Friday, February 21, 2020

Arts Integration Character Analysis Using Character Interviews

Arts Integration in the Classroom: Interviewing Book Characters for Character Analysis


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Are you looking for ways to engage your students with characters in their books?  You might want to try Character Interviews.
My kids love participating in character interviews.  It's a formative assessment that gets my students out of their seats (my kiddos need that so much) and engaged with the text. And it's so easy! In addition, studies have shown increased student involvement and achievement when the arts are integrated into curriculum.
Here's what you do:
First, choose a book that has strong characters.  I have found it best when there are two (or two groups) of polarized opposites.  For example, my kids love getting into the characters of Wump World.

Wump World by Bill Peet

I could write a whole other post on this book.  It hides in your bookshelf.  It appears to be an "old fashioned" book with a cover that doesn't grab you as your fingers dance over spines and covers.  But don't let the cover fool you.  If you ever want to teach figurative language, this is the book to use.  It is full of amazing alliteration and personification.  In subsequent readings, I've even begun to realize how many words with double letters that Bill Peet has included.  Though not figurative language, it's another day of discovery when you ask students about why the author chooses one word over another. And great for my level 1 and 2 EL students who are included in the instruction, but can still engage in the search for language.


I'm sorry.  I digress.  Another post, another day.
Character Interviews.

Once you have a book with strong characters, and after you read the book with the kids, you can instruct your students on how actors become other characters.  After all, we get to know characters by what they say and do and act.


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  • Actors are in charge of their voices.  A voice can be high pitched, low pitched, or somewhere in-between.  Characters can talk fast, slow, with an accent, with emotion.
  • Actors are in charge of their bodies.  How would this character stand (or would he/she/it even stand)? 
  • They are in charge of their facial expressions. Is the character happy, sad, exhausted, excited?  Then discuss what that character might sound like.  Or kinds of things that character might say.

Once you feel comfortable with your actors transforming before your eyes, you can then transform like the butterfly you are! You will be the interviewer.  Are you serious, scandalous?  Do you have an accent?  Do you wear big red glasses?  Are you giving away a car to everyone?
Students assume places around the room where they can have their own bubble of space.  They can even use their hands to delineate that space.
Then, let the magic fully begin.
Tell the children to become the character, and then freeze in a position (the freeze part really helps). Tell them they can revise their stance if they are not happy with the one they chose. I usually "read" the book: either retelling it as something that happened, or you can project it for them to see.  Take your microphone (is it a marker, is it a popsicle stick, is it a rose gold karaoke microphone) and ask questions to the characters. First person perspective.  The kids ARE the characters.
Some of my favorite kinds of questions are:

  • What were you thinking when <something happened>?
  • What did you say when <something happened>?
  • What do you think will happen to <some other character>?

arts-integration-in-the-classroomIf the book has two strong characters, you can have the students be the other character. Or you can debate, setting the students into two groups.
Make it as involved as you want.  Take note of their answers.  Do they truly understand a character's motives, needs, wants? There's your formative assessment.
When it's time to wrap things up, you can say, "When I count backwards to zero, your characters disappear, and you are yourselves again."
I hope this gives you some ideas to take character analysis a little away from questions to answer on a computer or worksheet, and towards getting your students physically involved .
Enjoy!


Monday, February 17, 2020

Freebie: Digital Parent Newsletter



Freebie: Digital Parent Newsletter

Let's talk about newsletters.  They take time.  They take copies.  Oh, dear, the copies!  Back in my school in Florida, we had a maximum of 500 copies per month.  Sounds like a lot, until you consider math homework for 25 kids Monday through Thursday (we had no text book), a required reading log, and other random copies. That's 20 copies per kid per month, less than 1 per day. Front to back copies were counted as two copies!  Thank goodness I had a parent benefactor who helped out.  He owned a company and would make copies of the homework for my class each week.  I loved making a newsletter because it was an easy way to inform parents of tests and trips, and to celebrate the kids with weekly Kudos.  I wasn't a copy hoarder, mind you.  My kids did lots of creative projects in class.  But sometimes, I just needed a sheet in front of them in a hurry.
A couple of times each year, I would ask the parents to write something like "I saw it" in their child's agenda book just to see how many parents were receiving the newsletter.  Though it was never more than half, I know that half was very thankful.  I also know that these were the parents who were going to ask for this information anyway.
And those were the days before the interwebs ☺, and sites like Dropbox and Google Drive, and all of the other fun ways we inform parents digitally.



I want to share with you an easy way to share a digital newsletter (NO COPIES!) with parents and guardians.  I have created an editable template in Google Slides for you.  It's very simple, not elaborate.  All you have to do is edit the template weekly, and then share it with your room parents and guardians.  They do not need a Google account, nor will they be able to edit the newsletter.


1.  First, open my newsletter.  When you click, it will ask you make a copy for yourself. Click Make a Copy.
Freebie Digital Parent Newsletter

2.  Edit the newsletter for your own class.  Change the background, the fonts.  Add, delete classes and subjects.

3.  When you're ready to share with parents, click on the web address up above (the url).  See how it says edit in the address? It's toward the end of the url.  Highlight the word "edit" and change it to "present".  (You don't need the quotation marks.)

4.  Copy the address (with the word "present" inside) and paste it in the email that you will use to send it to parents.  Before you send it to parents, feel free to click on it to check and see if it really works. It will. ☺I just did.

It's never too late to start a new way to communicate with parents and guardians.