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Students will understand the following:
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For this lesson, you will need:
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You may want to have students generate short similes rather than extended metaphors, actually using the word like or as and completing frame sentences such as the following:
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After students have read their revised descriptions to the class, take a vote on which descriptions the students like best. |
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To Dream the Impossible Dream Don Quixote might be seen as not simply crazy in his refusal to see things as they really are but more like a person who wants to accomplish a greater good and so refuses to compromise his ideals. Examples of such people include Nelson Mandela, Mahatma Gandhi, and Martin Luther King Jr. Ask students to discuss (with examples and other evidence) whether or not they think Quixote deserves to be put in the company of real-world idealists or is merely delusional. Tackling the Issues Ask the class to discuss solutions to an issue that plagues contemporary society at large or just your community—for example, homelessness, violence, environmental degradation, hunger. Half the class should mention idealistic solutions to the chosen issue; the other half should mention only realistic approaches to solving the problem. See if, in listening to both sides, someone can come up with a proposal that is both realistic and unconventional—an idea that hasn't been tried yet. |
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Miguel de Cervantes Jake Goldberg, New York, Chelsea House Publishers, 1993 Learn about the life and times of this 17th-century Spanish writer. Did you know that this writer was also a soldier, that he was in prison, and that he survived the plague? Don Quixote, Part I Miguel de Cervantes. Translated and adapted by Magda Bogin. Illustrated by Manuel Boix, New York, Stewart, Tabori & Chang, 1991 Meet Don Quixote, champion of causes and famous in legends and stories, in this beautifully illustrated edition. The illustrations in this classic will make you believe you are riding with this knight and his friend Sancho Panza through the Spanish countryside. Cervantes the writer and the painter of Don Quijote / Helena Percas de Ponseti Helena Percas de Ponseti, Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1988 Contains information on the life of Miguel de Cervantes. The Sanctification of Don Quixote: From Hidalgo to Priest Eric Jozef Ziolkowski, University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1991 Explores issues of Christianity in Don Quixote. |
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The Don Quixote Exhibit This site contains two tours through Don Quixote. Each of the 35 stations has text, images, and legends associated with the novel. Cervantes 2001 Project This site contains several electronic editions of Cervantes's work. It also has a digital archive of photographic images on Cervantes's times and works suitable for teaching and research purposes, plus a Spanish index. Don Quijote de la Mancha This is a fantastic site that presents the works of Cervantes in English and Spanish. The Webmaster has collected a few links on Cervantes and his novel. There are also links to Spanish theater and poetry. Knighthood, Chivalry and Tournaments Resource Library If your dream is to tilt with knights, this is an excellent resource site. You will find information on armor and arms. . |
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Click on any of the vocabulary words below to hear them pronounced and used in a sentence.
Context: It is one of the most enduring, if ridiculous, images in all of literature—a madman tilting at windmills.
Context: On his sallies through the landscape of La Mancha, Don Quixote encounters hundreds of characters.
Context: Alonso Quixano steps into his literary world and becomes a knight-errant, just like those in his books of chivalry.
Context: We have come to describe this type of vaulting ambition as quixotic—full of lofty, yet impractical ideals.
Context: Psychiatrists would call Don Quixote's altering of reality his coping mechanism. |
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This lesson plan may be used to address the academic standards listed below. These standards are drawn from Content Knowledge: A Compendium of Standards and Benchmarks for K-12 Education: 2nd Edition and have been provided courtesy of theMid-continent Research for Education and Learningin Aurora, Colorado. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: language arts Standard: Demonstrates competence in the general skills and strategies for reading a variety of literary texts. Benchmarks: Knows the defining characteristics of a variety of literary forms and genres. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: language arts Standard: Demonstrates competence in the general skills and strategies for reading a variety of literary texts. Benchmarks: Recognizes archetypes and symbols across literary texts. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: language arts Standard: Demonstrates competence in the general skills and strategies for reading a variety of literary texts. Benchmarks: Understands the effects of complex literary devices and techniques on the overall quality of the work. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: language arts Standard: Demonstrates competence in the general skills and strategies for reading a variety of literary texts. Benchmarks: Understands historical and cultural influences on literary works. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: language arts Standard: Demonstrates competence in the general skills and strategies for reading a variety of literary texts. Benchmarks: Makes abstract connections between his or her own life and the characters, events, motives, and causes of conflict in texts. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: language arts Standard: Demonstrates competence in the general skills and strategies for reading a variety of literary texts. Benchmarks: Relates personal response to the text with that seemingly intended by the author. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: foreign language Standard: Demonstrates knowledge and understanding of traditional ideas and perspectives, institutions, professions, literary and artistic expressions, and other components of target culture. Benchmarks: Understands age-appropriate expressive forms of the target culture (e.g., literature) and their significance in the wider community. |
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Kristen Rooks, an earth and life science teacher at Ivey Leaf School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. |
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