Shakespeare Teachers Guide PDF
Shakespeare Teachers Guide PDF
Shakespeare Teachers Guide PDF
SHAKESPEARE
IN AMERICAN COMMUNITIES TM
TEACHER'S
GUIDE
NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS
SHAKESPEARE
IN AMERICAN COMMUNITIES TM
Shakespeare in American Communities is a national theater initiative that
introduces middle and high school students to the power of live theater
and the masterpieces of William Shakespeare through performances by
selected professional theater companies, and the distribution of free,
multimedia educational resource kits. Shakespeare in American
SHAKESPEARE
Communities is a program of the National Endowment for the Arts in
partnership with Arts Midwest.
,\~}, ,~::::::::r:: . The National Endowment for the Arts was established by Congress in
1965 as an independent agency of the federal government. To date, the
ARTWORKS.
arts.gov
NEA has awarded more than $4 billion to support artistic excellence,
creativity, and innovation for the benefit of individuals and communities.
The NEA extends its work through partnerships with state arts agencies,
local leaders, other federal agencies, and the philanthropic sector. For
more information, visit arts.gov.
An
MIDWEST
Arts Midwest promotes creativity, nurtures cultural leadership, and
engages people in meaningful arts experiences, bringing vitality to
Midwest communities and enriching people's lives. Based in Minneapolis,
Arts Midwest connects the arts to audiences throughout the nine-state
region of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota,
Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. For more information, visit
artsmidwest. org.
Unless otherwise indicated, all images are from the Folger Shakespeare Library,
Washington, DC, home to the world's largest Shakespeare collection. To learn
more, visit www.folger.edu.
August 2011
CONTENTS
T
he National Endowment for the Arts is proud to provide you with these
special classroom materials for Shakespeare in American Communities.
We believe that these print, audio, and video resources will greatly
enrich the education of your students. Whether listening to james Earl jones
bring Shakespeare's poetry to life on our CD or using our lesson plans to rewrite
one of the Bard's famous monologues in their own words, your students will
find ample opportunities to expand their knowledge, creativity, and command
of language.
One great teacher can change a student's life. At the Arts Endowment, our
great hope is to help dedicated teachers like you accomplish this magic.
TEACHER'S GUIDE 1
THE ELIZABETHAN AGE
hakespeare lived during a remarkable were active during her reign, including
TEACHER'S GU IDE 5
ELIZABETHAN THEATER
E
ven in an era when popular At times throughout the sixteenth
entertainment included public century, Parliament censored plays for
executions and cock-fighting, theater profanity, heresy, or politics. But Queen
became central to Elizabethan social life. As Elizabeth and later King james offered
drama shifted from a religious to a secular protections that ultimately allowed the
function in society, playwrights and poets theater to survive. To appease Puritan
were among the leading artists of the day. concerns, the Queen established rules
Toward the end of the sixteenth century, the prohibiting the construction of theaters and
popularity of plays written by scholars such theatrical performances within the London
as Christopher Marlowe, Robert Greene, city limits. The rules were loosely enforced,
John Lyly, and Thomas Lodge led to however, and playhouses such as the
the building of theaters and to the Curtain, the Globe, the Rose, and the Swan
development of companies of actors, were constructed just outside of London,
both professional and amateur. These within easy reach of the theater-going
companies of players traveled throughout public. These public playhouses paved
England, generally performing in London the way for the eventual emergence of
in the winter and spring, and navigating professional companies as stable business
notoriously neglected roads throughout organizations.
the English countryside during the Among the actors who performed in
summers when plague ravaged the city. the Elizabethan theater, Richard Burbage is
Professional companies were also retained perhaps the best known. Burbage was the
for the private entertainment of English leading actor in Shakespeare's company, the
aristocracy. Lord Chamberlain's Men, and he is credited
In spite of its popularity, the Elizabethan with portraying a range of dramatic leads
theater attracted criticism, censorship, and including Richard III, Hamlet, Lear, and
scorn from some sectors of English society. Othello. An actor himself, Shakespeare
The plays were often coarse and boisterous, played roles in his own plays, usually as
and playwrights and actors belonged to a older male characters. Acting was not
bohemian class. Puritan leaders and officers considered an appropriate profession for
of the Church of England considered actors women in the Elizabethan era, and even
to be of questionable character, and they into the seventeenth century acting
criticized playwrights for using the stage to companies consisted of men with young
disseminate their irreverent opinions. boys playing the female roles. Instead of
They also feared the overcrowded theater clothing reflecting the station of their
spaces might lead to the spread of disease. characters, Elizabethan actors wore lavish
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TEACHER'S GUIDE 9
Greene, Shakespeare reappears as an establishing the polygonal Globe Theatre on
"upstart crow" flapping his poetic wings the outskirts of London. When Kingjames
in London. Evidently, it did not take him came to the throne in 1603, he issued a
long to land on the stage. Between 1590 royal license to Shakespeare and his fellow
and 1592, Shakespeare's Henry VI series, players, organizing them as the King's Men.
Richard III, and The Comedy of Errors were During King James' reign, Shakespeare
performed. When the theaters were closed wrote many of his most accomplished plays
in 1593 because of the plague, the about courtly power, including King Lear,
playwright wrote two narrative poems, Macbeth, and Antony and Cleopatra. In
Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece, 1609 or 1611, Shakespeare's sonnets were
and probably began writing his richly published, though he did not live to see the
textured sonnets. One hundred and fifty- First Folio of his plays published in 1623.
four of his sonnets have survived, ensuring In 1616, with his health declining,
his reputation as a gifted poet. By 1594, he Shakespeare revised his will. Since his
had also written The Taming of the Shrew, only son Hamnet had died in 1596,
The Two Gentlemen of Verona and Loves Shakespeare left the bulk of his estate to
Labours Lost. his two daughters, with monetary gifts set
Having established himself as an actor aside for his sister, theater partners, friends,
and playwright, in 1594 Shakespeare and the poor of Stratford. A fascinating
became a shareholder in the Lord detail of his will is that he bequeathed the
Chamberlain's Men, one of the most family's "second best bed" to his wife Anne.
popular acting companies in London. He He died one month later, on April 23, 1616.
remained a member of this company for To the world, he left a lasting legacy in the
the rest of his career, often playing form of 38 plays, 154 sonnets, and two
before the court of Queen narrative poems.
Elizabeth I. Shakespeare Ma. W ILL l .h:\1
When William Shakespeare
SHAKESPEARES
entered one of his most 0 11EDIE , died in his birthplace of
HI T RI ES, &
prolific periods around 1595, T R G DI E . Stratford-upon-Avon, he was
writing Richard II, Romeo recognized as one of the
and juliet, A Midsummer greatest English playwrights of
Nights Dream, and The his era. In the four centuries
Merchant of Venice. With since, he has come to be seen
his newfound success, as not only a great English
Shakespeare purchased the playwright, but the greatest
second largest home in playwright in the English
Stratford in 1597, though he language. Reflecting upon the
continued to live in London. achievement of his peer and
Two years later, he joined sometimes rival, Ben Janson
others from the Lord wrote of Shakespeare, "He was
Chamberlain's Men in not of an age, but for all time."
First Folio, 1623.
Iambic Pentameter
Shakespeare composed much of his plays in the form of poetry, often in a meter called iambic
pentameter. Even today, iambic pentameter is the most common meter used in English-language
poetry. A regular line of the meter contains roughly ten syllables, with heavier stresses falling on
every other syllable. An iamb is a metrical unit, or a "foot" of meter, made up of one unstressed
syllable followed by one stressed syllable ("alive," "forget," "a dog"). Pentameter refers to the number of iambs in the
line (penta is the Greek word for five, as in a pentagon). So there are five iambs in a line of iambic pentameter. Blank
verse is unrhymed iambic pentameter.
Here are two examples from Romeo and Juliet ('-' means unstressed and 'I' means stressed)
1-1-1-1- I
My grave is like to be my wect:Jing bed.
- I I I - I - I
But soft, what light through yoroer wimow breakS?
TEACHER'S GUIDE 11
FIRST PERFORMED PLAYS FIRST PRINTED
*The Two Noble Kinsmen is listed as one of Shakespeare's plays because most scholars believe it to be a
collaborative work of Shakespeare and John Fletcher, who was a prominent actor and Shakespeare's
close friend. Fletcher succeeded Shakespeare as the foremost dramatist for the King's Men.
TEACHER'S GUIDE 13
integrated into American culture by the Only in the twentieth century did the
nineteenth century that Mark Twain had his nature of Shakespeare's relationship to the
young hero Huckleberry Finn travel along American public change. He was still the
the Mississippi River by raft with a pair of most widely known, respected, and quoted
rogues who tried to pass themselves off as dramatist, but his work gradually came to
Shakespearean actors to earn money in be seen as part of high culture rather than
riverbank towns. popular culture. His plays became more a
Shakespeare productions attracted a form of education than entertainment, more
broad audience across socioeconomic and the possession of an elite crowd than the
ethnic lines. Audiences articulated their property of all Americans. The accessible
knowledge of and reactions to the plays by dramatist whom audiences once identified
hissing, whisding, stamping, clapping, and with, and even parodied, now became the
reciting passages along with the actors. The sacred dramatist to whom everyday people
plays were often accompanied by music, could hardly relate.
acrobatics, dance, magic shows, minstrel There are many reasons for this
shows, and stand-up comedy during breaks change of reputation, among them an
between acts. Shakespeare:S most famous increasing separation of audiences, actors,
lines and scenes - such as "To be or not and acting styles. Specialized theaters
to be"- were parodied through short skits, evolved that catered to distinct interests
brief references, and satirical songs inserted such as avant-garde theater, theater of the
into other modes of entertainment, absurd, and musical theater. Radio, film,
demonstrating how well performers and and television executives chose to feature
audiences alike knew his work.
Shakespearean allusions and quotations
were a regular feature of nineteenth-century
newspapers. In schools, his plays were
taught as rhetoric. Students would
memorize passages of his plays and recite
them aloud. While audiences admired the
playwright's gift for language, they found his
themes to be representative of their own
trials and tribulations. His characters coped
with love, hate, jealousy, ambition, and
mortality just as his audience members did
in their own lives.
strong literacy skills. The American school and starring Heath Ledger and Julia Stiles.
language moved rapidly away from the A Midsummer Night's Dream (1999) -This
rich Elizabethan style of Shakespeare, comedic romp featured a host of stars, including
making his words alien to a people who
Kevin Kline, Calista Flockhart, Michelle Pfeiffer,
once so effortlessly understood their power.
Still, for more than four centuries, Rupert Everett, and Stanley Tucci as Puck.
Shakespeare has played a defining role in Romeo + Juliet (1996) - Baz Luhrmann's stunning
American culture. Today he remains futuristic telling of the tragic love story starred Claire
America's most widely produced
Danes and Leonardo DiCaprio.
playwright-performed in theaters, on
film, in schools, at festivals, and read in West Side Story (1961) -This musical version of
millions of homes across the country Romeo and Juliet tells the tragic tale of two
youngsters from rival NYC gangs who fall in love
(starring Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer).
TEACHER'S GUIDE 15
RESOURCES ON WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
Brief Description After listening to and discussing selected monologues from the
Shakespeare CD, students will write their own versions of the
monologues, modernizing the diction and the situation, but
preserving the structure, themes, and emotions. After an overnight
revision, students will share their results in class.
Activity Description On a stereo, the teacher will play three monologues from the
Shakespeare CD, leading a brief class discussion between each
selection. Through close reading of the text, students should
attempt to understand the situation, the intentions, and the
emotions of the character speaking. (The clues are in the
language.) Allow five to ten minutes of discussion for each
selection.
Each student will now choose a monologue to rewrite. The
new version should be written in verse and should preserve the
circumstances of the original, although the diction and the details
provided should be made modem. Students may wish to consult
page 11 in the Teachers Guide to learn how to write iambic
pentameter.
Allow the rest of the class period for students to work individually
on writing their monologues.
Students should revise and finish their monologues overnight.
At the beginning of the second class, ask for volunteers to read
their results aloud.
TEACHER'S GUIDE 17
LESSONS
Stealing Love Letters
Brief Description Students will listen to the sections of the Shakespeare CD regarding
the sonnet form and the recited selections. After the teacher leads a
discussion about the form, the class will analyze the performed
sonnets. Then the students will select a sonnet to transform into a
love letter in prose. In the next class meeting, students will present
their work.
Activity Description The teacher will play the sections of the Shakespeare CD
regarding the sonnet, and will lead a class discussion about
the sonnet form and the individual selections. Through close
reading of the text, students should attempt to understand how
the images are used and how the themes and language work
together toward a certain effect. Allow five minutes of discussion
for each selection.
Each student will now choose a sonnet to transform into a love
letter. Written in prose, the letter can be addressed to a boyfriend
or girlfriend, a parent, a relative, or even a pet. The new version
should include as many images and themes from the original
sonnet as possible, though the diction and the situation may be
made contemporary. Allow the rest of the class period for students
to work individually on writing their love letters.
Students should revise and finish their love letters overnight.
At the beginning of the second class, ask for volunteers to
read their love letters aloud. Upon hearing students read, other
students should try to guess which of Shakespeare's sonnets
was rewritten.
Brief Description Using the Teachers Guide, students will learn about the
Elizabethan age. Then they will create characters and use structured
improvisations to display their understanding and exercise their
performance skills.
Class periods 1
Activity Description The students will read pages 2-8 from the Teachers Guide to learn
about Elizabethan England. The teacher should answer questions
about the reading material before beginning the performance
component of the activity.
Each student will receive a sheet with a "biography" of a person
from Shakespeare's world. Allow students several minutes to
read their descriptions, keeping them secret from other students.
Each card has a line of dialogue for the students to use in the
improvisation, but they should feel free to create additional
dialogue.
While the students are reviewing their biographies, the teacher
should write on the blackboard the complete list of characters to
give students a general idea of who they are interacting with in
their scene.
The teacher will divide the class in half, making one group of
students the actors and the other the audience. The teacher will
tell the actors that their scene will take place on the street outside
the Globe Theatre during the Elizabethan age. After giving them
a moment to imagine their places in this society, the scene will
begin. Without identifying themselves by name, the actors should
try to convey who they are through their mannerisms, speech,
and actions.
The audience will watch for status conflicts between characters
and determine each character's role within the society. The
audience should write down - don't shout out! - the character
each student is playing. continued
TEACHER'S GUIDE 19
LESSONS
The Scene outside the Globe ccontinued)
Activity Description After five minutes, switch groups and resume the improvisation.
Repeat the activity, allowing students to experience different roles.
Discuss the activity with students.
Outcomes Students will learn about the social structure of Elizabethan England
through their reading.
Students will demonstrate their understanding of the reading
material through improvisation.
Students will strengthen their performance and public-speaking
skills.
Queen Elizabeth I You are the Queen of England and one of the most powerful leaders
England has ever known. You are called "the Virgin Queen" by some
because you've never married. You will not marry because you fear a
husband would take power from you. You've had to prove yourself as
a woman in this leadership role. As a leader, you've outdone most of
the males who have preceded you. Your navy defeated the Spanish
Armada years ago, making your country one of the most powerful in
England. You are a patron of Mr. Shakespeare's company and enjoy
his work a great deal. Sometimes Shakespeare writes a play especially
for you, such as The Merry Wives of Windsor. You often invite their
company to Court but you also sometimes attend performances at
The Globe. Your line is: "I pardon you."
Earl of Derby You are the Earl of Derby. Of noble birth, and therefore owner of a
title, lands, and significant wealth, you have many servants to attend
you. Your wife stays at home and tends to the children while you
hunt, fence, gamble, and trade. You live a life of freedom and pleasure.
You are in London to visit the Queen. While in London, you visit the
marketplaces and perhaps purchase some new horses and armor. You
also attend the latest popular play at The Globe by the young William
Shakespeare. You dress in fine silks from France, small buckled shoes,
and large feathered hats. You bathe once a month whether you need it
or not. Your line is: "Excuse me, but isn't that my carriage?"
Earl of Essex You are a nobleman, of noble birth and title, and one of Queen
Elizabeth's favorites. You have been friends with the Queen since you
were children. Some gossip that you have had a romantic relationship
with the Queen. Nevertheless, you are plotting her overthrow. You are
gathering the support of other nobles before attempting a coup and
riot on the streets of London. You are one of the wealthiest men in
England and have many servants to attend your every need. You
attend The Globe and sometimes have been known to hire
Shakespeare's company to play "politically incorrect" plays, including
Richard II, to stir up trouble with the people and the Crown. Your
line is: "Have you seen the Queen?"
TEACHER'S GUIDE 21
LESSONS
The Scene outside the Globe ccontinued)
Sir Francis Drake You are a navigator and one of the greatest English sea captains of
all time. You are revered as a hero in the fight against the Spanish
Armada and despised as an upstart by the old nobility You epitomize
the self-made Elizabethan privateer. You love the hunt for treasure
(especially Spanish treasure) and are daring and visionary in
exploration. You and your crew are the first Englishmen to
circumnavigate the globe, claiming a portion of California for Queen
Elizabeth along the way. Your devastating naval raids earned you the
fear and the grudging respect of the Spaniards, who call you El
Draque, "The Dragon." Your line is: "The Armada is destroyed!"
The Master of Revels You are the Master of Revels in London, controlling and censoring
London plays. It is your responsibility to insure that everything on
stage is suitable and unthreatening to Crown, that the theaters are
clean, and that the health of the public is secured. You often shut
theaters down, because of health dangers like the plague or because
the acting companies are presenting plays which are perhaps
treasonable or slanderous to the Crown. You have complete control,
under the Queen, to help a theater thrive or to destroy it. Your line is:
"This theater is now closed!"
Boy Apprentice Actor You are a young apprentice in Shakespeare's company. You left home
at an early age and joined a traveling troupe, which quickly led you to
London. Barely 15 years old, you've been playing on the stage for
almost five years now and have played juliet, Viola, and Cordelia,
amongst others, to great acclaim. You're hoping, after your voice
changes, to grow into male roles and stay on with the company. Few
apprentices, however, grow into male roles and stay with the
company because there are so few positions available. You feel your
voice start to change and fear that you'll soon be out of work. Your
line is: "I think I can play juliet one more time!"
Traveling Actor You are a traveling actor. In a company of actors, musicians, and
jugglers, you travel from town to town, from estate to estate, scraping
together just enough food and money to live. You depend on the
patronage of your sponsor, the Earl of Leicester, to protect you from
being thrown in jail as a vagabond. You mostly perform old-fashioned
morality plays in small household theaters, barns, outside in the
woods, or on the lawns of nobleman's estates. You mostly live on the
road, sleeping and eating either in the company's wagon or outside.
When your company occasionally stops in London, you always see
the latest play at The Globe. You wish you could enter a resident
company of actors like The Lord Chamberlain's Men and stay in
London. Your line is: "To be, or not to be - that is the question."
Secret Puritan You are of the newly formed Puritan faith. You believe in living
simply, working hard, and worshipping God with a basic wooden
cross. Because your faith is persecuted and frowned upon by the
Crown, you must pretend to be a member of the Church of England,
attending at least once a month, but you worship as a Puritan in a
secret location. If caught, you will be persecuted as a religious heretic
and as a traitor. You loathe the theater, as a place where people lie
and indulge in vulgarities. You never go to The Globe and are
organizing a movement to have the theaters closed permanently
You stand outside the theater, usually, and heckle those who are
going in to see the shows. Your line is: "Boo! The theater is rank,
full of sin, and hath the plague upon it!"
Secret Catholic Priest You live secretly as a Catholic priest. Untill558, when Queen
Elizabeth ascended to the throne, you worked happily as a member of
a monastery Once Elizabeth abolished the Catholic Church from
England, your monastery was shut down and your fellow priests
imprisoned or converted. You barely escaped conversion by being
taken in by a friendly noblewoman who secretly is still a practicing
Catholic. You live on her estate and maintain a small church in the
back of her garden where she worships with you several times a week.
You constantly fear for your life and that members of Elizabeth5 Court
will find you and destroy your church. You have never been to the
theater. Your line is: "I am not her priest. I am clearly her gardener!"
TEACHER'S GUIDE 23
LESSONS
The Scene outside the Globe (continued)
Glove Maker You are a London glover, making gloves, purses, and belts from
various types of animal skin. Your hands are stained and stink from
the dye you use. Your daughter and wife have both recently died from
the plague, and you fear that if you stay in London, you will die soon
too. You drink too much ale and are always tired with an upset
stomach. Your business has dropped off recently and you're thinking
of moving to the country. You come to The Globe in the afternoons to
gamble and see the latest play. Your favorites are the comedies, such
as The Comedy of Errors and Twelfth Night. Your line is: "You look like
you could use some new gloves."
Carpenter You are a carpenter from just outside London. You are a member of
a craft guild, the workers' union of your time. You apprenticed for
years before becoming a full carpenter, and you do not respect those
who do not work for a living. You do not consider the theater a
"profession" or a "craft" and are angry that those whose "play" can
make a decent living. You dislike the theater and only attend to mock
it and throw vegetables at the actors. You are in London to attend a
guild meeting and to find out if there will be any new taxes levied by
the Crown this year. Your line is: "I could build that theater better
myself."
Shopowner You own a small shop in London that sells leather goods such as
horse whips, purses, belts, and book covers. You rarely can take an
afternoon off to go to the Globe. But when you can, you greatly enjoy
it. You also enjoy all the business in your shop generated by the
nearby theater. Before and after shows, your shop fills with people
from outside London seeking bargains on leather goods before
leaving town. You try to see every new play, at the cheap price of a
penny. Sometimes you stand in the cheaper gallery, but usually you
gain a seat on one of the lower levels. Your line is: "I can't see over all
these ruffians."
Peasant You are a peasant. Living just outside London on the lands of the Earl
of Essex, you work hard tending the Earl's chickens and gaming hens.
You sleep and eat in a shack, which only has dirt floors and a leaky
roof. You have no family and little social life. You eat stale bread and
ale, leftovers from the Earl's dinners. You come into London every few
months to try and find better work. But, being without any trade
skills, you never find better employment. Lately you've begun to feel
ill and you fear you have the plague. When the Earl gives you a scrap
of money, you come to The Globe to see the latest play You never
bathe, have never touched soap, and have various small bugs living in
your hair. Your teeth will soon all be rotten. Your line is: "Do you
have any bread to spare?"
Beggar You are a London beggar, homeless and living on the filthy streets
of London. You beg each day and, if you're lucky, get a scrap of stale
bread from off the streets. The streets are filled with human waste,
garbage, and dead animals thrown into the ditches. Your skin is
covered in boils; you almost always have a fever; and, with winter
coming, you fear this might be your last year alive. You sleep in a
ditch by the river with other homeless people. You rarely get into the
theater because you have no money Sometimes, though, you manage
to sneak in. You always crouch down on the floor amongst the other
groundlings, trying not to get noticed. Your line is: "A penny? I can't
afford a penny!"
School Boy You ran to school this morning and barely made it on time for the
6:00 a.m. bell. After prayers, you work till about 9:00 a.m. when you
are permitted breakfast, then you work till 11:00 a.m. Lunch is from
11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. The school day ends at 5:30 p.m. Yesterday
you were caught talking to your friend Thomas during your lesson,
and your knuckles were rapped with a stick in front of the whole class.
Only boys go to your school. Your sister's education is accomplished at
home. Noble children receive their education at home, from private
tutors. You study Latin, rhetoric, reading, writing, and arithmetic. As a
young boy you will read lots of plays written by Greeks and Romans,
and today you and your classmates are reading Seneca's Medea to
improve your Latin. Your line is: "I've learned my Ovid and I'm ready
to go home!"
TEACHER'S GUIDE 25
LESSONS
The Scene outside the Globe ccontinued)
Tutor You spend the day keeping the young Earl of Derby on schedule.
From 7-7:30 a.m. you oversee his dancing instruction. You then usher
your young lord to the schoolroom to begin his French lesson. You
work from 8 to 10:30 a.m. covering Latin, writing, drawing, and
French. At 10:30 a.m. you join the household in prayers, recreation,
and dinner. This is the second household for which you have taught.
The last family with which you worked had only one son. This family
has three, meaning you will have a stable job for years to come if you
do well with the eldest. At 1:00 p.m. you usher all three boys back to
the schoolroom. The lord has his Cosmography class as well as more
Latin and writing, and you begin arithmetic and letters with the two
younger sons. At 4:30 p.m. your day is almost finished as you bring
your young student downstairs for evening prayers and supper. After
a long day educating young children you curl up at the fire with a
copy of Aristotle. Your line is: "If you don't learn your Ovid, you will
not play tomorrow! "
Baker You are one of the three bakers in Lord Derby$ household. In the
kitchen you work under the Head Baker and Head Cook. There are
two girls who keep the fire and run errands with whom you like to
flirt. As Lord Derby's servant you must follow some strict rules. You
must not be absent from morning or evening meals or prayers or you
will be fined two pence each time. Every time you swear, you are
fined a penny If you ever provoke a fight or strike a man you would
be liable to dismissal. Last week you were fined a sixpence for
wearing a dirty shirt on Sunday Since servants are paid on the
traditional Quarter Days (so called because they divide the year into
quarters), you will be paid next week. Curiously, each of these falls
on or about an equinox or solstice, so you will be able to buy your
sweetheart a present for May Day Your line is: "If my bread does not
rise, I am in for another beating."
Apothecary You are the Earl of Hertford's personal apothecary and work with his
surgeon and physician. Medicines prescribed by physicians are made
up by you, the apothecary Since apothecaries belong to the Grocers
Company, you had to serve an apprenticeship before you became the
Earl's personal apothecary While traveling with your lord you serve
his entire household. You frequently make willow bark tea for her
. ladyship~ frequent headaches. Tomorrow you plan to go to a local
woman who sells dried and fresh herbs in town. The woman is
rumored to be a witch, but you are in desperate need of nightshade
and dandelion weed. Your line is: "Careful. This potion is deadly"
Wet Nurse You are a young mother working for the Earl of Derby You help the
Head Nurse raise his lordship's four children. Currently you are
nursing their youngest daughter, a four-month-old baby Your own
child was weaned a year ago and is being raised at home by your
elder sister. It is your job to nurse and care for the infant, and you
spend your entire day in the nursery While the three older children
are at lessons with the tutor, you and the Head Nurse like to sit and
gossip about Lord Derby and Lady Derby Lady Derby hasn't been
home for two months. Your line is: "I feel like these children are my
very own!"
TEACHER'S GUI DE 27
NCTE ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS STANDARDS
1. Students read a wide range of print and non-print texts 7. Students conduct research on issues and interests by
to build an understanding of texts, of themselves, and of generating ideas and questions, and by posing
the cultures of the United States and the world; to problems. They gather, evaluate, and synthesize data
acquire new information; to respond to the needs and from a variety of sources (e.g., print and non-print texts,
demands of society and the workplace; and for personal artifacts, people) to communicate their discoveries in
fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, ways that suit their purpose and audience.
classic and contemporary works.
8. Students use a variety of technological and information
2. Students read a wide range of literature from many resources (e.g., libraries, databases, computer networks,
periods in many genres to build an understanding of the video) to gather and synthesize information and to
many dimensions (e.g., philosophical, ethical, aesthetic) create and communicate knowledge.
of human experience.
9. Students develop an understanding of and respect for
3. Students apply a wide range of strategies to diversity in language use, patterns, and dialects across
comprehend, interpret, evaluate, and appreciate texts. cultures, ethnic groups, geographic regions, and social
They draw on their prior experience, their interactions roles.
with other readers and writers, their knowledge of word
10. Students whose first language is not English make use
meaning and of other texts, their word identification
of their first language to develop competency in the
strategies, and their understanding of textual features
English language arts and to develop understanding of
(e.g., sound-letter correspondence, sentence structure,
content across the curriculum.
context, graphics).
11. Students participate as knowledgeable, reflective,
4. Students adjust their use of spoken, written, and visual
creative, and critical members of a variety of literacy
language (e.g., conventions, style, vocabulary) to
communities.
communicate effectively with a variety of audiences and
for different purposes. 12. Students use spoken, written, and visual language to
accomplish their own purposes (e.g., for learning,
5. Students employ a wide range of strategies as they
enjoyment, persuasion, and the exchange of
write and use different writing process elements
information).
appropriately to communicate with different audiences
for a variety of purposes.
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