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Teaching
Ideas and Units - Teaching Units
The
Pied Piper of Hamelin
A
work sequence menu
- using
a classic literature text
- for
an upper Band B lower Band C ~ Level 4 English
- with
learning area links to S.O.S.E., Technology, and The Arts
NOTE:
- There
are way too many learning activities listed in this brainstorm for
any one class to be involved with. Choosing from amongst them should
be influenced by your educational intentions for the work sequence
and your class's needs.
- The
Explicit teaching points boxes which appear throughout the unit signal
some of the skills and knowledge which teachers may need to explicitly
teach to all or some of their students.
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Teacher's Educational Intetntions
-
Students will read, view and respond to a range of text types.
- Students will write and speak for different purposes and audiences.
- Students will develop knowledge of basic features of literary
forms, everyday texts and mass media texts.
- students will reflect upon their learning and achievement.
- Students will work in co-operative groups.
- students will demonstrate ability to work independently.
- Students will be challenged to think creatively, analytically,
laterally and logically in simulated and real situations.
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Engaging students
(focus on Rats section of poem) Activitiy
1 - Text Read-aloud
Activitiy 2 - Storyboard -
journal entry
Activitiy 3 - Advertising poster -
journal entry |
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Refining questions, ideas
(focus on Rats section of poem)
Activitiy
4a - Freeze Frame
Activitiy 4b - Storyboard -
journal entry
Activitiy 4c - Grammar Poems
Activitiy 4d - Rat Rap
Activitiy 4e - Report Writing -
journal entry |
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Reflecting on Learning
Activity
10 - Street Kids - journal entries
Activity 11 - Academic Controversy - journal entries
Activity 12 - Written Retelling
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'The Pied Piper of Hamelin'
by
Robert Browning |
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Extending students' ideas
Activity
5 - Research - journal entries
Activity 6 - Recitation
Activity 7 - Descriptive Writing
Activity 8 - Letters - journal entries
Activity 9 - Arts/Technology simulation - journal entries |
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Other
activities
-
Hamelin Herald Newspapers
-
Pay the Piper Film Company Simulation
-
Wanted! Poster and Speech |
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Focus
English Profile Outcomes Speaking
& Listening 4.2 - Contextual Understanding
Reading & Viewing 4.5 - Texts
Reading & Viewing 4.6 - Contextual Understanding
Reading & Viewing 4.7 - LSF
Writing 4.10 - Contextual Understanding
Writing 4.11 - LSF
Writing 4.12a - Strategies
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Focus
TLO Strands Reading:
Texts
Reading: Structures and Features
Reading and Writing: Contexts
Writing: Texts
Writing: Structures, Features and Strategies |

ENGAGING
STUDENTS
Activity 1- Listening and Notemaking
- Students
listen to teacher oral retelling of 'The Pied Piper of Hamelin' story.
- As they
are listening, and after the retelling, students record, in their
journal, main points in plot as well as any questions or concerns
they have about the story.
- In pairs,
share journal entries, adding new information and or further questions
where relevant.
Activity
2- Responding To The Text
- Students
work in groups of three (use random selection procedure to select
e.g. coloured dots, playing cards).
- Using
copies of Browning's narrative poem, and working collaboratively,
students prepare:
- A
plot graph (with at least ten events).
- A
map of Hamelin using details from the poem.
- A
glossary of unfamiliar words.
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Explicit teaching points
Conventions of Maps
How to construct a plot graph
The structures, features and purposes of glossaries |
- Each
student is to contribute to each task, and will take responsibility
for the completion of the 'published' version of one task to the satisfaction
of both other group members. All group members will sign each finished
piece to indicate their satisfaction with the work.
- In
their journals, students write reflectively about:
-
how they worked
- their
responses to the poem and the tasks
- answers
to previous questions
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Explicit teaching point
Model writing reflective journal entries |
Activity
3 - Ratcatcher Sought
- Students
to work in pairs to prepare a job advertisement - Ratcatcher Wanted
- for Hamelin Town Council. Advertisement must be presented in at
least two formats/genre such as poster, newspaper ad, towncrier's
call, and suitable for display or performance.
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Explicit teaching points
Purpose, audience, form for genres chosen
Layout, font |
-
REFINING
STUDENTS' QUESTIONS, IDEAS AND TEACHER'S INTENTIONS
Activity 4 - RATS! These activities focus upon the Rats
section of the poem. Teachers and students might choose to use all,
or select some, according to their purposes and audiences, and available
time. Teachers might like to set them up as learning centres and have
groups of children rotate through the activities.
Activity 4a - Freeze Frame
-
In-groups of four to six students, students choose the four main
events from this section of the poem.
- Students
create a still tableau, or freeze frame, for each event.
- Tableaux
are presented to class with appropriate spoken captions.
-
Photograph tableaux, write captions and or speech bubbles relevant
to the scene being portrayed, and display.
Activity
4b - Storyboarding
- Teacher
explain and model through joint construction a simple example
of the storyboard process.
- In
pairs or threes, students prepare a storyboard treatment of the
Rats section of the poem, using only four frames. ( Social Skill
= Equal contributions , brainstormed using Y chart)
-
- In
same groups, prepare an eight or twelve page storyboard treatment
of the same section of poem. (Same social skill, evaluate through
use of value line strategy)
- In
their journals, students write a comparison of the problems and
the relative effectiveness of four and 8 or 12 frame storyboards.
- Display
storyboards.
- Another
use would be for groups to use their storyboards to develop tableaux
for Freeze Frame.
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Explicit teaching points
Y charting of social skills
Storyboarding conventions |
-
Activity
4c-Grammar Poem
-
In pairs or individually, use grammar poem scaffold ( refer to
Nancy Lee Cecil , For The Love Of Language: Poetry For Every
Learner, Peguis Press, page 120-121) as a structure to write
descriptively about another animal, possibly a rodent or 'vermin'.
-
Use for Readers Theatre type performance or for individual reading
aloud.
-
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Explicit teaching point
Revise grammatical terms, preferably in context of Rats
section of the poem or through joint
construction of a poem based on this scaffold |
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Explicit teaching points
Review or introduce students to the Report genre, deconstruction
of its essential elements
Discuss criteria suitable for evaluation of literary
and artistic merit, and methods of recording data
in relation to these
Review writing proceses to be used and evidence required
for assessment |
- Students
write in their journals reviewing both explaining their use of the
criteria and the process of writing their report.
EXTENDING
STUDENTS' IDEAS
Activity 5 - Rapid-researching the historical and scientific contexts
- Form
students into pairs or small teams.
- Each
team is allocated a topic from the Topic Box and in an agreed limited
time (e.g. 10-15 minutes) finds at least ten items of relevant information
.
-
| Topic
Box
Swarms and plagues (locust, mice, rats, lemmings)
The Children's Crusade
troubadours, jesters, town criers, walled towns in the
Middle Ages
sounds animals can hear (especially rats)
the lives of children in the Middle Ages
Medieval Art (illustrated manuscripts)
the geography of Hamelin and surrounds |
- Groups
to prepare their information as an A3 sized poster with one illustration,
and to ensure that all group members are confident with knowing
that information.
- Display
posters along a corridor or around a large space.
- Conduct
a Gallery Walk with the class. Each group numbers off, ABAB. As
are brought together, Bs remain with their group's poster. The As
circulate between the posters, asking questions of clarification
from the Bs. Reverse roles.
- In
their journals students record the information they read and listen
to on a data retrieval chart or as a mindmap.
-
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Explicit teaching points
Revise scanning and skimming to locate
information
Brainstorm and discuss strategies for using the library's
resources, and for general task
management
Notemaking strategies
Revise drafting processes
Model and deconstruct the conventions of informational
posters
Remind of range of materials and technologies for publishing
posters |
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Explicit teaching points
Memorisation strategies
Use of the vocal elements of pause, pace, pitch, volume,
intonation and emphasis to highlight meaning and
add aural interest
Vocal performance skills |
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Explicit teaching points
Expectations and practises during visualisation
Adjectives and adverbs and their functions
Sensory description
Remind of drafting, revising, giving and seeking feedback,
and publishing protocols |
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Activity
8 - Letters
-
With the whole class teacher revises business, official, and personal
letter genres, deconstructing the essential elements to use as
a features list for later reference.
- Writing
in role, students are to construct one business/official letter,
such as:
-
Mayor of Hamelin writing to the town's parents after the disappearance
of the children
- From
an enterprising pest extermination firm offering their services
to the residents of Hamelin
- Writing
in role, students are to choose an appropriate audience and write
one personal letter detailing their experiences and opinions of
the events in Hamelin, such as:
-
The sole surviving rat who somehow escaped drowning
- A
parent of a missing child or children
- The
lame boy who is shut out of the mountain
- The
Mayor of Hamelin
-
A child living inside the mountain or ...
- In
their journals students to write about the similarities and differences
in the three letter text types and explain how their two letters
meet the requirements for a particular genre. This may be in the
form of two mindmaps or a double set of Venn
diagrams.
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Explicit teaching points
Revise the roles of audience, purpose and form/genres
in writing
Remind students of drafting and editing protocols
Mindmapping or making Venn diagrams |
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Explicit teaching points
Review Design Make Appraise process
Review audience, formats, purposes
Y chart social skill - equal contributions
Review or teach procedure and conventions for constructive
criticism during peer review process |
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Explicit teaching point
Y chart social skills - active listening, building on other's
contributions, disagreeing agreeably |
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Explicit teaching points
Review Academic Controversy procedure with class
Y chart social skills - disagreeing agreeably |
Activity
12- Retelling
- Students
are to assume a role of a character that features in the Pied Piper
story, and in role to construct a first person narrative retelling
of the events which occurred in Hamelin.
OTHER
ACTIVITIES Hamelin
Herald - Class to construct a newspaper covering the events told
in the story
- Brainstorm
newspaper contents, stories, regular features, advertising
- Hold
a press conference, using the Hot Seat Drama strategy, with teacher
in role as the Pied Piper, or the mayor, or the lame boy, or other
citizens of Hamelin. (Maybe also use senior drama students to play
roles after they have had a briefing session). Students in role
as journalists, cartoonists, photographer (if can get the digital
camera).
- Divide
the tasks amongst class to draft, revise, edit and publish newspaper.
-
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Explicit teaching points
Review newspaper genre, proofreading strategies, notemaking,
framing questions
Introduce students to Hot Seat strategy
Establish protocols for desktop publishing the newspaper
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- Pay
the Piper Film Company Simulation - In groups of 5-6, as a film
production company, students to collaboratively construct a storyboard
for the children's 20-minute video of the Pied Piper story.
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Explicit teaching points
Revise storyboarding procedures and the linguistic structures
and features of film
Discuss audience, purpose and form with class, applying
it in general terms to this activity
Research the roles workers have in film production companies
in relation to storyboarding in particular. |
WANTED
poster, ballad and speech - After the children's disappearance the
Mayor and the town corporation send heralds out to surrounding areas
trying to find the Pied Piper or the stolen children. Students to
prepare:
-
the herald's/town crier's speech
- a
wandering troubadour's ballad
-
a WANTED poster
which
could have been used as part of this quest.
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Explicit teaching points
Provide and deconstruct models of the three forms used
Remind students of the historical significance of ballads
as newstelling |
RESOURCES
Bartos-Hoppner,
B., and Fuchshuber,A., (1985) The Pied Piper of Hamelin,
Hodder and Stoughton, London (ISBN 0 340 36952 3)
Biro, V., (1997) The Pied Piper of Hamelin, Oxford University
Press, Oxford, UK (ISBN 0 19 272321 9)
Browning, R., and others (1996) The Pied Piper Of Hamelin
And Other Classic Stories In Verse, Penguin Books, London (ISBN
0 14600 331 4)
Browning, R., and Amstutz, A., (1993) The Pied Piper of
Hamelin, Orchard Books, London (ISBN 1 85213 414 3)
Browning, R., and Greenaway, K., (1888) The Pied Piper of
Hamelin, Frederick Warne, London (ISBN 80 00 00027 X)
Browning, R., and Greenaway, K., (1993) The Pied
Piper of Hamelin, Robert Frederick, Bath, UK (ISBN 9 781850 810957)
Browning, R., and Hodges, C.W., (1971) The Pied Piper of Hamelin,
Chatto and Windus, London (ISBN 0 7011 0360 4)
Cecil, Nancy Lee, (1994) For The Love Of Language: Poetry
For Every Learner, Peguis Press, Winnepeg, Manitoba, Canada (ISBN
1 895411 61 0 )
Corrin, S. &S., and Le Cain, E., (1990) The Pied Piper of
Hamelin, Picture Puffin, London (ISBN 0 14 054072 5)
Hathorn E., and Rogers,G., (1994) Way Home, Random House
Australia, Sydney
Hunia, F., (1993) The Pied Piper of Hamelin, Ladybird
Books, Loughborough, UK (ISBN 0 7214 1592X)
Picard, B.L., (1958) German Hero-sagas and Folk-tales,
Oxford University Press, Oxford UK (ISBN 0 19 274163 2
Rickards, D., (1992) The Pied Piper: A Play, Mimosa
Publications- Literacy Links, Melbourne (ISBN 07327 1160 6)
Skurzynski, G., (1993) What Happened in Hamelin, Random
House, New York ISBN o 679 83645 4)
Storr, C., (1984) The Pied Piper of Hamelin, Methuen
Children's Books, London (ISBN 0 416 49130 8 - hardcover: ISBN O0
416 49560 5 papercover)
Umansky, K., (1998) Three Rapping Rats, A&C Black, London
(ISBN 0 7136 4570 9)
Wheatley, A., (1994) Merchant of Death, Angus and Robertson,
Sydney (ISBN 0 207 18593 X)
Zak, D., and Holden, R., (1997) The Pied Piper of Hamelin,
Angus and Robertson, Sydney
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