ENG24-25 Shakespeare for Teachers
Course name
Shakespeare for TeachersUniversity
RUGEC
5/6 ECCourse date
semester 1 (2024 - 2025)Registration open until
Location
Groningen/onlineInstructor(s)
Hans Jansen (RUG)E-mail contact
Hans JansenCourse objectives
With successful completion of this course, students will:
- Have developed a critical intellectual foundation for teaching Shakespeare;
- Be able to recognize defining characteristics and concerns of Shakespearean drama;
- Be able to analyze and discuss the rich, complex language of Shakespeare’s plays;
- Be able to situate Shakespeare’s drama in the realities of the early modern playhouse;
- Be able to discuss adaptation and performance approaches to Shakespeare’s work;
- Have mastered different dramatic techniques to explore Shakespeare’s drama;
- Have become aware of classroom integration of Shakespeare’s dramatic works.
Course content
Knowledge of, and familiarity with, Shakespeare’s plays and poems remain vital components of understanding English language, literature, and culture. This course deepens and broadens that knowledge and familiarity by closely attending to two or three of Shakespeare’s plays, and by bringing contemporary, topical critical lenses to bear on those works. Through close reading, serious engagement with critical theory, and discussions of performance productions, films, and interpretations of the plays, students will hone their skills in critical reading and writing and gain an essential academic grounding for teaching Shakespeare themselves.
We will spend several weeks studying A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Macbeth and Romeo and Juliet as three plays most suited for young audiences. We will pay special attention to performance aspects, adaptation, language, and the perspective of gender studies and adaptation studies. in addition, we will visit the Shakespearetheater in Diever for a theatre production of Midzomernachtsdroom and a tour.
Educational perspective
This course will help students develop the expertise needed for teaching Shakespeare and it will encourage them to develop their own best tools for that teaching.
Course requirements / Language proficiency
A strong command of spoken and written English is essential to succeed in this course. Basic knowledge of Shakespeare and drama in English is recommended.
Assessment
Format
Seminars and lectures; independent research.
There will be six seminars and lectures, two of which will be on-site and the rest will be online.
The course will include viewing of the plays online, and a visit to the Shakespearetheater in Diever.
Exam
Presentation 40%
This assignment brings together three main objectives of the course by helping you develop 1) your skills as presenters and teachers; 2) your comprehension of Shakespeare; and 3) your ability to make meaningful critical connections between the scene under analysis and the course’s secondary literature.
One student group per week will select 1) a scene around which to organize their discussion and 2) one of the critical texts assigned for that week. The group’s discussion will showcase their understanding of the scene (and thus the play), their understanding of the critical text, and their ability to engage students in discussing their chosen scene. You must inform the lecturer of which scene and which essay will you discuss no later than the Monday before our Friday class.
Research essay 60%
For this assignment, you will develop a class around one of the plays under discussion and you will draw on one of the theoretical lenses discussed during the course. Your paper will contain assignments and activities for different age groups, involving the text as well as online theatre productions. This essay will be 3000 words (including references) and will be formatted in MLA style.
Note: You must earn at least a 5.6 on this assignment in order to pass the course.
Study load
Seminars: 6 x 3 = 21 hrs
Excursion to Diever: 6 hrs
Reading and preparatory work per week: 6 x 9 = 56 hrs
Presentation = 23 hrs
Research Essay = 34 hrs
UvA/VU 6 ECTS
Students who need 6 ECTS may elect to do an extra assignment. This must be determined with your lecturer in week 1.
Background literature and course materials
Literature
Set texts will be provided in the Digital Learning Environment.
- Ralph Alan Cohen, ShakesFear and How to Cure It, The Arden Shakespeare, 2018, ISBN 978-14742-2971-8
- Shakespeare, William, Macbeth, ed. by Linzy Brady and David James; Cambridge School Shakespeare, third edition, 2014 ISBN 978-1-107-61549-6
- Shakespeare, William, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, ed. by Linda Buckle; Cambridge School Shakespeare, fourth edition, 2014; ISBN 978-1-107-61545-8
- Shakespeare, William, Romeo and Juliet, ed. by Rob Smith; Cambridge School Shakespeare, Fourth ed. 2014, ISBN 978-1-107-61540-3
- recommended: Abigail Rokison, Shakespeare for Young People, The Arden Shakespeare, 2013, ISBN 9781441125569
Costs
€70,-
Further information
Friday 08-11-2024 | Online | 10:00-13:00 |
Saturday 9-11-2024 | Excursion to Diever (whole day) | |
Friday 22-11-2024 | Online | 10:00-13:00 |
Friday 29-11-2024 | Rijksuniversiteit Groningen. Academy building, room A12. Broerstraat 5. | 10:00-13:00 |
Friday 6-12-2024 | Online | 10:00-13:00 |
Friday 13-12-2024 | Rijksuniversiteit Groningen. Harmonie building, Collaboratory A (1313.0125). Oude Kijk in ’t Jatstraat 26 | 10:00-13:00 |
Friday 20-12-2024 | Online | 10:00-13:00 |