Smack Dab in the Classroom : by Dia Calhoun
I am pleased to offer the first in a series of posts exploring how to use middle grade books in your class or reading group. Over the next year, on the 23rd day of each month, I’ll offer my own ideas on this topic, as well as those of other authors, teachers, and librarians.
This week, I
explore a way to get kids more involved with the story, using the example of my middle grade novel After the River the Sun, First, a brief synopsis:
City-boy Eckhart loves
books and video games about King Arthur’s knights. After his parents drown in
the Snake River, Eckhart must move to Eastern Washington to live on an orchard
with his crusty Uncle Al. There Eckhart steps out of a video-game fantasy world
of knights and monsters into a real-life quest for family, home, and courage.
Eckhart looks at
challenges that come his way through the lenes of the knights he wishes to
emulate, especially Sir Gawain. One example is this section where Uncle Al
wants Eckhart to learn to drive the tractor, but Eckhart is scared of the enormous machine.
Eckhart stared at the tractor.
It was huge,
with two enormous wheels in back
and two smaller wheels in front.
Dials plastered the dashboard
liked goggling eyes.
Gear shifts sprouted upwards,
and hoses sprang out like tentacles.
It looked like a big green monster.
Eckhart didn’t want to get on it—
not one bit.
Then he thought of Sir Gawain.
What would Gawain do?
He had faced the Green Knight
and the monstrous giant Gormundus.
Wasn’t the tractor
really a kind of green Gormundus?
[Page 151]
Like the knights he
admires, Eckhart is on several different quests throughout the novel. Discuss
with your class or reading group Eckhart’s many quests. For each one, have students:
1. Name the quest.
2. Identify the goal and why it’s important.
3. Identify Eckhart’s method for achieving it.
4. Identify and discuss the ultimate resolution.
Be sure to include
the following quests and go as far beyond this list as your class takes
you:
The quest for home
The quest to win
the Green Knight video game
The quest for
courage
The task of
clearing the old orchard and, then replanting the new orchard
The quest to atone
for his parents’ deaths
Which other
characters have quests (or goals)? Have the class name them and talk about how they
go about achieving their goals.
For more ideas on how
to use After the River the Sun in
your classroom or reading group, find a complete, free classroom guide here:
I'm so excited about this series, Dia!
ReplyDeleteGreat stuff, Dia! I look forward to more!
ReplyDeleteThanks for a great post...very informative.
ReplyDelete