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  LEARNING GUIDES to feature films
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  LESSON PLANS for snippets
and short subjects

  SET-UP-THE-SUB using movies, snippets,
and short subjects

  FOR CHILDREN AGES 3 - 8  — "Guides to Talking and Playing for Growth" with movies







AUGUST, 2010



ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS and DRAMA -- High School Level:   

Introduce students to the world's greatest playwright and perhaps the greatest love story ever told, Romeo and Juliet.


The Snippet Lesson Plan to "Shakespeare in Love" provides a fictionalized view of the man and imagines circumstances that could have given rise to his greatest romance. When students feel that they know an author as a person, they will be more interested in reading what he or she has written. An introduction to the times in which a play was first performed is helpful in appreciating the artistry and meaning of the work. This snippet from "Shakespeare in Love" provides all of that, while avoiding those parts of the movie that earned it an R rating.

The Snippet Lesson Plan provides teachers with an introduction and a student worksheet to enhance the educational effect of the movie.







U.S. HISTORY AND ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS -- Middle School Level:

Kit Kittredge -- An American Girl provides a look at hard times during the Great Depression from the point of view of a nine-year-old girl and her friends. It is particularly appropriate viewing for children in today's hard times.

The movie is a tender reminder that those who are down and out deserve support, compassion and respect. Hard times can happen to anyone. The movie has strong female role models and Kit acts on her dream of becoming a reporter. "Kit Kittredge - An American Girl" also shows how people with ulterior motives can whip up hatred of minority groups to serve their nefarious ends.


What about people devastated by natural disasters - a few years later?   . .  .   Aid is Still Required.

TWM, in conjunction with Aid Still Required, announces its first CD Learning Guide. Based on the realization that the effects of disasters last many years, Aid Still Required is determined to help victims of disasters, long after the first furious rush of aid has been sent. It focuses on "restoring communities in the aftermath of natural disasters & human crises by building back better and building back green". Aid Still Required has three ongoing projects: assisting people still recovering from the Indian Ocean Tsunami, from Hurricane Katrina, and from the ethnic cleansing in Darfur.

To raise funds they have produced a record album with some of the greatest hits of stars like: Paul McCartney, John Lennon, Eric Clapton, Maroon 5, Avril Lavigne, Bonnie Raitt, James Taylor, Shawn Colvin, Phantom Planet, Norah Jones & Ray Charles, Ani DiFranco, Sarah McLachlan, Beth Nielsen Chapman, Hunter Payne, and Blind Boys of Alabama.

The CD Learning Guide illustrates how analysis of poetry can be applied to the lyrics of some popular songs.






                                         


Whale Rider In this story, a Maori girl in New Zealand persists in her efforts to become the chief of her tribe, despite her grandfather's insistence that the chieftanship follow the male line. "Whale Rider" offers young people the opportunity to learn about a different culture and to examine the difficulties many traditional groups experience in facing change. The importance of myth and stories which shape the lives of traditional people will become clear to viewers and offer the perspective necessary to look at their own myths and stories.

Dear Frankie This is a heartwarming story about a deaf and fatherless boy and his mother's sometimes misguided efforts to protect him; yet there is a question of whether, all the while, he's protecting her. This film will be helpful in both Health and ELA classes. Students will gain a deeper understanding of how to interact with non-hearing members of society. They will see a boy adjust to a serious life-long injury and retain his emotional stability. The film can also be used to teach the importance of non-verbal communication, demonstrate several literary devices, including characterization, theme, and complication, and provide opportunities for students to practice the writing and speaking skills required by most ELA curriculum standards.

Where the Red Fern Grows -- Actually, TWM doesn't recommend this movie, but if you're going to use it, check out our Guide.


MAY, 2010


We've been working on our new format. We'll implement it throughout the site over the next few weeks. Give us your comments.

Adaptations: Many ELA teachers use movie adaptations of written works of fiction. Check out TWM's new essay Lesson Plans Using Film Adaptations of Novels, Short Stories and Plays. Many guides on TWM are adaptations including three of our newest Learning Guides.

NEW LEARNING GUIDES:
For ELA, Social Studies and Health Classes


          



          





Health and ELA Teachers:

Our contibutor Mary RedClay gave us new and better ways to use
Fly Away Home for teaching about healthy ways of grieving in Health classes and as a springboard for discussions and assignments in ELA classes. Click here for a new and expanded Guide.


JANUARY, 2010

Two New Learning Guides and One Snippet Lesson Plans for January, 2010:


U.S. HISTORY: Iron Jawed Angels:    In 1917 Alice Paul and the National Women's Party picketed the White House demanding that women be allowed to vote. After the First World War began and the pickets remained at their posts, they were assaulted by violent crowds and falsely arrested for blocking the sidewalk. The Suffragists were imprisoned in harsh conditions and subjected to treatment that would today be considered torture. Public outrage was immense and helped the suffragists obtain passage of the 19th Amendment.

This movie can be used to vividly impress students with the following important historical lessons not taught in textbooks: (1) when the militant wing of the suffrage movement, led by Alice Paul, used nonviolent protests to demand the vote, they were assaulted by crowds of men and denied police protection; (2) the government tried to suppress the militants' nonviolent protests with false arrests, unfair trials, imprisonment in harsh conditions, and what can best be described as torture; (3) the militant suffragists withstood the violence, imprisonment and torture, continuing their protests and refusing to back down while strictly adhering to nonviolence; (4) the arguments of the militant suffragists and the public's outrage at the way they were being treated, as well as the respect that the strength of the suffragists' commitment engendered were factors in leading to the passage of the 19th Amendment; and (5) American suffragists independently developed tactics of nonviolent protest which were strikingly similar to the methods of promoting political and social change being developed by Mahatma Gandhi at about the same time.

Iron Jawed Angels will inspire students to study the suffrage movement, one of the four great advances in human rights in the U.S. during the 20th century. The others were the Civil Rights movement seeking equal treatment for black Americans, the procedural protections given to persons accused of crimes, and granting rights to the disabled.





ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS and DRAMA: Macbeth This is Shakespeare's classic tragedy of the rise and fall of a couple corrupted by power and ambition. Showing a film version of the play, either before or after reading the text, will enhance students' understanding of both the art and the content of Macbeth.

In the section entitled "Beyond Macbeth" TWM shows how to maximize the relevance of Macbeth to the lives and interests of teenagers.





ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS and DRAMA: Snippet Lesson Plan on The Use of Acting Technique to Describe Character in Shakespearian and Other Plays using "Stage Beauty"   
  • The lesson compares two different performances of Desdemona's death scene from Shakespeare's Othello shown in the film.
  • The introduction provides a brief synopsis of the play and a description of the advent of actresses on the English stage. The next several steps of the lesson plan provide guidelines for analysis of the acting in the two versions of the death scene presented in the movie "Stage Beauty".
  • The Snippet Lesson Plan concludes with two simple exercises to allow students to experience the communicative power of body movement, facial expression, tone of voice, inflection, and volume.


November, 2009

Revised discussion questions and more suggestions for assignments in existing Learning Guides for:

             


Three new Snippet Lesson Plans based on
Planet Earth.



          

New ELA Snippet Lesson Plans:

Determining Theme using Pink Floyd: The Wall
and


Introducing the Poetry of Edgar Allan Poe using an Episode of the The Simpsons (The Raven)






September, 2009



17 Again — Snippet Lesson Plan on the Psychology of Bullies [14+; snippet: 4 minutes, 15 seconds; lesson: 30 minutes]


The Ten Best Teaching Films

for Classes in:

   
  • U.S. History for High School
       
  • English Language Arts for High School
       
  • Drama for High School (also for ELA classes)
       
  • Science for High School
       
  • Health for High School

    Snippet Lesson Plans on TeachWithMovies.com!

    TWM announces another new feature — Lesson Plans to Snippets of Movies — Classes based on movie segments of less than 40 minutes and which illustrate one or two topics required by curriculum standards. Also included are short subjects of less than 40 minutes.

    Our current Snippet Lesson Plan offerings include:

                             


    U.S. HISTORY AND CULTURE
    • Benjamin Franklin using "Ben and Me" - Guide to Talking and Playing for Growth (U.S./1750 - 1812; SEL: Friendship; Moral-Ethical Emphasis: Citizenship) [ages 5 - 8; short subject: 27 minutes]


    • Civil Rights Movement - The Nashville Sit-ins using "A Force More Powerful" [ages 12+; snippet: 25 minutes; lesson: two class periods]


    • The Constitutional Convention using "Birth of the Constitution" -- from the series "This is America Charlie Brown" (U.S./Creating the Nation; Moral-Ethical Emphasis: Trustworthiness; Citizenship) [ages 9 - 12; short subject: 24 minutes]


    • The Transcontinental Railroad using "The Building of the Transcontinental Railroad" -- from the series "This is America Charlie Brown" (U.S./1865 - 1913) [ages 8 - 11; short subject: 24 minutes]


    WORLD HISTORY AND CULTURES


    ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS
    Literature and Literary Devices

                                                                                    

    MATHEMATICS
    MUSIC



    • Introduction to the Orchestra using "The Bolero" [9+; 26 minutes]


    • American Music using "The Music and Heroes of America"-- from the series "This is America Charlie Brown" (U.S./1865 - 1913; Music) [ages 8 - 11; short subject: 25 minutes]


    SCIENCE: BIOLOGY



    SCIENCE: INVENTIONS

    • The Great Age of American Inventors using "The Great Inventors" -- from the series "This is America Charlie Brown" (U.S./1865 - 1913; Science - Technology) [ages 8 - 11; short subject: 24 minutes]


    • The Inventions of Ben Franklin using "Ben and Me" - Guide to Talking and Playing for Growth (U.S./1750 - 1812; SEL: Friendship; Moral-Ethical Emphasis: Citizenship) [ages 5 - 8; short subject: 27 minutes]


    GUIDES TO TALKING AND PLAYING FOR GROWTH

    TWM is pleased to announce three new Guides for Talking and Playing for Growth for children ages 3 - 8:
    TWM CHOSEN FOR USE BY TEACHERS THROUGHOUT CANADA!

    Criterion Pictures provides movies for classroom use to more than 70% of the teachers in Canada. After carefully reviewing available curriculum materials, Criterion chose TWM Learning Guides to help Canadian teachers supplement curriculum when they show feature films. Teachers in most Canadian schools can access more than 100 TWM Guides through www.criterionpic.com.

    TeachWithMovies.com is honored that the largest distributor of feature films to the Canadian education market has chosen TWM curriculum materials.

    COMING SOON: Here are just a few of the new features you can expect from TWM in the first half of 2009: For black history month and English and Drama classes, TWM will provide a complete rewrite for the Learning Guide to A Raisin in the Sun. History students will be entranced by HBO's Iron Jawed Angels, the amazing tale of the final push for women's suffrage in the U.S. We will also have guides to using snippets from movies such as Messenger, the story of the origins and rise of Islam. TWM will also focus on Westerns with Guides to The Searchers, The Shootist, Bite the Bullet and a revision to the Guide for High Noon. For science and health classes we will have a Learning Guide to Inside the Teenage Brain, from PBS. Health teachers will be interested in She's Too Young, which is about peer pressure on high school girls to engage in sex and the dangers of sexually transmitted diseases. Also on the horizon are new Guides for Talking and Playing for Growth to Fraggle Rock and Wall-E.


    NEW AS OF JANUARY, 2009


    Click here for the Learning
    Guide
    to Edward Scissorhands.


    Edward Scissorhands is a charming and popular movie. In this new Learning Guide, TWM shows teachers how to use the film to acquaint students with important literary devices. Also included are: (1) exercises in writing a literary analysis of the story, both in paragraph and essay formats, (2) assignments in writing summaries of portions of the movie, and (3) discussion questions relating to both the craft of the story and its theme.







    Click here for the Learning
    Guide to Charly.
    The
    Learning Guide to Charly, the movie version of Flowers for Algernon, employs the "Into, Through and Beyond" method of organizing a lesson plan. It also contains suggestions for using both a student centered and a teacher centered approach to teaching both the book and the film. The "Into" section suggests research assignments and class presentations to introduce students to the issues surrounding mental disability. The "Through" section contains questions to stimulate class discussions, topics for debate, expository essay assignments, persuasive essay assignments, and ideas for class presentations. All of these relate to the story's themes or literary devices. The "Beyond" section suggests discussions and assignments which introduce students to the ethical questions inherent in experiments on people and animals.


    Click here for the Learning
    Guide
    to Lord of the Flies.

    Using the "Into, Through and Beyond" approach to organizing a lesson plan, the TWM Learning Guide to Lord of the Flies helps teachers use the movie as a treat after the novel has been read or on its own as a work of cinematic story telling. "Into" suggests an exercise in which students are divided into groups and must determine how they would organize their society if marooned with a few people on a small island. The "Through" section contains questions for class discussion and suggested responses relating to the literary devices in the screenplay, such as symbol, character development, theme, and irony. Suggested assignments include essays comparing specific aspects of the book and the film and an exercise in creating a short sequel. "Beyond" activities focus on the question of whether the story still rings true today. Students are separated into groups and asked to conduct a thought experiment to be presented to the class predicting what a specific group of people would do if suddenly forced to build their own society away from intervention by the outside world. Other activities are also suggested.


    OCTOBER, 2008

    Check out the all new: For Music and Orchestra classes: The Bolero is an Academy Award winning presentation of the Los Angeles Philharmonic performing Maurice Ravel's symphonic masterpiece.
    The instruments featured include: flute, clarinet, bassoon, E-flat clarinet, oboe d'amore, trumpet, tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, piccolo, trombone, and violin. The music is excellent and the camera work extraordinary.

    Lasting only 26 minutes, this short subject can be of great assistance in introducing classical music to secondary school students. The film also provides an introduction to many instruments of the modern orchestra. The comments by Mr. Mehta and some of the musicians personalize the music and give students a little information about what it's like to be a classical musician.

    For Health and English Language Arts classes: Learning Guide to Gracie's Choice:

    Gracie's Choice is the story of a teenage girl with four younger siblings, a drug-addicted mother, and a co-dependent grandmother. Gracie manages to keep her family together through hard work and perseverance, eventually convincing a court to allow her to adopt her younger brothers over her mother's objections. At the end of the movie, Gracie is living the life of a single mother and bettering herself by taking courses at a community college. Most of the movie is an accurate representation of reality. The TWM Learning Guide will tell what is true and what was left out of the movie.

    This movie shows the devastating effects of drug addiction on a family and codependence in operation. However, the most important lesson comes from the actions of Gracie, a girl who overcomes great difficulty, keeps her family together, and progresses with her life. Gracie's Choice will give students in health classes a visceral understanding of these lessons. In English Language Arts classes, the movie will motivate students and drive assignments.
    ADDED DURING THE SUMMER, 2008    --    We've Been busy!





    Learning Guide to Charlotte's Web
    (for teachers);

    Talking and Playing Guide to Charlotte's Web
    (for parents).










    Talking and Playing Guide to Kiki's Delivery Service
    (for parents)








    Learning Guide to Cast Away


    Set-Up-the-Sub Lesson Plan for Cast Away
    (English Language Arts - Grades 9 - 12)





  • Understanding how filmmakers achieve emotional impact is an essential skill for critical viewing. TWM's Introduction to Cinematic and Theatrical Technique includes an article and a student worksheet written by John Golden, a leading expert in the use of film in the classroom. Mr. Golden explains how shot design, soundtrack, music, lighting, costumes, sets, and editing affect the message of any movie. These materials will assist teachers in presenting these concepts to their students.

  • Unchained Memories: Readings from the Slave Narratives is an excellent introduction to slavery in the American South. Actors give dramatic readings of the recollections of former slaves who were interviewed in the 1930s by the Federal Writers' Project. A narrator links the episodes with basic information about slavery in the U.S. The movie is also an excellent introduction to the genre of the personal narrative.

    The TWM Learning Guide to Unchained Memories features an article on the slave narrative in American literature as well as a student handout on "Slavery: A World-Wide View, Then and Now". The Guide also contains a homework assignment, a comprehension test, discussion questions, suggested readings, projects, and activities.


  • The Witness is an award winning documentary about personal transformation and caring for animals. Eddie Lama, a street wise Brooklyn contractor, takes viewers inside his personal odyssey from animal avoider to animal protector --- and then to vegetarian and crusader against the cruelties of the fur industry. It all began when a woman he wanted to date asked him to petsit her cat for the weekend.

    Eddie Lama is an articulate narrator who speaks from the heart. He tells his story with self-deprecating humor. Mr. Lama's love for animals radiates from the screen and envelopes the audience. The final scenes show Mr. Lama driving a van, outfitted with a large screen TV, playing video clips of the abuse of animals in the fur industry. He parks the van in front of high fashion New York City stores that sell fur. The scenes of animal abuse and the compassionate reactions of the by-standers are riveting.

    The Witness is an engrossing story of the capacity for emotional and moral growth that all people possess. This movie is appropriate for English Language Arts classes for two additional reasons: (1) it will drive writing and other skills-based assignments; and (2) it will facilitate critical thinking and self-awareness.

    This film is an excellent vehicle for awakening students to the fact that our actions have implications for animals that we need to take into account. It is also an excellent introduction to the animal rights movement, which gains adherents daily and which is an increasingly vocal part of society's current debate about ethics.

  • Teaching Students to Write a Narrative is a complete lesson plan suitable for any secondary level class. Here are a few excerpts from the introduction:
    A narration lets us know something. It tells us what happened. It tells us a story.

    Our students love to hear narrations. They strain to hear the latest news among their friends about what happened over the weekend and they rush to see the latest films that promise a good story. . . . . They are held by a good narrative in the same way that our ancestors, hundreds of years ago, gathered around a fire and listened to a tale woven from words.

    As teachers we can use this interest to help students learn to write and, at the same time, meet most of the curriculum standards associated with writing skills. The key is student interest. When their heads are into it, young people can write far better than when they are simply doing an assignment. Narratives, perforce, put their heads into the task.


  • Last but not least, for the summer of 2008, TWM has expanded its materials on alcohol and drug abuse to include a student handout on "Codependence -- What Happens When a Family Member is an Alcoholic or a Drug Addict". The handout is part of the "Lesson Plan on Alcohol Abuse, Alcoholism and Codependence" presented in the Learning Guide to When a Man Loves a Woman.




  • From prior editions of "What's New on TeachWithMovies.com"

    Teachers:    Are you concerned that time will be wasted if you're absent from class?
    Worry no more  .  .  .   Check out TWM's exclusive Set-Up-the-Sub.
    Get the most out of movies in English Language Arts and Literature classes:
    .  .  .   use our new Film Study Worksheet.
    New Learning Guides on TeachWithMovies.com:

      Swan Lake                                                           All My Sons      

                               

    Swan Lake is a beautiful and popular Romantic ballet which explores the archetypical metaphor identifying female grace with the movement of swans. The ballet is set to an enchanting score by Tchaikovsky and presents some of the most expressive and appealing movements ever seen on stage.

    The Learning Guide to Swan Lake shows teachers (and parents) how to: (1) introduce ballet to young audiences; (2) use the movie to provide an example of the Romantic movement in an art form other than literature, music, or visual arts; (3) discuss some themes popular in the Romantic movement; (4) provide an example of the use of metaphor and symbol; and (5) provide an SEL lesson about romantic relations. Knowledge of this ballet and of its place in the tradition of the Romantic movement will enhance the understanding of history and of art.

    All My Sons. This Guide is to the play, not the movie. Arthur Miller wrote the play to be read as well as performed and the 1948 movie doesn't quite measure up. However, the play is a classic of American theater. It explores themes that are interesting to teenagers, such as cheating and relations between father and son.

    The Learning Guide to All My Sons provides a full and in-depth analysis of the play including its use of language, symbol, character, irony, and foreshadowing. The Guide compares the structure of All My Sons to ancient Greek tragedy and analyzes the character of Joe Keller as a tragic hero. It evaluates the play and its characters from social, psychological and historical perspectives. The Guide sets out the themes of the play and provides 70 discussion questions, with suggested answers, relating not only to theme but also to the dramatic devices used in the play.

    From What's New on TeachWithMovies.com for Previous Months

    TALKING AND PLAYING FOR GROWTH

    A new resource, for teachers in K - 3 to involve parents in the learning process!

    Talking and Playing Guides to family movies show parents of children ages 3 - 8 how to use movies to foster verbal development, promote social-emotional learning, and teach character education. Designed by the creators of TeachWithMovies.com, in conjunction with Dr. Betty Bardige, Ed.D., the Guides help parents interact with children to foster growth and development.
    "Teachers can use these Guides to suggest that parents talk to their kids about the movies kids like to watch."James Frieden, co-founder of TeachWithmovies.com
    Talking and Playing Guides are currently offered for:
    Finding Nemo --- Happy Feet --- The Adventures of Milo and Otis --- An American Tail --- Babe --- A Bug's Life --- Cars --- Ben and Me --- Toy Story



    From What's New on TeachWithMovies.com for Previous Months

    TWM is a Resource for Social-Emotional Learning
    TeachWithMovies has always had a focus on Social and Emotional Learning. Now we are calling it that. The former Character Development Index has been converted to a Social and Emotional Learning Index. The Guides now feature discussion questions on SEL.

    New Learning Guides on TeachWithMovies.com

                     The Pursuit of Happyness                                            When a Man Loves A Woman                 
    A Lesson Plan on Alcoholism and Codependence

                                       

    The Pursuit of Happyness shows a homeless African-American father taking responsibility for his child while succeeding as a stockbroker. Supplemented with the additional materials in the Learning Guide this film be used to teach important lessons about medial literacy, homelessness, and parenting. TeachWithMovies.com has written an 18 page handout, Episodes in the Life of Chris Gardner (What's Not in the Movie) describing the life of the man on which the movie was based. Did you know that Mr. Gardner's most impressive achievement is not even mentioned in the movie?

    When a Man Loves A Woman -- With a Lesson Plan on Alcoholism and Codependence. The movie is an in-depth dramatic exploration of the effects of alcoholism on a marriage and the changes that one couple must go through when the alcoholic member enters recovery. Michael has learned to protect Alice from the consequences of being drunk since the very beginning of their relationship. Someone he loves is in pain and Michael does what he can to reduce that pain. Alice encourages Michael's enabling behavior because it allows her to live an intoxicated life without paying the price. Over the years, this interaction has become deeply imbedded in their relationship. However, when Alice hits bottom and enters a rehab program, she needs Michael's enabling behavior to stop.

    The Lesson Plan that accompanies the movie covers the basics of alcoholism and alcohol abuse. It contains a student handout, a comprehension test, and discussion questions.

    TWM has also added a new feature: Movies to Supplement Health Classes. We are just starting this project and would love to hear your suggestions and comments. Check it out!

    FEATURES FROM WHAT'S NEW FOR THE PAST SEVERAL MONTHS

                


    We've taught Stand and Deliver to hundreds of students. Not only is the movie an inspiration to children but it can be used to teach important concepts about due process, particularly the burden of proof in courts in criminal and civil cases. It has sections on the movement of ideas over continents, oceans and time, a taste of calculus, literary devices in a work of historical fiction, and the pitfalls of cheating. Teaching aids include: an introductory lecture, student handouts, diagrams to use in class, three comprehension tests with answer keys, and several class projects.

    The Learning Guide to The Glass Menagerie has been completely revised. New background material includes a full exposition of the themes and symbols in the play. This classic of American theatre, the first great American "memory play," contains themes that relate directly to the lives of many adolescents.

    TeachWithMovies.com has also revised its lesson plan on The Development of Lorenzo's Oil, Strange Twists of Fate, and the Scientific Method. This is excellent for teaching the scientific method in a real world situation that will mean something to students who have seen Lorenzo's Oil.

    In April TWM featured three new Learning Guides:


          


    The Outsiders is a classic novel which many children read in Middle or High School. It shows young men searching for their identity in a violent and dangerous world. The story is about cliques, fighting, friendship, loyalty, fitting in, struggling to understand who you are, courage, and redemption. The movie uses a number of literary devices and shows deep psychological insight. Its message is at once wise, concerned, and hopeful.

    Bend It Like Beckham focuses on two English girls who want to play football (soccer) professionally. Jesminder (Jess) is from an Indian Sikh family that has recently emigrated to England. Julie is from a traditional English family. Each suffer from the prejudices of her parents. Jess' parents believe that playing football and displaying her legs to the world are not a proper role for a traditional Sikh girl. They forbid her to play. Julie's disinterest in things feminine and her friendship with Jess lead Julie's mother to fear that her daughter is a lesbian. It all comes to a head at Jess' sister's version of the "Big Fat Sikh Wedding".

    This movie shows girls serious about sports. The TeachWithMovies.com Learning Guide shows how to use this movie as the basis for a unit on the ethics of lying to parents.

    Ice Princess is a girls' sports formula movie that exceeds the expectations of its genre. The characters grow and change in ways that have a ring of truth.

    Casey is an ugly duckling high school physics geek whose mother has groomed her for Harvard. To become a graceful swan on ice Casey must make her mother understand that Harvard is her mother's dream, not Casey's. She must also overcome her mother's disdain for women who pursue a sport. When Casey finally makes it to the ice, not only must she beat the competition, she must survive the stratagems of the skating rink owner (Tina). This woman will stop at nothing to ensure that her own child (Gen) makes it to the regional finals.

    Gen, it turns out, is tired of training most of the day trying to live Tina's dream of glory on ice. A subplot details Gen's efforts to live a normal life in which she can see her boyfriend and go to parties. She even wants time to study so that she doesn't look like an idiot in math class. A second subplot involves the romance between Tina's son and Casey.

    Effective immediately, each Learning Guide contains discussion questions relating to Social-Emotional Learning topics that can be taught through the movie.

    From a recent "What's New on TeachWithMovies.com"


    Teach about the Renaissance and fairy tales with a lesson plan based on Ever After, an enchanting re-imagining of Cinderella.

    Set in France in the early 1500s, this version features as the little cinder girl a well-read young woman of passionate intelligence and integrity. She awakens a jaded prince of France by advocating concepts from Sir Thomas More's Utopia. The Prince, it turns out, is suffocating in the gilded cage of royal life. In a charming departure from the plot of the classic tale, the cinder girl saves the Prince just as much as he saves her.

    Leonardo Da Vinci, who served as artist in residence at the French court from 1516 to 1519, acts out the role of fairy godmother. The Mona Lisa and several of his famous inventions make cameo appearances. This is a very literate tale, told with great wit and charm.

    TeachWithMovies.com has prepared a lesson plan for Ever After complete with an introductory lecture, a time line, discussion questions, a comprehension test, and an answer key. A unique "Learning From Historical Errors" section allows teachers to use the film's many departures from the historical record as teaching tools.

    TWM has also redrafted the Learning Guides to Romeo and Juliet, Cool Runnings, and A Christmas Carol. Each of these Guides now provide suggested answers to all of the discussion questions.

    From an Earlier "What's New on TeachWithMovies.com"

    See our new Lesson Plan for Health Classes based on the film Super Size Me and a Learning Guide to Deepa Metha's searching inquiry into the treatment of widows in India, a love story called Water. This movie was nominated for an Academy Award in the Best Foreign Film category.

    Both of these films have a deep impact on kids. Super Size Me can reduce the amount of fast food they eat. We've seen it happen. After our presentation of Water at Palisades High School in Los Angeles several students said it was the "best movie" they'd ever seen. The introduction makes all the difference (and the introduction is in the Learning Guide).


    In recent months, TWM has added or substantially revised Learning Guides to Stand and Deliver, The Glass Menagerie, The Outsiders, Bend It Like Beckham, Ice Princess, Ever After, Romeo and Juliet, Cool Runnings, A Christmas Carol, Super Size Me, and Water. This is a very strong line-up of new or revised materials from which teachers can create lesson plans. The Development of Lorenzo's Oil, Strange Twists of Fate, and the Scientific Method is an excellent lesson plan for teaching the historical method.

    Be sure to look for Social-Emotional Learning topics in each Learning Guide.

    The newest Learning Guides presented in this web page will help teachers prepare lesson plans for the following movies: Edward Scissorhands, Charly, Lord of the Flies, The Bolero, Gracie's Choice, Charlotte's Web, Cast Away, Kiki's Delivery Service, Unchained Memories, The Witness, Swan Lake, All My Sons, The Pursuit of Happyness, When a Man Loves a Woman, Stand and Deliver, The Glass Menagerie, The Outsiders, Bend It Like Beckham, Ice Princess, Ever After, Romeo and Juliet, Cool Runnings, A Christmas Carol, Super Size Me, and Water. This is a very strong line-up of new or revised materials from which teachers can create lesson plans. The Development of Lorenzo's Oil, Strange Twists of Fate, and the Scientific Method is an excellent lesson plan for teaching the scientific method.

    James Frieden
    Deborah W. Elliott              August 20, 2010




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