NY: Knopf,
2006.
19
Survival Tales
Cast Away. Dir. Robert Zemeckis. Dreamworks: 2000.
Dashner, James. The Maze Runner. NY:
Delacorte Press, 2009.
DuPrau, Jean. The City of Ember. NY:
Random, 2004.
I am Legend. Dir. Francis Lawrence. Warner:
2007.
Ralston, Aron. 127 Hours: Between a Rock
and a Hard Place. Atria, 2010.
Read, Piers Paul. Alive. NY: Harper, 1975.
Sachar, Louis. Holes. NY: Farrar, Straus, &
Giroux, 1998.
Allegories
Adams, Richard. Watership Down. London:
Rex Collings, 1972.
Anderson, M.T. Feed. Somerville, MA: Candlewick, 2002.
Gaiman, Neil. The Graveyard Book. NY:
Harper, 2008.
LEngle, Madeleine. A Swiftly Tilting Planet.
NY: Farrar, Straus, & Giroux, 1978.
Lewis, C.S. The Lion, the Witch, and the
Wardrobe. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1950.
Orwell, George. Animal Farm. London:
Secker and Warburg, 1945.
Rowling, J.K. Harry Potter and the Sorcerers
Stone. London: Bloomsbury, 1998.
Saint-Exupery, Antoine de. The Little Prince.
NY: Reynall & Hitchcock, 1943.
20
Loss of Innocence
NOTES
21
22
NOTES
23
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