What's included
7 live meetings
7 in-class hoursClass Experience
Fall Scheduling: Because it is very hard to predict what will happen regarding physical schools, I am scheduling classes as parent requests come in. If you don't see a section of a class you want, please let me know when you would like it and I'll do my best to accommodate you. This literature class is designed for the student who: 1. Has an interest in weird, spooky, and macabre stories. 2. Can read but doesn't necessarily do it. (Of course, avid readers are welcome, too.) 3. Wouldn't mind reading short stories by the authors of such classic novels as Frankenstein and The Time Machine (as long as they don't have to do it alone). Each week will begin with biographical information and historical background. Homework will include writing a journal response to the work read in class. Week 1 Introductions, expectations, historical context, and important literary concepts. Students will discover what makes Gothic literature Gothic. We will begin reading Mary Shelley's "The Mortal Immortal." Homework will include a journal entry responding to the first half of the story and predicting what will happen next. Week 2 Discussion and sharing of selected journal observations. After completing "The Mortal Immortal," we will begin Edgar Allan Poe's "The Masque of the Red Death" and discuss the allegorical nature of the story--does the moral of the story take away from the entertainment value of the story? Week 3 Discussion and sharing of selected journal observations. After completing the Poe story, we will read "The Diary of a Madman" by Guy de Maupassant. What does this story have in common with other stories we have read (both in class and outside it.) Week 4 Discussion and sharing of selected journal observations. Read "The Boarded Window" by Ambrose Bierce. How does Bierce's style differ from Shelley's or Poe's? What makes it seem so "modern"? Week 5 Discussion and sharing of selected journal observations. Read "The Yellow Wallpaper" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. How does the narrator qualify as "unreliable"? Why was this story so revolutionary at the time of publication? Week 6 Discussion and sharing of selected journal observations. Read "The Red Room" by H.G. Wells. Are there any themes that are common to the sampling of stories we read? How are they similar? The final project will be introduced and options discussed. Projects may be designed by each student or chosen from a list provided and might include research, essay writing, creative writing, painting, drawing, sculpture, music, performance, etc. Week 7 Students will present their projects to the class. If time remains, we will read a scary bonus story.
Other Details
Parental Guidance
Some of these stores are a deep, bloody red, and others are more psychologically gruesome, so this course might not be suitable for every reader. "The Diary of a Madman" is especially dark and includes several cold-blooded murders.
Supply List
All stories will be provided by the teacher. Students should have a notebook for notes and journaling. The use of a quill pen is highly encouraged; otherwise, a regular pen or pencil will do. (Just kidding about the quill pen, but I might make one for myself. Here is a tutorial: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-EIgYQZZIes )
External Resources
Learners will not need to use any apps or websites beyond the standard Outschool tools.
Teacher expertise and credentials
Nebraska Teaching Certificate in English/Language Arts
Master's Degree in Music or Theatre or Arts from University of Nebraska
A retired English teacher, I hold an MFA in Creative Writing and a bachelor's degree in Language Arts Education from the University of Nebraska at Omaha. I currently work as a reading and writing coach for students of all ages. (Continued below the class list.)
Teaching allows me to share my passion for the written word. For example, inspiring a love of Shakespeare in formerly fearful young readers is one of my proudest accomplishments. I also believe writing is an essential tool for communication with the world and with the self. Art is for everyone!
For what it's worth, whenever I get a chance to travel to see a Shakespeare play, I do it. I've been fortunate to go to England a few times recently and have seen wonderful plays at both the Globe Theatre (The Tempest, As You Like It) and the Royal Shakespeare Theatre (Macbeth, Richard III). Sometimes when I think about that "then I scorn to change my state with kings." (Sonnet 29.)
SCHEDULING NOTE: I understand sometimes it is necessary to miss a class. Just let me know and I can send a link to the video of the class missed.
A little bit about my teaching methods:
For all classes, students are encouraged to interrupt with questions, comments, etc. whenever they arise.
--My one-hour concept courses ("Irony" and "Connotation/Denotation") are more lecture-heavy, though questions and discussion are encouraged. I do pretty frequent checks for understanding because we are covering a lot of information in a short amount of time. These are the only courses where students are not expected to produce a final project.
--For the literature courses, I try to keep the lecturing to a minimum. I begin class by presenting background information and use guiding questions for discussion. The amount of reading done in class varies depending on the material and the students.
For the Shakespeare courses, there is no outside reading beyond what the student chooses for their final project. We use the Reader's Theatre method, with all willing students reading a part and fairly frequent checks for understanding. The reading is usually followed by video clips from different film versions of the scenes we have read.
For novels such as The Great Gatsby, The Haunting of Hill House, and The Hobbit, most of the reading is done outside of class, though I do like to read together occasionally when there's something particularly challenging in the material.
High-interest short stories like "The Cask of Amontillado", the 19th-century horror survey, and the novel Ready Player One are especially good for students who might be a little fearful or uninterested in reading, although in any given class only a third or a half of the students fit that description. Every now and then I'll have a group where every student is passionate about reading.
For these high-interest courses, we read a higher percentage of the work in class. I spend a good amount of that time modeling good reading skills; for example, "interrogating the text" by asking questions, replicating aloud what goes on in the mind of a good reader. This is especially good for students who need to work on reading comprehension.
Reviews
Live Group Class
$140
for 7 classes1x per week, 7 weeks
60 min
Completed by 31 learners
Live video meetings
Ages: 12-17
3-9 learners per class