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The World of William Unit Objectives This unit will help you to: • Distinguish facts from opinions and theories • Interpret illustrations • Imagine what others are experiencing • Become more aware of changes in language over time • Combine information from a range of sources Unit 11: Investigating Shakespeare’s World Learning Outcome By the end of the lesson I will be able to: 1. distinguish facts from opinions and theories 2. Improve my note-taking skills Key words fact, opinion, theory Facts about William Shakespeare born Famous for Have read worked married other Know him through wrote Investigating Shakespeare’s World. Finding the Facts What is fact? What is an opinion? Why are fact and opinion different? Why is it important that we know the difference and use the right one in different situations? Definitions FACTS: Can be proven to be true. OPINION : A point of view. THEORY : A suggestion using evidence to show their point of view could be correct. Copy this into your yellow book Turn to Page 115 What is an abbreviation? When researching, it would take too much time to write down everything you read. An effective way of just gathering the bits you will need is to use abbreviations. An abbreviation is a shortened version of a word or phrase, for example, _____________________________. Distinguishing facts from opinions and theories. Biographies do more than give facts. They also provide opinions and theories about the person. This makes the biography more interesting to read. The writer often helps the readers to distinguish between the facts and opinions and theories. This extract opens with the sentence: William Shakespeare is probably the most famous of all writers. This statement is based on point of view. It cannot be proved. It is opinion. The word ‘probably’ alerts the reader to this. In lines 23-31 the writer offers a theory about how Shakespeare might have been caught stealing deer from Charlecote Park. This is neither fact nor opinion. It is an attempt to explain why Shakespeare left Stratford when he did. The words ‘It seems that’ (line 23), ‘it is said that’ (line 26), and ‘may well have’ (line 29) alert the reader to this. Task: Turn to p117 Complete Activity 2, Your chart will need to look like this: FACT OPINION THEORY Biographical writing The main purpose of a biography is to re-tell the events of a persons life. A biography usually contains: A lot of factual detail Opinions and stories about the person A theory or two about how / why they did the things they did. Shakespeare’s Life Learning Outcome To create a time line which is set out in chronological order and that shows factual details. Key words Time line Chronological order Facts Starter – Your class is going to create a ‘living’ timeline of Shakespeare’s life! With your partner look at the card that you have been given. Each card shows a different event in Shakespeare’s life. How could you perform the information on your card? • Could you make a freeze frame - with no action? • Would you prefer to include movement and action? • You may decide to include a line or two of speech. Position yourselves in date order… 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 1564 – Shakespeare born 1582 – Marries Anne Hathaway 1583 – Susannah born 1585 – Judith & Hamnet born 1587 – Begins acting in London 1590 – Begins writing his plays 1596 – Hamnet dies 1599 – The Globe Theatre is built 1601 – His father dies 1603 – He forms a new company ‘The King’s Men’ 1607 – Susannah marries 1608 – His first grandchild is born 1612 – Shakespeare retires to Stratford 1615 – Judith marries 1616 – Shakespeare dies Main Activity: Creating your time line Examples: • Create a board game: 1. 1564 Shakes peare born 2. 3. 4. 1582 Plenary • Make up a question that you could ask your class mates about Shakespeare. Use information from your time line or from the spider diagram in your exercise books. Shakespeare in Elizabethan England Shakespeare lived from 1564 till 1616. For most of that time Queen Elizabeth was on the throne (she died in 1603), and so the that time period is known as Elizabethan England. 8Lc Fri 2/3/07 8TB Mon 5/3/07 lesson 3 8Lc Fri 2/3/07 8TB Mon 5/3/07 lesson 3 After she died After Queen Elizabeth popped her clogs, King James I came to the throne. King James was also King of Scotland, and one of his interests was language…another interest was… Witchcraft and magic 8Lc Fri 2/3/07 8TB Mon 5/3/07 lesson 3 In Elizabethan England EVERYONE believed in witchcraft. That is, everyone believed that witchcraft was real, that witches cast spells to make a cow sick, or to cause a woman to be ugly, or to make a man’s hair fall out. They believed that most witches were women, that they had supernatural powers, and that they could so things like see into the future, predict the weather, or kill without being caught. 8Lc Fri 2/3/07 8TB Mon 5/3/07 lesson 3 Witchcraft for people like you and I So what did it mean to be accused of being a witch? Some of you may have heard of the dunking stool…where those accused were sat on the end of a very long stick and dunked in the local river…if they survived then they must have used witchcraft to help them so they were clearly guilty…if they drowned they were cleared of all charges…but of course, they were dead, so did it really matter? 8Lc Fri 2/3/07 8TB Mon 5/3/07 lesson 3 Witchcraft, King James, and a play called ‘The Tempest’. FACT: King James was on the throne when Shakespeare wrote The Tempest. OPINION : We know The Tempest is a very good play because people still go and see it be performed 400 years after it was written. THEORY : Shakespeare included lots of magic and some witchcraft in ‘The Tempest’, because he wanted to please King James and he knew King James would enjoy seeing the magic of Prospero and Ariel, and the witchcraft of Sycorax in the play. TASK… Using the worksheet, complete the CLOZE activities in your best handwriting onto lined paper. These tasks will be the beginning of your year 9 Shakespeare SAT’s project so it is very important that your work is presented well. a) The Life of William Shakespeare, (Page 1) b) Shakespeare Cultural background, Witchcraft. (Page 2) You can use a separate piece of lined paper for each CLOZE activity. Elizabethan Theatres Learning Outcome By the end of the lesson I will have interpreted illustrations and be able to say how they help me understand Elizabethan theatre. Key words Elizabethan theatres GETTING INFORMATION FROM PICTURES Although not much is known about Shakespeare, a great deal is known about the times in which he lived and the theatres where his plays were performed. One picture provides a valuable source of information. In 1596 a Dutchman, Johannes de Witt made a sketch of the Swan Theatre in his diary and this was later copied by his friend Arend Van Buchell. It is the only eyewitness picture of the inside of an Elizabethan theatre. 7 Activity 1. On plain paper draw the picture of the Elizabethan theatre on pg119 2. Complete Activity 3, pg 118 and label your drawing. Use one colour for the Latin labels and a different colour for the English meanings. 3. Write on the back of your drawing the true statements in activity 3.2. Thurs 8/3/07 lesson 4 Task: Activity 4 Turn to p120 Using the A4 worksheet, 1) label each part of the theatre, neatly. Make sure your writing stays level. 2) On the back of the worksheet, answer part 2 in full sentences. Fri 5/3/07 lesson 5 Elizabethan Theatres Lesson Outcomes By the end of the lesson I will have an understanding of the Elizabethan theatre experience. Thurs 8/3/07 lesson 4 Starter 1) On lined paper put your name on the left and today’s date on the right. 2) Put the title William Shakespeare: A biography 3) Put the sub-heading Shakespeare’s Personal Life 4) Write a paragraph using the research you have gathered for homework. Homework Remember that you are going to write an Introduction to Shakespeare. You have already written details about various aspects of his life. Your next task is to write: 1) a paragraph about Elizabethan theatre 2) a paragraph about one (or more) of Shakespeare’s plays. The following websites are useful: http://www.bardweb.net/words.html http://www.pegasus51.org/awtew/language.htm Also, there is information in the library. Aim to write at least 100 words for each subheading. The following may help you: Title of the play Characters in the play Themes in the play, for example, love, hate, war, power. Plot Type of play (comedy, tragedy, history for example) Stage design theatre location theatre name why male actors cost of going to see the play who went to see the play the Elizabethan experience of going to the theatre Fri 5/3/07 lesson 5 Cinema or theatre? which would you choose? Thurs 8/3/07 lesson 4 Have you been to the theatre or the cinema? Think about the experience. Why is the cinema different to the theatre? Who hasn’t been to the theatre? Why not? Not cool? No opportunity? Too expensive? Not interested? Comparing Shakespeare’s theatres with theatres today Thurs 8/3/07 lesson 4 Shakespeare’s theatres Modern theatres have… had… 1. No roof, so sometimes it rained in the theatre. 2. Daylight was the only lighting. 3. No special lighting effects so the audience had to imagine, E.g. a storm. 4.No stage make-up to help the actors disguise themselves. 5. Individual actors had their own costumes. 6. No scenery; the stage always looked the same. 7. Only a few props that actors could carry on stage 8. No female actresses; men played women’s parts and boys played girls’ parts. 9.Most of audience (the groundlings) stood around the stage, very near to the actors. This was the cheapest way to see a play, costing one penny. 10. Audiences could be noisy if they didn’t like the play, shouting, hissing, booing, and sometimes throwing rotten vegetables, Thurs 8/3/07 lesson 4 11. Some of the audience paid 2 pennies to sit on benches in the galleries. Cushions cost one extra penny. 12. During the intervals, audiences could buy bread, fruit and beer inside the theatre. 13. A flag would be flown from the roof of the theatre to show that a play was due that afternoon. 14. A trumpet would be played to announce the start of the play. 15. Audiences had to listen carefully to know what the play was about and where the scene happened. Now match the modern information… A. Powerful electric lighting to light up the stage. B. Actors wear stage make-up, sometimes to disguise themselves. C. The lights dim to show that the play is starting. D. Plays are advertised on posters and in newspapers. E. In the intervals, audiences leave the auditorium to buy drinks and ice-cream. F. Theatres are shut in without any light getting in from the outside. G. Lighting is used to create special effects on the stage. H. All the costumes are designed by one artist. I. Many props are used to make the stage look as real as possible. J. Scenery is used to create a picture on stage. K. Men or boys play male parts and women or girls play female parts, except in pantomimes. L. All the audience sit on comfortable seats in rows facing the stage. M. Audiences listen quietly and don’t clap much if they don’t like the play. N. The cheapest seats are high up at the back of the Circle. O. Audiences usually buy a programme which explains the story and where each scene takes place. Reading with Empathy Lesson Outcomes By the end of the lesson I will have imagined what it feels like to be someone else and to see things from their point of view. Key words Empathy groundling Describe in detail a visit to the theatre Complete Activity 5 using the information on pages 121-122 You are a groundling http://www.shakespearesglob e.com/about-us/virtual-tour what you do what you see when you look around you Reasons for being at the theatre The different kinds of people around you things you like most about it things you like least about it You are a groundling in the World of William Shakespeare 1. What is your name? 2. How do you earn a living? 3. Do you have friends? Family? Describe in detail a visit to the theatre You can do this in one of the following ways: 1. Write a letter to a friend or relative 2. Write a diary entry 3. Write out an interview with a groundling Reading with empathy, Activity 6 page 123 Interview with an Actor • Interviewer: What do you enjoy about Shakespeare’s plays? • Actor: Well, I think the characters are interesting to play and….. • Interviewer: What was it like going on stage for the first time? • Actor: Scary. The stage is very large and bare. I noticed that the audience was….(lines33-39) • Interviewer: How did it effect you having no lighting on the stage? • Actor: Well, it meant that……(lines37-39) • Interviewer: How did the audience behave when you were acting? • Actor: (lines39-44) • Interviewer: How did the rich people behave when they were watching? • Actor: (lines45-47) • Interview with a Groundling • Why do you like going to the theatre? • Where are Shakespeare’s plays set? • What kind of scenery is there? • What kind of people stand and watch the plays? • Do you think it would be better if you could afford to pay more? Why? • How do you and the other groundlings treat the actors? Fri 16/3/07 Lesson 7 Lesson 7 Lesson Objectives To examine Elizabethan language. Lesson Outcomes By the end of the lesson I will be able to understand some Elizabethan words, and figure out how to understand any I don’t know. Fri 16/3/07 Lesson 7 The language of Shakespeare Language changes all the time. Think of all the new words we have that have developed alongside technology…computer, interface, modem…and in our fast paced, throwaway society, cheeseburger, coke, disposable nappies. In pairs, make a list of 5 words you think Shakespeare would have to ask what they meant, if he suddenly appeared from the past? Unbelievable facts: Some people spend all their time looking at Shakespeare's texts. From these scholars we can learn that Shakespeare added at least 3000 words to our language, his vocabulary was HUGE….he knew at least 17,000 words, and over 7,000 of them he used only once! Page 124 So let’s try getting our head’s round the language of Shakespeare: Fri 16/3/07 Lesson 7 Match these Elizabethan words to their definitions: iant An ungenteel man, a bookseller dimense Stale urine used to strengthen beer zouch Solitary, lonely unked A space measured out Fri 16/3/07 Lesson 7 Matched them correctly? iant Stale urine used to strengthen beer dimense A space measured out zouch An ungenteel man, a bookseller unked Solitary, lonely Fri 16/3/07 Lesson 7 Task Heading: Understanding language from the past: Activity 7 Copy these words in a list down your page: (Complete this on lined paper) Destroying A quick mind Deadly Die A form of entertainment Blocked up Worthy structure Abandoned Roof made from straw Burnt Grilled Trousers Then, when you read the extract from Fire at the Globe p124, write the correct Elizabethan word next to our modern version. Homework Due in Tuesday 14th March You are going to write an Introduction to Shakespeare. Using the information gathered about Shakespeare so far, your homework is to write a 200 word biography on William Shakespeare. This will be the beginning of your Introduction. Include information about some of the following information: Birth Marriage Death Parents Children Why he went to London Lived Worked Famous Names of plays His other job Anything else of interest Extension Task Underline where you have used FACTS ? OPINIONS and THEORIES. Mon 19/3/07 Lesson 8