Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Hunger games, using the movie or the novel in the classroom
Poetry in the classroom
For someone poems can be boring and many wonder why we have to work so much with poems in the classroom, especially when you find the poems difficult to understand. However, the reasons why we are learning poems are many. The Norwegian competence aims from LK06 says that “read and understand different types of texts of varying length from different sources” (Udir, 2006), this include poetry as well. Poetry is, and has always been, a huge part of literature tradition in Britain and English speaking countries, and pupils in school are supposed to learn about these countries. Poetry is also a genre we often come across in our daily life, and poems are often short texts and that appeal to many students. Poems are also a great platform for learning to read between the lines.
When students have reach 5th and 6th grade, they will have a greater vocabulary and we can introduce them to some more poetry terms. Rhyme schemes are something they probably are getting used to, and this might be one of the easiest things to discover in a poem. Other devices used in a poem could be alliteration, when a line or verse in a poem contains several words that begins on the letter. Assonance are when lines or verses contains words with repeating vowels or sounds. Here is one example:
LK06 http://www.udir.no/kl06/eng1-03/Hele/Kompetansemaal/kompetansemal-etter-7.-arstrinn/?lplang=eng 25.11.15
The Hunger Games
Authorities in Dystopian Literature - The Hunger Games
https://www.flickr.com/photos/goodncrazy/4350445408 |
Hunger Games in the classroom
- . “To suggest and encourage a passion for reading in the English classroom.
- . To highlight what is distinctive about teenagers, thereby increasing understanding of the types of reading matter and themes which might appeal to them most”. (Birketveit and Williams, page 165)
Matilda
Matilda Is a book written by Roald Dahl in 1988. Tha book is about a super inteligent girl with special powers who lives with her family who don't care about her or education. At school she meets the wonderful and kind teacher Miss Honey, and the terrible headmaster Miss Trunchbull.
The book has several themes and one of them is children who rebels against authority (in this case the parents and miss Trunchbull). Another theme in Matilda is family, Matilda knows that her family isn't normal and show us what a dysfunctional family is. We take it for granted that parents are loving, kind and suportive. Miss Honey has also a dysfunctional relationship with her aunt Miss Trunchbull. A third theme you can find in the book is authority abusing power. Mis Trunchbull abuses her children by throwing them around, locking them in and forcing them to eat cake. At last but not least we have the theme "superpowers", Matilda is not only super smart but she also can move things by using her mind. How cool is that?
- by Karita Hansen
Panem: A dystopian society
The Hunger Games has become a world famous YA-series, and all three books have been adapted into movies. The series is written by the American author Suzanne Collins. The story takes place in “the Hunger Games universe”, and it is set in the country “Panem”. Panem is a dystopian society, and we will now look at what makes Panem a dystopian.
First of all, what is a dystopia? Nikki Gamble describes dystopia as “a fictional, socially engineered society usually presided over by a totalitarian regime” (Gamble, 2013, p. 200). One of the most characteristic things about a dystopian literature is that the humans are the cause behind the dystopic state. A dystopic state can have similarities with the world we live in, but it is usually set in an imaginary future. It is a very restricted society where you have a superior authority that controls the rest of the citizens. (Gamble, 2013, p. 200)
So what about Panem? After national environmental disasters and war, North America was destroyed. Panem raised from the ashes and became a country. Humans where therefore the reason behind the evolving of this state. Panem is placed at an unknown time in the future, as dystopias often are. It is divided into 12 districts, and Panem’s source of power lies in a utopian city called “the Capitol”. The different districts are built on class divisions and they are not allowed to have contact across the districts. The society is built as a pure dictatorship with “President Snow” as the one in charge. He and his “peacemakers” makes sure that the citizens don’t contact other districts. This is to avoid that the people in the districts comes together in a new rebellion. The society is living in hunger, but in the Capitol people are eating more than they need. The fact that nobody can take a stand against the injustice in Panem, says a lot about how much power the government has and how much power they use to keep people from rebelling.
As you can understand, Panem is a very controlling society and it does not give the citizens much freedom. It is an unfair life how the people in the different districts lives. It is truly a dystopia and I’m just happy that I don’t have to take place in a society as Panem.
Sources
- Gamble, Nikki. Exploring Children’s Literature. London: Sage Publishers, 2013
- http://www.flickeringmyth.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/The-HUnger-Games-Movie-Logo.png
Romeo and Juliet in class
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0063518/
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romeo_and_Juliet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Shakespeare
By Karita Hansen
Using Fairy Tales in a Teaching Situation
By Vegard Melum
The Grimm Brothers |
Sleeping Beauty |
Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Little Red Riding Hood and the Wolf
By Vegard Melum
Whereas in Roald Dahl’s revolting rhyme, everything seems like the original fairy tale at first, until “Red” suddenly does something unexpected:
Then Little Red Riding Hood said, “But Grandma,
what a lovely great big furry coat you have on.”
Ah well, not matter what you say,
I’m going to eat you anyway.”
She whips a pistol from her knickers.
She aims it at the creature’s head
And bang, bang, bang, she shoots him dead.
My lovely furry wolfskin coat."
Romeo & Juliet
Perhaps one the world's most famous plays, Romeo and Juliet, is written by the famous and glorious William Shakespeare, in London in the middle of 1590s. The play is divided into 5 Acts, with 3-6 scenes in each, and it’s written in present tense. The play is categorized as a tragic drama, due to is heartbreaking ending. The setting takes place in Verona in Italy and in a typical Renaissance setting.
Romeo and Juliet by Francesco Hayez, 1823 |
The plays protagonist is Romeo and Juliet, which also shares
the plays point of view. The climax, in my opinion, is in act 5
and scene 3 when Romeo finds Juliet and kill himself with poison. Thereby the falling action also takes place, in my opinion, in Act 5 and at the end of scene 3, when the Prince and the parents discover the bodies of Romeo and Juliet, and agree to put aside their feud in the interest of peace.
One of the central themes in the play is love. In the play, you can find themes like the forcefulness of love, love as a cause of violence, forbidden love, love between friends and love between nurses and child. There’s also themes of the society as children versus adult, the individual versus society, the inevitability of fate. They play also enlighten the importance to have freedom. Personally, the play gave me a clear message about the importance to have and to give freedom. Freedom to be who you want to be, love who you want and do what you want.
It’s interesting that still, after all these years, the play is still essential and representative of today's society. Romeo and Juliet show us still how fragile love is, so we must grasp and accept it when we have it.