Teaching Shakespeare

Teaching Shakespeare
Title Teaching Shakespeare PDF eBook
Author Rex Gibson
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 238
Release 2016-04-21
Genre Education
ISBN 1316609871

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An improved, larger-format edition of the Cambridge School Shakespeare plays, extensively rewritten, expanded and produced in an attractive new design.

How to Teach Your Children Shakespeare

How to Teach Your Children Shakespeare
Title How to Teach Your Children Shakespeare PDF eBook
Author Ken Ludwig
Publisher Crown
Total Pages 369
Release 2013
Genre
ISBN 0307951499

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Outlines an engaging way to instill an understanding and appreciation of Shakespeare's classic works in children, outlining a family-friendly method that incorporates the history of Shakespearean theater and society.

Teaching Shakespeare with Purpose

Teaching Shakespeare with Purpose
Title Teaching Shakespeare with Purpose PDF eBook
Author Ayanna Thompson
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages 192
Release 2016-01-28
Genre Drama
ISBN 1472599640

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What does it mean to teach Shakespeare with purpose? It means freeing teachers from the notion that teaching Shakespeare means teaching everything, or teaching “Western Civilisation” and universal themes. Instead, this invigorating new book equips teachers to enable student-centred discovery of these complex texts. Because Shakespeare's plays are excellent vehicles for many topics -history, socio-cultural norms and mores, vocabulary, rhetoric, literary tropes and terminology, performance history, performance strategies - it is tempting to teach his plays as though they are good for teaching everything. This lens-free approach, however, often centres the classroom on the teacher as the expert and renders Shakespeare's plays as fixed, determined, and dead. Teaching Shakespeare with Purpose shows teachers how to approach Shakespeare's works as vehicles for collaborative exploration, to develop intentional frames for discovery, and to release the texts from over-determined interpretations. In other words, this book presents how to teach Shakespeare's plays as living, breathing, and evolving texts.

Teaching Shakespeare and Marlowe

Teaching Shakespeare and Marlowe
Title Teaching Shakespeare and Marlowe PDF eBook
Author L. E. Semler
Publisher A&C Black
Total Pages 169
Release 2014-02-13
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1408185024

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This book explores how to achieve innovative approaches to teaching and learning Shakespeare and Marlowe within formal learning systems such as school and university.

Creative Shakespeare

Creative Shakespeare
Title Creative Shakespeare PDF eBook
Author Fiona Banks
Publisher A&C Black
Total Pages 250
Release 2013-12-16
Genre Drama
ISBN 1408156857

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This unique book desribes the ways in which educational practitioners at Shakespeare's Globe theatre bring Shakespeare to life for students of all ages.The Globe approach is always active and inclusive - each student finds their own way into Shakespeare - focussing on speaking, moving and performing rather than reading. Drawing on her rich and varied experience as a teacher, Fiona Banks offers a range of examples and practical ideas teachers can take and adapt for their own lessons. The result is a stimulating and inspiring book for teachers of drama and English keen to enliven and enrich their students' experience of Shakespeare.

Shakespeare in the Spotlight

Shakespeare in the Spotlight
Title Shakespeare in the Spotlight PDF eBook
Author William Shakespeare
Publisher
Total Pages 48
Release 1994
Genre
ISBN

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How and Why We Teach Shakespeare

How and Why We Teach Shakespeare
Title How and Why We Teach Shakespeare PDF eBook
Author Sidney Homan
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 222
Release 2019-05-15
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 1000011658

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In How and Why We Teach Shakespeare, 19 distinguished college teachers and directors draw from their personal experiences and share their methods and the reasons why they teach Shakespeare. The collection is divided into four sections: studying the text as a script for performance; exploring Shakespeare by performing; implementing specific techniques for getting into the plays; and working in different classrooms and settings. The contributors offer a rich variety of topics, including: working with cues in Shakespeare, such as line and mid-line endings that lead to questions of interpretation seeing Shakespeare’s stage directions and the Elizabethan playhouse itself as contributing to a play’s meaning using the "gamified" learning model or cue-cards to get into the text thinking of the classroom as a rehearsal playing the Friar to a student’s Juliet in a production of Romeo and Juliet teaching Shakespeare to inner-city students or in a country torn by political and social upheavals. For fellow instructors of Shakespeare, the contributors address their own philosophies of teaching, the relation between scholarship and performance, and—perhaps most of all—why in this age the study of Shakespeare is so important.