Macbeth Unit Plan: Rationale
Macbeth Unit Plan: Rationale
Macbeth Unit Plan: Rationale
This unit was adapted in part by Dr. Lisa Klein’s 12th grade Academic English course
syllabus, semester calendar, and lesson plan resources. This includes quizzes,
exams, and select writing prompts. She is a 12th grade Academic and AP teacher, the
head of the English department at Baldwin High School in Pittsburgh, Pa, and a
professor of Education at Duquesne University is Pittsburgh, Pa.
Rationale
Goals
Overview
In this Shakespeare unit students will read Macbeth Act by Act. Each Act will
be discussed at length in class. Along with this, students will demonstrate
understanding through writing, quizzes, and analysis of select excerpts in class.
After completing the play, the students will be assigned a writing assignment, in
which they will use textual evidence to support their claims and work together to
help each other through editing and the writing process. During this time the
students will participate in brainstorming, prewriting, and editing workshops. The
students will also have an exam on the play. The unit will end with film analysis,
during which time the students will watch the play.
Standards
PA- Pennsylvania Academic Standards
Standard C.: Use knowledge of root words and words from literary works to recognize and understand the
meaning of new words during reading. Use these words accurately in speaking and writing.
Standard D.: Identify, describe, evaluate and synthesize the essential ideas in text. Assess those reading
strategies that were most effective in learning from a variety of texts.
Standard G.: Demonstrate after reading understanding and interpretation of both fiction and nonfiction text,
including public documents.
· Make, and support with evidence, assertions about texts.
· Compare and contrast texts using themes, settings, characters and ideas.
· Make extensions to related ideas, topics or information.
· Assess the validity of the document based on context.
· Analyze the positions, arguments and evidence in public documents.
· Evaluate the author’s strategies.
· Critique public documents to identify strategies common in public discourse.
Standard A.: Read and understand essential content of informational texts and documents in all academic
areas.
· Differentiate fact from opinion across a variety of texts by using complete and accurate information, coherent
arguments and points of view.
·Distinguish between essential and nonessential information across a variety of sources, identifying the use of
proper references or authorities and propaganda techniques where present.
· Use teacher and student established criteria for making decisions and drawing conclusions.
· Evaluate text organization and content to determine the author’s purpose and effectiveness according to the
author’s theses, accuracy, thoroughness, logic and reasoning.
Standard C.: Produce work in at least one literary genre that follows the conventions of the genre.
Standard B.: Analyze the relationships, uses and effectiveness of literary elements used by one or more
authors in similar genres including characterization, setting, plot, theme, point of view, tone and style.
Standard C.: Analyze the effectiveness, in terms of literary quality, of the author’s use of literary devices.
· Sound techniques (e.g., rhyme, rhythm, meter, alliteration)
· Figurative language (e.g., personification, simile, metaphor, hyperbole, irony, satire)
· Literary structures (e.g., foreshadowing, flashbacks, progressive and digressive time).
Standard E.: Analyze how a scriptwriter’s use of words creates tone and mood, and how choice of words
advances the theme or purpose of the work.
Standard F.: Read and respond to nonfiction and fiction including poetry and drama.
Standard E.: Revise writing to improve style, word choice, sentence variety and subtlety of meaning after
rethinking how questions of purpose, audience and genre have been addressed.
*Note: This lesson plan was designed for 29 45-minute classes estimated to take
about 6-7 weeks to complete. Reading is to be done at home in order to use the
maximum amount of class time for discussion and analysis of each Act.
Detailed Daily Lesson Plans
Materials/Handouts