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Monologue: Reading and Students

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Monologue: Reading and Students
Middle/High School Monologues

Teaching Students to Read and Write Monologues

Welcome to the World of Monologue A Sample Unit of Lessons for Middle and High School Teachers

Jefferson County Public Schools Version 2.0

WELCOME TO THE WORLD OF MONOLOGUE By all reports from the field, this unit can be a lot of fun for you and your students: • there’s performance • there’s walking in others’ shoes and learning empathy 1

Middle/High School Monologues

• there’s connecting to Farris Bueller, Bill Cosby, Lily Tomlin, Hamlet and even Jay Leno • there are even places for content area teachers to jump in. If you choose to use this unit later in the year, students might be more ready than ever to try on different personae or share their empathy about others not like themselves. In fact, monologue writing presents opportunity for students to reflect about themselves, as well as their writing. In this unit,“monologue” is broadly defined as a speech by one character (person, animal or even object) to self, an imagined other character, or the audience. A monologue should reveal significant information about the character and his or her situation, and might provoke, entertain, persuade or inform. The characters might be invented by the student, be the student, or be adapted from another source. Monologues are written to be heard; consequently, this unit includes several lessons focusing on fluent oral reading skills, rehearsal, revision-by-rehearsal, and performances, as well as lessons focusing on character development and identification of purpose. Hopefully, before launching into this unit you will have the opportunity to collect video and audio clips, texts of film scripts, and/or examples of monologues from short stories and novels. (Because of copyright restriction, we have not included “professional” examples in this CCG.) The student models we do include are “works in progress” and should be discussed in terms of their potential growth as well as their strengths. If



References: Rief, Sandra and Heimburge, Julie, How to Reach and Teach all Students in the Inclusive Classroom (1996). Hawthorne Educational Services, Inc., The Pre-Referral Intervention Manual (1993). Choate, Joyce, Successful Inclusive Teaching (1997). Winebrenner, Susan, Teaching Kids with Learning Difficulties in the Regular Classroom (1996). Inspiration Software, Inc., (1999), www.inspiration.com Phillips, Vickie and McCullough, Laura, SST/Staff Support Teams (1993). Moll, Anne, Collaborative Strategies, (2001). Adapted from Student/Staff Support Teams, Phillips, McCullough 1993 and Collaborative Strategies, Mall (2001) 30 Middle/High School Monologues 31

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