Learning Resource Type

Lesson Plan

What Do Women Most Desire?

Subject Area

English Language Arts

Grade(s)

12

Overview

Students will conduct survey-based research and compile data that compares the responses that the knights from The Wife of Bath's Tale received to the response of persons in modern day society.   

This is a College- and Career-Ready Standards showcase lesson plan.

    English Language Arts (2021) Grade(s): 12

    ELA21.12.R3

    Utilize active listening skills in formal and informal conversations, following predetermined norms.

    Unpacked Content

    UP:ELA21.12.R3

    Vocabulary

    • Active listening
    • Formal conversations
    • Informal conversations
    • Predetermined norms

    Knowledge

    Students know:
    • Active listening skills.
    • Strategies to identify formal and informal settings.
    • Engage in formal and informal conversations.
    • Predetermined norms for formal and informal discussions.

    Skills

    Students are able to:
    • Demonstrate active listening skills during formal and informal discussions.
    • Practice predetermined norms for formal and informal discussions.

    Understanding

    Students understand that:
    • Conversations and discussions follow predetermined norms which help us actively listen and gain understanding.
    English Language Arts (2021) Grade(s): 12

    ELA21.12.14

    Actively engage in collaborative discussions about topics and texts, expressing their own ideas by respectfully contributing to, building upon, and questioning the ideas of others in pairs, diverse groups, and whole class settings.

    Unpacked Content

    UP:ELA21.12.14

    Vocabulary

    • Collaborative discussions
    • Pairs
    • Diverse groups
    • Whole class settings

    Knowledge

    Students know:
    • The format and process for respectful, collaborative discussions in a variety of settings.
    • Methods for expressing their ideas, contributing to and building upon others' ideas, and questioning the ideas of others.

    Skills

    Students are able to:
    • Participate in a collaborative discussion in pairs, diverse groups, and whole class settings.
    • Express their own ideas, contribute to and build upon others' ideas, or question the ideas of others.

    Understanding

    Students understand that:
    • They can better understand a topic or text by discussing their ideas with others.
    • There are multiple ways to respond to others in a collaborative discussion, including answering questions, asking questions, or adding to others' ideas.
    English Language Arts (2021) Grade(s): 12

    ELA21.12.18

    Create and deliver an oral presentation, created collaboratively from individual contributions, that is suitable in purpose and tone for its intended audience and occasion.

    Unpacked Content

    UP:ELA21.12.18

    Vocabulary

    • Oral presentation
    • Collaboratively
    • Individual contributions
    • Purpose
    • Tone
    • Intended audience
    • Intended occasion

    Knowledge

    Students know:
    • Methods to deliver ideas in an oral presentation, such as speaking to defend or explain a digital poster, multimedia presentation, or video on an area of interest related to college or career choices.
    • Strategies to determine the purpose, tone, audience, and occasion for a presentation.
    • Necessary skills to create and deliver a presentation in a collaborative format.

    Skills

    Students are able to:
    • Create an oral presentation by collaboratively combining individual contributions.
    • Deliver an oral presentation.
    • Adjust audience, purpose, tone, and occasion as required for oral presentations.

    Understanding

    Students understand that:
    • Respectful collaboration with peers is necessary for academic and workplace success.
    • Finished collaborative products can be created by combining each individual's contribution.
    • Audience, purpose, tone, and occasion can change based on the criteria of an assignment.

    Primary Learning Objectives

    • Collaborate to generate questions to be used for conducting an interview. 
    • Synthesize and present data. 
    • Demonstrate understanding of how literature shapes or reflects society.

    Procedures/Activities

    Day 1:

    1. After students have read Chaucer's The Wife of Bath's Tale, have them discuss the question that the knight has to answer on his quest.

    2. Ask students if they think the responses to the question have changed since Chaucer's time.

    3. Divide the class into groups of four or fewer.

    4. Instruct groups to compose five questions that correspond with the question that the knight had to answer.    

    5. Have students decide on five people of various ages, genders, grades, and professions whom they can interview using the questions the group compiled.

    6. Allow students class time and homework time to go on "a quest" to get the responses and, with the interviewee's consent, record at least one of the interviews.

    Day 2: 

    7. Have groups meet and compile the results of their responses and compare them to responses that the knight received.

    8. Instruct students to create graphs and charts that reflect the results of the compiled responses.

    9. Using the charts, graphs, and interviews, have students create an oral presentation which presents the answers that the group discovered in its modern day quest.           


    Day 1:

    1. After students have read Chaucer's The Wife of Bath's Tale, have them discuss the question that the knight has to answer on his quest.

    2. Ask students if they think the responses to the question have changed since Chaucer's time.

    3. Divide the class into groups of four or fewer.

    4. Instruct groups to compose five questions that correspond with the question that the knight had to answer.    

    5. Have students decide on five people of various ages, genders, grades, and professions whom they can interview using the questions the group compiled.

    6. Allow students class time and homework time to go on "a quest" to get the responses and, with the interviewee's consent, record at least one of the interviews.

    Day 2: 

    7. Have groups meet and compile the results of their responses and compare them to responses that the knight received.

    8. Instruct students to create graphs and charts that reflect the results of the compiled responses.

    9. Using the charts, graphs, and interviews, have students create an oral presentation which presents the answers that the group discovered in its modern day quest.           


    Day 1:

    1. After students have read Chaucer's The Wife of Bath's Tale, have them discuss the question that the knight has to answer on his quest.

    2. Ask students if they think the responses to the question have changed since Chaucer's time.

    3. Divide the class into groups of four or fewer.

    4. Instruct groups to compose five questions that correspond with the question that the knight had to answer.    

    5. Have students decide on five people of various ages, genders, grades, and professions whom they can interview using the questions the group compiled.

    6. Allow students class time and homework time to go on "a quest" to get the responses and, with the interviewee's consent, record at least one of the interviews.

    Day 2: 

    7. Have groups meet and compile the results of their responses and compare them to responses that the knight received.

    8. Instruct students to create graphs and charts that reflect the results of the compiled responses.

    9. Using the charts, graphs, and interviews, have students create an oral presentation which presents the answers that the group discovered in its modern day quest.           

    Assessment Strategies

    Formative assessment of group discussions

    Ask students to explain the results of the research

    Allow students to present the differences in the knight's responses and the modern responses

    Group presentation 

    Acceleration

    Students can write a reflection explaining to what extent literature reflects society.

    Students can use the charts and graphs to report findings to a math class.  

    Intervention

    Students may review graph and chart lessons with math instructors.

    Students may use Oral Presentation Rubric as guideline for planning the presentation.

     

    Approximate Duration

    Total Duration

    91 to 120 Minutes

    Background and Preparation

    Background/Preparation

    This lesson should follow the reading and discussion of Chaucer's The Wife of Bath's Tale.

    Materials and Resources

    Materials and Resources

    Set of index cards for writing interview questions and recording responses.

     

     

    Technology Resources Needed

    http://prezi.com/

    Smart phone or digital camera

     

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