LANGUAGE ARTS :: SECONDARY RESOURCES :: RIGHT DIRECTION 2 :: BODY BIOGRAPHY
Planning Points
Approximate Time Needed: 90 minutes
Correlation to English I SCS: 4.03, 4.04, 5.01
Correlation to NC High School Exit Exam Competencies: C-3,
C-5, PI-9, PI-11
Students will work in small groups to produce a life-size visual representation
of a character from literature. They will then present this representation to
the class and evaluate the work of other groups.
- Rolls of newsprint or bulletin board paper
- Markers
- After students have read a work of literature or a biography, divide
them into small groups and give each group a six-foot length of newsprint or bulletin
board paper and a set of magic markers.
- Assign each group a character
from the literary work or have the group choose a character.
- Students
trace an outline of one group member's body on the paper.
- Each group
then chooses the best way to represent the following aspects of the character
symbolically:
- The Heart: Where should it be placed to best
represent what this character loves most? What should it look like and what shape,
color, pictures, or symbols should be included in it? If the character's love
changes, students should find a way to represent this visually.
- The
Backbone: This should be represented in a way that visually conveys what
motivates the character most. For example, students have represented Antigone's
backbone as a chain connecting the word 'gods' at the top and 'people' at the
bottom.
- The Hands: What does the character hold in her or his
hands? Items that are associated with the character either literally or figuratively
should be included. Students have represented Ophelia as holding a handful of
flowers, for example, and Creon holding a scroll with the words "MAN'S LAW"
clutched in his fist.
- The Feet: On what is the character standing?
This should a symbolic representation of the character's most fundamental beliefs
about life. King Lear, for example, has been portrayed standing on a crumbling
rock labeled "respect for the elderly."
- The Background:
Students should draw some elements that suggest the character's environment, background,
or predicament.
- Quotations: Near the character's head, students
should place two or three direct quotations from the story that sum up the character
and add to an understanding of the character.
- When the groups have
finished, they display their Body Biography and present it to the class. Their
presentations should explain the choices they made and help the class understand
the meaning of the symbols they have created.
- The rest of the class responds
to the biography and presentation by making suggestions and discussing alternative
ways in which the character might have been represented.
An informal assessment occurs as the teacher and students respond both to the
Body Biography and to the presentation. The teacher and/or students could also
complete a more formal evaluation rubric based on the effectiveness of each
of the required symbolic representations.
Students usually take to this activity with enthusiasm and energy; some visual
learners lead their groups to make astounding visual interpretations. Sometimes,
all the groups can represent the same character and then compare their representations.
Alternatively, students could read different novels, illustrate the protagonist
of each and then share with the class. Students at all levels can participate
actively and fruitfully in this activity, and the finished products are often
both attractive and intriguing.
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