Monday, 6 February 2017

The Raven

I've come to realise that, no matter how old my students are (ahem, ahem...), they always enjoy celebrating foreign holidays such as Halloween. Last October, I decided to humour them, but I had my rules.

1-. They were going to read a poem.
2-. The poem was long.
3-. It had lots of strange words.
4-. I wanted to record their voices reading it.

Their enthusiasm somewhat subdued, I showed them the following video:



Some of them were touched by this point. Most of them, though, still had their suspicions. It was long, it had a lot of long, difficult words, and the subject matter wasn't all that clear. Who was Lenore, anyway? 

Printed copy of the poem in our hands, we went almost line by line, focusing on the rhythm and the sounds, just getting used to the cadence and the images conjured up by the extensive use of alliteration, repetition and rhyme. Even those students who still didn't understand the poem were starting to let themselves get carried away by the intricate, elaborate and resounding mechanics of the poem. 

OK, then. Death, loss, insanity, obsession... the themes started to fly around in class. Written on the board, bubble diagram covering the white surface. The words started to gain meaning, up until then unclear. Mythological figures became more concrete and significant. Most students were on board and started to make decisions about how they were going to read their lines. 

They wanted to read their lines in pairs, so I gave each pair of students two stanzas. We went over difficult words, drawing their attention to internal rhyme so they could predict their pronunciation. Without saying they were turning into actors, the students were interested in the speaker's frame of mind in order to give their performance some substance. And then, the big day arrived. 

I used WavePad, a voice-recording app on the iPad, and recorded stanza after stanza. The students felt satisfied after we finished, our 10-minute long recording testament to their efforts, to the journey they had to make to reach the master of horror literature, even if it was only with their fingertips. 

When we finished, the general comment was... we should do this more often! 

I agreed. 

Have you used Poe's masterpiece in class? What was your experience? Let me know in the comments below! 

2 comments:

  1. Hi Maite,
    I am a teacher of English as a foreign language and I love Poe. I have also used The Raven and The Cask of Amontillado to teach my students. In fact three years ago I designed a whole didactic sequence based on Poe's work. If you are interested you can have a look at it at m-ballarbo.wixsite.com/the-raven

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    1. Thanks, Mercè!
      Sorry it's taken so long to reply to your comment!
      It's great to see that other English teachers are using literature in their lessons! I'll have a look at your work :) I'm preparing some simple projects based on The Black Cat and The Tell-Tale heart for 1ºESO students as a Halloween extravaganza for the next school year! I just find Poe so pliable and easy to work with :)
      Thanks for the comment x x

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