Pre-reading one-pagerĪnother pre-reading activity that you could do is this one by Thoreauly Lit. However, instead of leaving a statement on posters, students are asked to move to the ‘agree’ or ‘disagree’ side of the room.Īfter choosing sides, students must defend their opinion in-class discussion. Like English Bulldog’s activity, this activity has ten statements on issues raised in Shelley’s Frankenstein that students must agree or disagree with. QR code mini flipbook with links to chapters of the novel in audio and textual format, as well as summary, character, allusion, theme, and literary technique tasks.The post-reading activities in the bundle include All of the activities in the bundle look engaging and interesting. If you’re interested, English Bulldog also includes the carousel discussion in a pre-and post-reading activity bundle (which you can look at here). There is also a PowerPoint with student-friendly objectives, student directions, and activity time limits. The carousel discussion also has a Frankenstein lesson plan for the teacher, Common Core objectives, preparation steps, a classroom agenda, and assessment strategies. Then students will have a whole-class debriefing discussion. Students must leave a statement of dis/agreement on the poster.Īfter seeing all of the posters and leaving a statement, students choose (or are assigned) a poster to review and analyze the trend in thinking. The carousel activity is like English Bulldog’s other carousel activities, where students move around the room reading posters with statements on them. The first Frankenstein pre-reading activity on our list is this pre-reading carousel discussion by English Bulldog. Pre-reading lesson plans for Frankensteinīefore reading the novel, it’s a great idea to do some pre-reading activities to activate students’ prior knowledge, as well as fill knowledge gaps they may have. Help your students better understand this Gothic novel using one of these Frankenstein lesson plans or activities. And yet many people only know and understand the surface-level of the novel, an evil monster created by a mad scientist. Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein has had a far-reaching influence on popular culture. We have 25 easy and exciting lesson plans and activities for teaching Frankenstein. For questions or complaints, contact our District Equity Officer and District Compliance Officer and Title IX Coordinator for Employee Affairs: Dana Page, Assistant Superintendent Human Resources, 2425 Jefferson St., Napa CA 94558, 70, and/or District Compliance Officer and Title IX Coordinator for Student Affairs: District Section 504/ADA Coordinator: Maryanne Christoffersen, Director of Student Services, 2425 Jefferson St., Napa CA 94558, 70.Are you searching for lesson plans for Frankenstein? Then you’ve come to the right place. The Napa Valley School District is committed to equal opportunity for all individuals and does not allow discrimination, intimidation, harassment, including sexual harassment, or bullying based on a person’s actual or perceived race, color, ancestry, nationality/national origin, immigration status, ethnic group identification/ethnicity, age, religion, marital status/ pregnancy/ parental status, physical or mental disability, sex, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, gender expression, genetic information, medical information or association with a person or group with one of more of these actual or perceived characteristics.
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