Writing the Hero's Journey & Character Archetypes
What's included
Homework
1 hour per week. Student's will work on their own story following the Hero's Journey roadmap throughout the weeks and create two characters following the archetypes.Assessment
Grade can be provided at the parent's request. A - Complete a Hero's Journey beat sheet and two character beat sheets; showing an understanding of the steps and archetypes. B - Complete a Hero's Journey beat sheet and one character beat sheet; showing an understanding of the steps and archetypes. C - Complete a Hero's Journey beat sheet OR one/two character beat sheets; or worked turn in doesn't show an understanding of the steps or archetypes. D/F - Doesn't turn in the Hero's Journey beat sheet or character beat sheets.Grading
includedClass Experience
US Grade 6 - 8
The Hero's Journey is a form of storytelling that follows a main character on a journey that changes them emotionally. This myth pattern has been studied for years and goes back the original written and verbally told stories of humans. Joseph Campbell brought it to popular culture with the book, The Hero With a Thousand Faces. Christopher Vogler breaks it down even further specifically for writers in the book, The Writer's Journey. Students will learn the steps of the Hero's Journey and the character archetypes that populate this story structure, and they will create their own "hero" and plot a story idea following this map in the class. There are NO live meetings for this course. There will be a weekly post in the classroom each week which will include: video lessons for that week's subject, discussion questions, and resources for the learner's story. Learners may log in and watch the lessons at their own convenience during the week. Week 1 - We will go over various character archetypes from The Hero's Journey for protagonists, antagonists, and secondary characters. We'll go over the types of details to think about when creating characters. A character info sheet will be provided to the students for them to build their characters with details such as name, age, birth, sex, race, parents, siblings, childhood, careers, where they lived, highs and lows in life, skills, needs, and more. Students can share characters from their favorite books or movies that they feel are those character archetypes. Spoiler Note: Character arcs will be discussed for some example characters from films and books which could spoil the ending or twists of them: Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, A League of Their Own, Harry Potter series, Star Wars IV-VI, The DaVinci Code, and Avengers: Infinity War. Week 2 - We will cover the basics of the Hero's Journey and the steps 1) The Ordinary World, 2) Call to Adventure, and 3) Refusal of the Call. This is the beginning (or Act 1) of the story, we'll talk about ways to introduce your hero, ways to introduce the ordinary world, how does your hero get called to go on the adventure, and why might they choose to stay where they are instead of embarking on the adventure. Students are welcome to share a favorite book or movie and what scenes they think hit these three steps of the Hero's Journey. Spoiler Note: We will for the next five weeks go over key plot points of the following films (and spoil): Moana, The Wizard of Oz, The Matrix, and Star Wars. Week 3 - We will cover the steps 4) Meeting with the Mentor, 5) Crossing the First Threshold, and 6) Tests, Allies, Enemies. This is the end of the beginning (Act 1) and the start of the middle (Act 2), we'll talk about ways to introduce the mentor character to your hero and how the mentor will affect the rest of the story, what the hero does to decide to go on the adventure, and now the hero is in the thick of things and will meet allies and enemies on their journey. Students are welcome to share a favorite book or movie and what scenes they think hit these three steps of the Hero's Journey. Week 4 - We will cover the steps 7) Approach to the Inmost Cave, 8) The Ordeal, and 9) Reward. This is the heart of the middle (Act 2) and possibly near the end (Act 3), we'll talk about ways to keep the challenges coming and keep the hero moving forward, throwing even more difficult challenges at the hero that they might not survive, and what do they do when they triumph. Students are welcome to share a favorite book or movie and what scenes they think hit these three steps of the Hero's Journey. Week 5 - We will cover the steps 10) The Road Back, 11) The Resurrection, and 12) Return with the Elixir. This is your ending (Act 3), we'll talk about whether the hero goes back to their normal world or can't, your hero will face the final and most difficult challenge of the journey, and now they have triumphed and what does your character do at The End. Students are welcome to share a favorite book or movie and what scenes they think hit these three steps of the Hero's Journey. Week 6 - We will go over any questions that students have about the Hero's Journey now that they know all the steps. Students will share the stories they have plotted out on the Hero's Journey beat sheet and the two characters they have created, and receive feedback from the instructor and other students.
Learning Goals
Students will understand what the Hero's Journey is and each step their hero will go through to reach the end of the story.
Syllabus
6 Lessons
over 6 WeeksLesson 1:
Hero's Journey & Character Archetypes
Learn the basics about the Hero's Journey and the character archetypes that are most commonly found in this story structure.
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Lesson 2:
Hero's Journey Steps 1-3
Learn about the first three steps of the Hero's Journey and watch film clips as an example of what traditionally occurs in these steps.
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Lesson 3:
Hero's Journey Steps 4-6
Learn about steps 4-6 of the Hero's Journey and watch film clips as an example of what traditionally occurs in these steps.
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Lesson 4:
Hero's Journey Steps 7-9
Learn about steps 7-9 of the Hero's Journey and watch film clips as an example of what traditionally occurs in these steps.
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Other Details
Parental Guidance
The Character Info Sheet and the Hero's Journey Beat Sheet will be provided via Google Docs. The film clips will be posted in the class with YouTube links which can be played in the classroom page.
Clips will be shown from some PG-13 or R movies and might contain violence and/or language; The Matrix, Terminator, Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade, Top Gun, The Hunger Games, The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, and Spider-Man.
Supply List
A Hero's Journey beat sheet and a Character Info Sheet for the student to fill out for their own story and characters provided as a google doc link. Videos of the lectures and youtube links of film clips will be provided in class.
External Resources
In addition to the Outschool classroom, this class uses:
Teacher expertise and credentials
2 Degrees
Master's Degree in Film/Cinema/Video Studies from California State University, Fullerton
Bachelor's Degree in Liberal Arts and Sciences from Charter Oak State College
Master of Fine Arts in Screenwriting
Bachelor of Arts in Applied Arts: Creative Writing
Certificates from Institute of Children's Literature
Certificates from Institute for Writers
Writing young adult fantasy and space opera under the pen name Angelia Almos.
Reviews
Live Group Class
$15
weekly or $90 for 6 weeks6 weeks
Completed by 2 learners
No live video meetings
Ages: 11-14