"But Miiiiiiiiiiiiiss, I've already read that book!"
"Oh, I saw the movie like a million times so I don't have to read it, right?"
Though the students who had read it before enjoyed The Hunger Games, I could tell I was on a mission to make the book interesting a second (or even third) time around whilst still helping the first-time readers navigate Panem and keep spoilers at bay.
My stab at a Hunger Games bulletin board. |
I do not agree with the method of teaching this novel with students competing against one another as tributes because it glorifies the Hunger Games-- something the novel itself discourages. However, I did give students a taste of how much strategy the tributes needed in order to survive by staging tribute interviews. Each student assumed either the role of a tribute (of their own creation) in an attempt to win sponsors or the role of the interviewer (channeling Caesar Flickerman) to ease the tribute's interview and schmooze the audience into sponsoring the tribute. Each interview was scored as a pair and the rest of the class voted via text message on Poll Everywhere to anonymously say if the pair had won their sponsorship. The students quickly learned that both roles were equally important in order to achieve success, which helped us focus on the significance of minor characters in the novel as well.
Student Work: Cinna's Design Book |
Student Work: Katniss and Peeta Scrapbook |
At the end of the unit I gave students seven choices for a creative project. As I had hoped, each choice was completed by at least one student. Many students opted to create a survival handbook for the Hunger Games, several created their own soundtrack to the novel with descriptions of how the lyrics connected to various points in the novel, a few created and drew their own versions of the costumes Cinna created for Katniss with explanations of why her look was important at that point in the novel, some put the Gamemaker on trial in a mock trial against a tribute, one pair made a scrapbook of Katniss and Peeta, a few comic books depicting a scene from the novel were created, and a couple students created their own dystopian societies to present to the class.
Student Work: Dystopian Society (Map) |
Here are a few more projects:
Student Work: Comic Book |
Student Work: Comic Book |