VISUAL MAPPING LAYING OUT THE SCRIPT SUBJECT ENGLISH

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Visual Mapping: Laying Out the Script

Visual Mapping: Laying Out the Script

Subject: English

Grade level: 9-12


Rationale or Purpose: Students visually map out the order of the episodes or roles

they want to use in their Living Newspaper script and begin transcribing the first draft.


Materials:


Objectives:

English I – English III: 110.42-110.44

English IV: 110.45

Activities:

Step 1: Set up the room by covering the floor or a large table with butcher paper. (Or have separate sheets of butcher paper for groups working on different scripts.) Have markers, scissors, note cards easy to access. If the class is working in groups on different scripts, have students break up into their groups.


Step 2: Ask students to find the quote or paragraph in their primary sources that inspired each of the chosen episodes or roles they selected for their Living Newspaper script.


Step 3: Have students cut out these quotes or paragraphs from the original context (i.e. students cut two lines out of a larger article). For items that can’t be physically cut out (i.e. roles students want to develop and include), have them write the name and a brief description of this item on a note card.


Step 4: Instruct students that they will work in silence to create a “visual map” (outline) on the butcher paper. Students should decide where in the course of the script each role or episode should be (i.e. should the script begin with the monologue by the United Nations official or a refugee in Rwanda? What makes the most sense as far as introducing information to the audience, making a statement about the information being presented, and impacting your audience emotionally?)


Step 4: Ask for a volunteer to put one episode or role down first, then ask students to begin placing their episodes near or around this episode based on their connections. Ask students to work one or two at a time, taking each other’s placements into consideration.


Step 5: Once episodes are all placed, students each have a chance to make one adjustment to the visual map, to draw something with the markers (could be a line to connect episodes, a stage direction, a picture of a role, etc.), or to cut an episode into halves or thirds and distribute it throughout the map.


Step 6: Once the visual map is done (this could look very literal and chronological or very abstract, depending on the group), ask students to discuss whether they are satisfied with the order. Ask if/how the order supports the thesis statement chosen earlier for the performance.

At the end of this activity, you should have a visual map or maps with a beginning, middle, and end of the script and a clear through-line.


Step 7: Once the maps are done, put students into pairs, then split the script into as many pieces as pairs there are. Ask students to record, now in chronological order, their section of the script (i.e. what will happen in this section? Which episodes does it contain? Where does it fall in greater structure of the script?). Or if multiple maps were created in small groups (for multiple scripts), have each small group work together to record the order of the script. This should be a direct transcription of the episodes/evidence in the visual map, but without “characters” assigned to speak certain lines (See Extension below.)

Closure: Students can post the visual map on the wall to return to in subsequent lessons. Ask students to consider ways they still want to build on their script (i.e. assigning lines to certain characters, expanding certain roles, the inclusion of creative writing) and tell them you will be doing some of these things in future lessons.


Student Product: Visual map(s); transcribed basic script


Assessment/Evaluation: Students might be evaluated based on their active participation in the decision-making process of mapping out and deciding on the order of the script. This could also be a self-evaluation.


Extension: While students will end up at the end of this lesson with a rough skeleton of the script, the lines they include will probably have no character attached. In other words, a line would merely read, “7 million illegal immigrants resided in the United States in January 2000,” rather than “NARRATOR: 7 million illegal immigrants resided in the United States in January 2000” or “GOVERNMENT OFFICIAL: 7 million illegal immigrants resided in the United States in January 2000.”










From p. 107 of the Living Newspapers Across the Disciplines Resource Guide by the Humanities Institute at the University of Texas at Austin, http://humanitiesinstitute.utexas.edu



Page 3 of 3


21 FALLS COSTS NUMBERS AND LINKS WITH VISUAL
21 VISION BASIC ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF THE VISUAL
27 EL PROCESO DE INFORMACIÓN VISUAL EL PROCESO DE


Tags: english grade, first english, mapping, laying, script, subject, english, visual