Literature Reader 1

First World War Literature
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EngelsMiddelbare schoolhavoLeerjaar 5

This lesson contains 80 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 9 videos.

Items in this lesson

First World War Literature

Slide 1 - Slide

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2 and four in duos and more
In duos: What do you know/ comes to mind about WW1, in 1 word
1) In turns, write down one word, one person writes the other thinks. Make a list. (pingpong idea)
2) On my signal form a group of 4 and add to your list
3) Which group of four is able to write down the most words?

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3:00

Slide 2 - Slide

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World War 1
Watch the video, did you recognize your words/ ideas? Which new ones can you add?

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Slide 4 - Video

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Slide 5 - Video

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World War 1 in 1 word

Slide 6 - Mind map

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Goals
1) "I can explain the historical events and context of the First World War and how they influenced literature."
2) "I can identify and discuss key themes like loss, patriotism, and the impact of war in First World War literature."
3) "I can analyze the language and techniques authors use to convey their ideas about war."
4) "I can relate the experiences described in First World War literature to broader human emotions and challenges."
5)  "I can share my thoughts and feelings about First World War literature through discussions, projects, or writing."

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Slide 8 - Video

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Lesson 1 & 2
Goals: 
1) Learn about the historic context while working on a creative group project
2) Learn how to analyze major themes in a poem, reading it critically 
How? 
1) Introduction literature lessons
2) research project + in class presentations
3) Class reading of "the Soldier"

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Project
--> As a group, create a final product (presentation/ poster/ dance ;)) on the historic context of WW1
--> How? 
  1. Go to the "differentiatie" part. Choose the videos you need, select them based on your group's skill level
  2. --> Find the answer to the given reasearch questions
  3. --> Decide on the way you want to present your findings to other groups

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Myth
Reality

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Rupert Brooke
1887-1915
well-to-do family
Cambridge, intellectual
Golden Warrior
Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve
5 war sonnets: Nineteen Fourteen
Capturing the mood of the moment
Bloodpoisoning from insect bite

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The Soldier
Themes: Patriotism
"if I should die..."

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The soldier: Foolishly naive and sentimental?

Yes, let me explain...
No, let me explain...

Slide 14 - Poll

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Objectives
"I can identify and discuss key themes like loss, patriotism, and the impact of war in First World War literature."
"I can analyze the language and techniques authors use to convey their ideas about war."
"I can relate the experiences described in First World War literature to broader human emotions and challenges."

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Objectives Today
Today you will learn more about life in the trenches
After today you know who Siegfried Sassoon is, what shellshock is and analyze the poem

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Before we start..

A short test to see what you remember about The Soldier (Brooks)...

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In The Soldier, why was the concealed dust 'richer'?
A
It was made of gold.
B
It was made of honour.
C
It was made by a rich man.
D
I have absolutely no idea.

Slide 18 - Quiz

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Siegfried Sassoon
Watch the video and write down main points
https://prezi.com/p/chhwqvhq9nyd/?present=1 

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About the author
  • Siegfried Sassoon
  • 1886 - 1967
  • Joined army
  • Poems: Reality Horrors of War
  • act of wilful defiance of military authority'

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Attack

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Today
Today you are going to read and analyze another poem by Sassoon.
But first, let's refresh your memories. Answer the questions while watching the video

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5

Slide 24 - Video

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03:11
Sassoon's poetry shows a great contrast to that of Brooke's. Not Patriotism but "brutal realism". Why?

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03:56
How would fellow soldiers describe Sassoon (or "Mad Jack")?

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05:01
In what way was Sassoon changed after returning to the front?

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05:58
Explain his "act of willful defiance"

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06:44
What do you expect the tone of his poetry to be after having been through all of this?

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Objectives
  1. "I can identify and discuss key themes like loss, patriotism, and the impact of war in First World War literature."
  2.  "I can analyze the language and techniques authors use to convey their ideas about war."
  3.  "I can share my thoughts and feelings about First World War literature through discussions, projects, or writing."


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Does it matter
A poem is divided into stanzas:  a division of a poem consisting of a series of lines arranged together in a usually recurring pattern of meter and rhyme.

Look at "Does it matter"
What is the same in each stanza?
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1:00

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Answer
They all start with a question. We'll see later on why this is important.

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Literary terms:
Imagery- Imagery refers to the elements of a poem that engage a reader’s senses. These are the important sights, sounds, feelings, and smells.




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Does It Matter?
In groups of three or four:
1. Individually, read the poem carefully. Underline words you do not know
2. Check the unknown words, make sure every group member understands them
3. Answer the following questions
4. In 20 minutes class discussion
5. Done? Answer the questions in your reader
1. How would you characterize the tone? Find examples in the poem to prove your point.
2. What is the theme?
3. What images are used in the poem, and what is the effect?
timer
7:00

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Tone: Sarcastic
  • Each situation (question) described in the first line of each stanza is quite horrific
  • These situations are all after-effects from the war
  • However, they are all nullified by the ‘advantages’ given in the rest of the stanza
  • Therefore they do not seem to matter.

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What is the theme of this poem?

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Theme: Possible answers
anti-war
horrors of the war
perception of mental health

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Give examples of Imagery in this poem

Slide 39 - Open question

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Possible answers
being blind
losing limbs
going mad


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Task ahead
Look in your reader and answer the questions about 
"Does It Matter?"

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Objectives reached? Describe in one sentence what the key themes are in this poem and how language is used to covey the message.

Slide 42 - Open question

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Compare "attack" and "does it matter"; which poem speaks to you most?
Attack
Does it matter

Slide 43 - Poll

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Today's Goals:
At the end of this lesson you know more about:
- Wilfred Owen, a War Poet (1893-1918)
- His poem 'Dulce et Decorum Est'

Slide 44 - Slide

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Today's Goals:
At the end of this lesson you know more about:
- Wilfred Owen, a War Poet (1893-1918)
- His poem 'Dulce et Decorum Est'

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War Poets
Sigfried Sassoon & Wilfred Owen 
War Poets

Wilfred Owen (1893-1918)
Killed in action at the age of 25.
Wrote nearly all of his work within a year. (August 1917- September 1918)

Slide 46 - Slide

Siegfried Sassoon was born on 8 September 1886 and died on 1 September 1967 in Heytesbury, Great Britain. He studied at Cambridge but never graduated there. He enlisted after the war had started and left for France in May 1915. Sassoon turned out to be a courageous soldier and got wounded twice for which he received the honour of the Military Cross. Despite of that, he became more and more angry about the needless loss of young lives and the severe conditions these young soldiers had to endure. After getting wounded a third time, he was sent to England where he started writing poetry about his experiences. That's when he met Wilfred Owen whose work he started promoting fairly soon after. After some debate he did return to France to fight until the end of the War. His written work named Counter- Attack which was published shortly after the War impressed many who read it. The bitterness it portrayed was something not many had dared to write and/ or publish.

Propaganda played a big role during this war. Because of pamflets like the one that's shown and many others, young boys were being temped (and felt obliged) to serve their country. What they often didn't realise is that they could die in the trenches. 
Wilfred Owen
"The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori."

Latin phrase is from the Roman poet Horace: “It is sweet and fitting to die for one’s country.”

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Wilfred Owen
Wilfred Edward Salter Owen, MC was an English poet and soldier. He was one of the leading poets of the First World War.

On November 4, 1918, just one week before the armistice was declared, ending World War I, the British poet Wilfred Owen is killed in action during a British assault on the German-held Sambre Canal on the Western Front.

Slide 48 - Slide

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Wilfred Owen - Dulce et Decorum est
The poem centers around a group of exhausted soldiers having to flee from a mustard gas attack.

1. While listening pay attention to the tone of the poem. What can you say about this?
2. Focuses on the Latin phrase: Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori. What is Owen's message do you think?


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Reading Dulce et decorum est

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Wilfred Owen - Dulce et Decorum est

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Wilfred Owen
(1893 - 1918)

 'All a poet can do today is warn. That is why the true Poets must be truthful'.

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Born in Shropshire
Failed to get into university
Worked as a lay assistent to a vicar in Reading
Worked as an English tutor in France when the war broke out
Enlisted in 1915
Battle of the Somme 1917, came back with shellshock, Craiglockhart Hospital in Edinburgh. Met Sassoon there.
Died one week before the armistace. 
Similarities / Differences to Dulce (notes!)
Similarities:
  • Both poems written in 1917 (when Sassoon and Owen met)
  • Both Dulce Et Decorum Est and Does It Matter are negative about the war.
  • Both poems talk about having nightmares from the battlefield

Differences:
  • Dulce et Decorum Est is much more graphic

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Dulce et Decorum est - Wilfred Owen

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Wat is de 'toon' van dit gedicht?
A
blij
B
verdrietig
C
confronterend
D
overdreven

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20-09: Menin Road - British loss 22.000 men; gain 800 yards
25-09: Polygon Wood - British loss 17.000 men; gain 1.000 yards
12-10: Passchendaele - British loss 13.000 (in 3h); gain 100 yards
Battle of Verdun: 600.000 men (total loss)
Battle of the Somme: 1.000.000 (total loss)

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“Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”



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WILFRED OWEN (1893-1918)
  • Schokkende, realistische gedichten
  • In 1917 naar huis, vrijwillig terug
  • Gruwelen van het front vertellen
  • Stierf een week voor het eind van de oorlog
  • Werk uitgegeven na zijn dood

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WILFRED OWEN (1893-1918)
Dulce et Decorum est
Gifgasaanval
Gruwelijke details
'the Old Lie'

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Interactive
In groups of 2-4: create 5 interview questions you would want to ask Siegfried Sassoon based on what you have learned about World War One poetry and his poems so far. Go to Magic School and chat with Sassoon! Write down the answers to your questions. Try to find out as much as possible. 

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Research time!
In small groups find out about the following topics, using the videos and AI research assistant in the next slides:
- What were the main causes for WW1?
- Which alliances were formed?
- When did it all take place (generally?)
- What is trench warfare + what was life in the trenches like for soldiers?
- What was the role of women during the war?
- How did the war come to an end?
Create a final product (presentation/ poster/ etc.) to show in class

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Slide 74 - Video

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AI Research Assistant
Use the "Magicschool" classroom tool: "Research Assistant" to help you with your research.

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Slide 80 - Link

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