Monday, March 28, 2011

Has anyone else in class even heard of the TV show "Moonlighting" ???

Really, am I the only one in class that actually watched a show called "Moonlighting" that was mentioned in the article I read, "Shakespeare and the At-Risk Student"?  Just wondering.

All of this talk about Shakespeare reminds me of my first (and really only) experience teaching Shakespeare.  I taught in a Chinese college in Hong Kong for a year and a half in the mid-90s.  I’ll never forget when the student group assigned to cover Romeo and Juliet absolutely BLEW me away with their lively, memorized, engaging, full-on dramatic rendition of the play.  They had rewritten the play to key scenes and designed it all to run about 30 minutes.  Students memorized and delivered their lines in a virtually flawless performance.  All students wore full costume.  Juliet even perched on a desk as she called out to Romeo.  They may have even kissed?   I can’t remember. The Chinese students used some of the most precise enunciation they had used all semester.  The students wrote to me later in their journals that the project was one of the most inspiring they had ever done.  Admittedly, it was their creativity and their drive that produced the good work they did.  I only facilitated and acted as the guide-on-the-side.  It was a real lesson to me on the importance of letting students free so they can create freely. 
Gleaves, Slagle, and Twaryonas supply inspiration and ideas I’ll definitely use in their article on “Shakespeare and the At-Risk Student.”  As a future special education teacher, I expect to sometimes question whether I should be using multiple modalities and alternative/modified texts for teaching harder texts.  I like that these authors embrace the idea that “at-risk students could not only present and perform, but be appropriate audience members.”  The teachers espoused the belief that “all… students can understand and appreciate the works of William Shakespeare.”   I found it interesting that Patti introduced her sophomore students to the text by first watching a film, e.g. she introduced The Taming of the Shrew by first having students view Zeffirelli’s film of the play, starting Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton.  They ended the class by viewing the Moonlighting spoof (strangely enough I vaguely recall when this came out).  Patti used Zeffirelli’s Hamlet to  help students connect to the drama.  She also used scene-by-scene summaries, character poems, improvisation, and journal writing (and the Moonlighting spoof again).    All of this emphasizes that the multi-modal approach is critical to engaging students, particularly at-risk students.  This all comes back to the importance of creating multiple access points to text and learning.  With at-risk students, there is a likelihood that a text-only approach would not engage and would not appeal to all students’ strengths.  The multi-pronged approach of video, writing, reading, speaking will appeal to a wider variety of the student strengths in order to encourage learning.
Clearly, a key part of teaching Shakespeare is ensuring students can connect to the text.  I particularly liked Patti’s point that having students present complete scenes is unwieldy and perhaps too daunting for students who are at-risk.  She instead had students choose single incidents and improvise the scenes using their own language and dialects.  Patti found these improvised incidents “increased success” and further engaged students.  David suggests that students need to become familiar with Shakespeare, audiences of the time, and “Elizabethan customs, belief, and family life.”  Through studying this, students compare and contrast their own lives with life in Shakespeare’s time.  He used Papp and Kirkland’s Shakespeare Alive! (1988) to guide students in this study.  I definitely need to check out this book!  I liked how he assigned small groups a chapter; students had to select five things from their chapter and present the information back to the class.

 The teachers’ descriptions of their efforts to engage these at-risk students in the Shakespeare Celebration inspires me to provide similar opportunities for my future students to participate and “own” such an event by choosing and planning the medium for contribution.  Students could provide art or projects for display, present text from Shakespeare through dramatizations, skits, videos, reenactments,  or choral reading, be a master of ceremony or stage manager.  Each student chose a project for the event.  The teachers noted that the key elements to the event were that the study and performance should be fun and that the effort should focus on collaboration in the classroom.  The results were that  students improved their attitudes toward their responsibilities, gained renewed or new found confidence as learners, and enhanced their self esteem.  I hope I’m creative enough to get this going in my own classrooms!!
I finished the Manga Shakespeare Romeo and Juliet, but I’m just not sure I love reading it over the original Romeo and Juliet.  I need to think on this a little more.   At this point, I’d prefer to stick to the original.  I might, however, give students an opportunity to read this in a group project.  Or maybe, I’d take a scene from the original and compare it to this.  I guess I’m still getting used to the idea of the graphic novel.  I feel like there’s so much we can do with the original, and like the teachers in “Shakespeare and the At-Risk Student,” I do feel that all students can appreciate the work of Shakespeare in some way.  At any rate, I am very interested in hearing the responses and ideas of my classmates to this debate.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Thank goodness our class isn't held in Dauphin Room 101...

WAR IS PEACE
FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH.

I'm not going to make much sense tonight.  There are some days when novels like 1984  may not be quite the novel you need for life and inspiration.  Today is one of those days.  Lighter fare would be welcomed but that's me... that's me right now at least.  I did, however, choose to read this book; it's something I've wanted to delve into for awhile.  Yes, there are days that I prefer to not think and worry about what I could and should be thinking about... the freedoms I should appreciate. This week maybe not ideal, but I proceed.

More pause is required for serious daring within.  Some thoughts I've contemplated through the reading:

1.  The power of literacy.  The unpower of ignorance.  The unpower of literacy.  The power of ignorance.  In 1984 we read the slogans of the Party.  I'd be wiped out in an instant: challenged on discretion;  physical pain unacceptable.  Yet, the theme of literacy and its effects, the focus on words/language/vocabulary/nuance and access to it streams throughout many of the books we've read recently:  The Book Thief, Night, Feed, 1984, Anne Frank.  Elie Wiesel's efforts to capture his experiences through words as a way forward into the future.  Liesel's efforts in The Book Thief to gain access to words and books.  Nazi efforts to discourage non-Party reading.  Feed's view of the future and the negative impact of non-free-thinking, non-influenced decision making, and little contemplative thinking at all.  In the world of 1984 the destruction of words is seen by many as a beautiful thing, yet Winston recognizes this as just part of the effort to make "thought-crime" impossible. No longer do we need 50 words for "good" and 50 words for "bad:" now good/ungood all based on one single word.

All of these works focus on literacy, the power of words, the power of creativity; it's all contrasted by the efforts to crush this power to support totalitarianism.  1984 presents a dim view of humanity's future through its presentation of the almost-Nazi-like effort by Big Brother to eliminate words.  1984 takes it even further so that the effort to achieve acquiescence, docility comes not just from burning books and eliminating access but by eliminating actual words and any nuances in language.    All history becomes rewriting; history essentially is eliminated.  It's a dismal view of the capacity within humanity. 

2.  Are we really capable of love?  Are we not really just in survival mode all the time? The views of human nature are startling in 1984  as in Night.  We saw real-life son stealing food from a father in Night.  We saw Winston turning in his lover because he couldn't stand the torture in 1984.  Winston is reborn, recommitted to life through his love affair but in the end just ends up fending for himself.  His belief in friendship through O'Brien faulty.  Humans who cope well in love with no serious roadblocks end up giving in.  Is there truly a brotherhood or family unit?  Maybe abuse of power simply pervades. 

As I said, the book presents a dismal view.

Did I mention I may need some lighter fare in terms of reading right now?  More discussion to come in class.