Showing posts with label GCSE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GCSE. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 December 2024

Looking at writers - does he ever stop smoking?

Today, I am writing a eulogy for someone very close to me. Like most people, I’ve put things off. For example,  I’ve been tempted to search the history of using ‘a’ instead of ‘an’ when forming the phrase ‘a eulogy’. I won’t bore you with the details. And, of course, writing this blog is another way for me to put off the inevitable. Anyway, a eulogy is about creating a sense of a person and what they mean to you. 


This sense of a person is something I feel we have lost within English. I’ve been part of lots of discussions around how English should change and what’s the problem with its current form, but I’d argue that our sense of humanity and our sense of humans has been lost. Texts have become collections of techniques to find and catalogue. Texts have become things to highlight and pick out things. Texts have become these things that float in nebulous space that have no relevance or currency in the real world. 


Texts in the English classroom cannot escape being picked apart and overly scrutinised. It isn’t the obsession with knowledge that is at the root of the problem. It is this default method that everything we do in English has to be linked or connected to the spotting of something. How many lessons go by without there being a highlight or comment on a technique used? We’ve got to the point where we are our own worst enemy. We only feel comfortable if students are talking about techniques. 


The writer has become a forgotten entity. 


Instead of reading texts to discuss a writer’s ideas, we are seeing things through the prism of techniques. And, to be honest, that is such a narrow view. It strips the person away from the discussion. We are thinking about things rather than people. 


How many times do we show pictures of writers? In fact, how often do students see images of the writer? For most of the time, we don’t show a picture of the writer. We want students to make inferences, assumptions, opinions about the writer about the text, yet we don’t actively show writers. We don’t actively help students co-construct a view of the writer. A person that thinks and feels something. 


For the past year, I have actively made students actively construct a writer in their head. And, the key way to do that is to constantly remind students visually of the writer. Instead of making the writer this shadowing figure that they have to construct like a séance and the techniques are a form of a Ouija board, we’ve put photos against every text. They can see who wrote it and that seeing the writer is important. 


Here is one such poem I recently discussed in lessons. 




The Dunce 


He says no with the head
but he says yes with the heart
he says yes to what he loves
he says no to the teacher
He's standing
we are questioning him
and all the problems are posed
suddenly he felt a crazy laugh come over him
and he erases the whole thing
the numbers and the words
dates and names
The sentences and the traps
and despite the master's threats
under the boos of child prodigies
with chalks of all colors
on the blackboard of misfortune
it draws the face of happiness.


Jacques Prévert





Interestingly, Prévert is never photographed without a cigarette in his mouth. For me, that just typifies the rule breaker he is. 


Once we started introducing photographs alongside writing we saw other interesting things. The building up of an interpretation of the writer. But, also, a personal dimension to the discussion. He must think … He feels … It is interesting that a long time ago one strategy we used was a ‘character on the wall’. On a big sheet, we’d have an outline of a body and we’d write bits about the character as we read a text. It seems a shame that we never did that for writers. Because, by the end of the text, a student should know what a writer thinks or feels about something, yet often they don’t. We’ve placed the emphasis on the character, the plot and the themes. Dickens bludgeons you over the head with ideas. Shakespeare is a bit more subtle. Our obsession with the text means that we work on the students’ understanding of the text and not the students’ understanding of the writer through the text. Just look at how students think in terms of texts and not in terms of writers. That speaks volumes. The text dominates. The writer is hidden. Students will talk about Macbeth and Charge of the Light Brigade,  but they don’t talk about Armitage or Weir. In fact, they barely recall the writer’s names at times. 



One of my favourite activities to build on this is to look at this poem about Rosa Parks. 


Rosa 


How she sat there, 

the time right inside a place 

so wrong it was ready. 


That trim name with 

its dream of a bench 

to rest on. Her sensible coat. 


Doing nothing was the doing: 

the clean flame of her gaze 

carved by a camera flash. 


How she stood up 

when they bent down to retrieve 

her purse. That courtesy. 


Rita Dove 





After reading the poem, I ask students to discuss these things: 



What does Rita Dove think of...



...what happened? 




...how Rosa was treated? 




...the people moving Rosa? 




… the other people on the bus? 




And, then, I flip it with these questions: 


What does Rita Dove feel about ...




...what happened? 




...how Rosa was treated? 




...the people moving Rosa? 




… the other people on the bus?



Students naturally talk about devices and words around the poem, but first and foremost they are talking about the writer. Making inferences about what they think and feel. From the beginning they explore the poem through the writer. The writer is a clear and strong presence. And, not some random faceless unknown. We are getting students to construct an interpretation from the beginning and not as an afterthought or as something that has to be taught as knowledge. 


Every day students are making inferences about the people around them. Their friends. Their teachers. Their parents. We are constantly thinking about what the other person feels or thinks. That’s what English is partly about: understanding people, situations and events. If we don’t work hard to make the subject about people, then it won’t be a subject for people. 


Thank you for reading. I have digressed enough, but you’ll probably be able to make some inferences from reading this about me as a person. 


Xris 


Sunday, 22 September 2024

Narrowing those feelings

Effect is such a funny thing to explore when reading texts. It is wrapped up in so many things. What has happened previously? What does the reader think will happen next? What is really going on in the story? A lot of what we expect from students is precision. Precise identification of a mood or a feeling.The best students are those that can identify a range of precise moods and even some of those moods are conflicting moods. Take the ‘Life of Pi’ paper and the conflicting disgust and comical moods surrounding the description of the hyenas. The problem is that we are expecting teenagers to articulate feelings, which, in all fairness they are struggling to identify in themselves and not just in an extract from a story. 


The biggest problem we have in English, aside from apostrophes on everything ending with an s or the fact that a lot is two words, is oversimplification of overgeneralization. I had to write some curriculum documents and the word ‘oversimplification’ was the one I used in every box and on every page when it came to misconceptions. Knowledge isn’t the problem. It is how that knowledge is used in context that is the problem. It is the fact that it can be used in other contexts but it isn’t precise or appropriate. Take the students who use the word ‘discombobulated’ in their writing. They use it in every piece of writing, including essays. The same is seen with quotations from key texts that appear in creative writing. Or, voltas applied to non-fiction texts. 


For this reason, I have been looking at how we can support precision around thinking in texts. Effect is such a nebulous concept and it is hard to pin down. That’s why I explored if I could group the feelings around something more precise. 


  • Is the feeling related to power? 

  • Is the feeling related to the place? 

  • Is the feeling related to a character in the text? 

  • Is the feeling that the reader feels differently to the characters in the story? 


It is alright asking students what they feel in response to a text, but it takes quite a bit of skill to hone those feelings down. Quite sophisticated readers could do that easily, but most students can’t. That’s why I think it is important to think about what is causing the feeling before a student even grasps for words. 

That unpicking of feelings is really important for understanding stories. Otherwise we get generalised comments. It feels creepy. It feels sinister. Take the Hartop paper. The car has a claustrophobic setting. Hartop is dominating the car. The women are powerless. Once we have established the different feelings. We can explore the subtext. Why is it claustrophobic? Why is Hartop dominating? Why are the women powerless?  

Within any text, there are competing sources for our feelings and students need to see that there is a level of plurality in texts. We feel opposing feelings for different things in the text. Weaker students tend to generalise this fact and blanket everything with the same feeling. The better students pinpoint the differences in feeling. 

Once students have the idea of opposing sources of feelings, we can then explore the what and the why behind them. To start that discussion, I used this table this week. 

 

Size /Power 

Mood /Place 

People 

Reader  

Intimidating 

Sinister 

Confined  

Uneasy  

Superior 

Tranquil 

Imprisoned  

Pity  

Domineering 

Boredom 

Ensnared  

Confusion  

Dominating 

Monotony  

Alienated 

Amused  

Overpowering 

Foreboding  

Isolated  

Relate  

Unrelenting 

Menacing  

Detached  

Fearful  

Inferior 

Dreary  

Outcast  

Anxious  

Fragile  

Claustrophobic  

Overwhelmed  

Concerned  

Vulnerable  

Suffocating  

Suppressed  

Unsettled  

Feeble  

Idyllic  

Ecstatic  

Surprised  

Overpowered 

Harmonious  

Inspired  

Expecting  

Defenceless  

Magical  

Determined  

Unexpected 

Helpless  

Perfect  

Hopeful  

Empathise  

Powerless  

Lifeless  

Connected  

Sympathise  

Timid  

Chaotic  

Appreciated  

Intrigued  

 

This week we explored Rosabel and discussed the claustrophobic bus compared to the magical outside. We further discussed the level of detachment she felt in her situation. We often have word bingo behind tables like this, but the students used this to narrow their thinking. The narrowing down on meaning is key. Instead of throwing everything out including the kitchen sink, we were refining and narrowing. How would we describe the mood of the bus? How would we describe Rosabel’s feelings? 


We need students to be self-refining their ideas and words when approaching texts. That's what makes the best responses. They have sifting through their brain to be precise. They have picked out the right word and not the first word that comes to mind.


English is a massive subject and lots of things lead teachers to explore and grapple loads of things at once. The longer I teach, the more I come to the idea that exploring should be happening on a microscopic level. We should be refining and narrowing the ideas to be clear. As teachers, we should be working constantly on refining and sifting through things to get to the kernel of a idea. 


Thanks for reading, 


Xris