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Lesson Plan: Writing about the Total Effect

Author: B. Wu, Murry Bergtraum HS, New York, N.Y.
Subject: English
Grade Level: 9-12

Overview:
This lesson is designed to assist students in understanding how an author of a skillfully crafted piece of literature succeeds in leaving a great emotional impact on readers through orchestrating all the key literary elements, such as, plot, setting, point of view, tone, theme, symbol, and irony. Through the discussion of the total effect, students can analyze hoe the effect is achieved in other works of literature in their future reading.

Objective:
Following the discussion about how each literary element contributes to the creating of the total effect in Julius Caesar, each student will display his/her understanding by composing an essay about 250 words on the topic.

Materials:
Julius Caesar by Shakespeare.

Activities and Procedures:
  1. Begin the class with the discussion on " In observing an artistic work (painting, music, movie, drama), what elements in the work move you most and why?" (The answer could be sound, colors, language, images, etc.)
  2. From the above discussion, students will be led to the topic of how the total effect is created in works of literature. (The answer could be: plot, setting, language, tension, characterization, etc.)
  3. Summarize the discussion:
  4. Prewriting:
    Ask yourself the following questions and record your answer in a chart.
  5. Writing paragraph by paragraph:

Assessment measures:
The final essay on the topic.

Follow-up activities/extensions:
This lesson will lead to discussions of the total effect of other selections of literature.