Romeo & Juliet: Language KS3

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In these lessons, students will learn how to read and respond to the text of the play. This will help them to gain crucial close-reading skills. Tasks include: actively exploring the rhythm of the play through games; finding examples of literary terms in key scenes; and performing a close-reading of Act 1, Scene 1, including the Prince's speech.

In order to benefit fully from these lesson plans, we recommend you use them in the following order:

If students are new to the play, we suggest you start with these introductory KS3 Lesson Plans. If you would like to teach the play in greater detail, use the advanced KS4/5 Lesson Plans.

These lesson plans are available in the Downloads section at the bottom of this page. To download resources, you must be logged in. Sign up for free to access this and other exclusive featuresActivities mentioned in these resources are available in a separate downloadable 'Student Booklet', also at the bottom of this page. The 'Teachers' Guide' download explains how best to use Teach Shakespeare and also contains a bibliography and appendices referencing the resources used throughout.

Key Questions for Students:

Do I understand how Shakespeare’s plays are structured and organised?

Do I understand the basic plot and structure of Romeo and Juliet?

Do I understand how to make cuts to the text successfully?

Key words: cuts, editing, genre, mini-saga, organisation, plot, resolution, script, story, structure

 

Prologue: Opening Discussion

Students should turn to the Story Mountain handout in the Student Booklet. This template has five blank boxes to illustrate the structure of the five act play and five cards showing summaries of each of the five acts to arrange in the correct order. Through feedback, you could elicit students’ reasoning as to the placement of the cards in the five boxes to create the arc of the story: beginning – build-up/rising action – problem – resolution/falling action - ending. By way of an extension activity, mix in some sets of cards relating to another Shakespeare play or more than one play. Students could then compare their findings and comment on similarities and differences; this could lead to a discussion of the similarities and differences between tragedies, comedies and histories.

 

Enter the Players: Group Tasks

1) Mini sagas

Ask students to summarise the plot of Romeo and Juliet as a mini-saga, and share and compare students’ different versions. Which parts of the play emerge from this exercise as essential to include in their own stage production?

 

2) In or Out?

Ask students to imagine that they need to cut an hour’s worth of material from their productions of Romeo and Juliet. Show students a scene by scene summary of the play, and ask them to discuss whether it would be preferable to:

  • cut whole scenes, or
  • cut lines from lots of different scenes

What would the implications be of different kinds of ‘cuts’? What, as directors, would they need to bear in mind?

Students could then do a dictogloss activity in groups of four. Read the following text (a short passage from a longer section on cutting the text taken from Fiona Banks’ book Creative Shakespeare) twice. The first time, students should just listen and then the second time, students should make notes as they listen.

'It is very rare to see a Shakespeare play in performance that has not been cut in some way. Many Shakespeare plays would run well in excess of 3½ hours if they were not cut. How a play is cut always depends on the type of performance or production. Certainly each director of productions at the Globe will choose different lines to cut. Cuts are always influenced by the type of production that the director wishes to create. Sometimes characters can be cut completely if this serves the story a director wants to tell. There are very few rules; artistic interpretation is what drives the process of cutting.'

Students would then work in groups of four to reconstruct the paragraph. Finally, students should be shown Banks’ advice about cutting a text for performance in full. (The passage used for the dictogloss would be marked so that students can check their paragraph against the original.)

Writing a summary of the key points of Banks’ advice would be a useful resource for the next activity.

 

3) Director’s Edit

Direct students to look at the Script Machine activities from the microsite 2013.playingshakespeare.org/language, and opt for ‘Director’s Edit’. Divide students into groups and allocate one of the key scenes to each group: Act 1 Scene 1, Act 2 Scene 2, Act 3 Scene 1 and Act 3 Scene 5. Students can see how the director of a real production has edited the play by cutting numerous passages. What conclusions can they draw about what has been cut and why? To what extent has Banks’ advice been heeded?

 

3) Compare and contrast

Compare the following edit of Act 1 Scene 1 (cut from lines 42-101) with the original text. Everyone will need a copy, which is included in the Student Booklet. Prepare a performance of this edit involving the whole class.

 

 

 

 

Capulet 1 bites his thumb at the Montagues

 

MONTAGUE 1:    Do you bite your thumb sir?

CAPULET 1:     I do bite my thumb, sir.

MONTAGUE 2&3:     Do you bite your thumb at us sir?

CAPULET 1:      Is the law on our side if I say ay?

CAPULET 2:     No

CAPULET 1:     No, sir, I do not bite my thumb at you, sir,

CAPULET 3:     But I bite my thumb, sir.

CAPULET 4:     Do you quarrel, sir?

MONTAGUE 4:      Quarrel sir? No, sir.

CAPULET 5:    I serve as good a man as you.

MONTAGUE 5:     No better

CAPULET 5:     Yes better sir

MONTAGUE 6:    You lie!

CAPULET 6:    Draw if you be men!

BENVOLIO:    Part fools!

TYBALT:    Turn thee, Benvolio, look upon they death.

BENVOLIO:    I do but keep the peace.

TYBALT:   Peace? I hate the word, 
As I hate hell, all Montagues, and thee.

[They fight.]

MONTAGUES:     Down with the Capulets! Down with the Capulets!

CAPULETS:    Down with the Montagues! Down with the Montagues!
 

[Enter Prince]

PRINCE:    Rebellious subjects, enemies to peace,
You men, you beasts
Throw your weapons to the ground,
If ever you disturb our streets again,
Your lives shall pay the forfeit of the peace.
Once more, on pain of death, all men depart.

 

Encourage students to reflect on how well this edit worked as a piece of storytelling and as a piece of theatre.

 

Exeunt: Closing Questions for Students

What are the main events in the story of Romeo and Juliet

What would audiences most enjoy about a production of Romeo and Juliet

Where would I decide to put the interval and why?

 

Suggested plenary activity…

Encourage students to think about what they as an audience member most enjoy about going to see a Shakespeare play/or Romeo and Juliet specifically. They should distill their thoughts so they are left with just five points, e.g.

  • a romantic storyline
  • deals with thought-provoking issues
  • an emotional connection with characters
  • hearing famous lines and speeches
  • fast-paced and exciting

Compare students’ different ideas and identify any common themes emerging.

 

Asides: Further Resources

  • This quiz about the story line of Romeo and Juliet could be a useful tool for consolidating textual knowledge, for retrieving information from the text and for revision purposes. The questions are available in the Student Booklet, and the answers are available in the downloadable Lesson Plans at the bottom of this page.
  1. Where in present-day Italy does the play take place and who is its ruler?
  2. Who is the first speaker in the play, and how many appearances does this speaker make?
  3. What is the name of the two feuding households? 
  4. How old is Juliet and how do we know? 
  5. Is Rosaline related to the Montague or Capulet family?
  6. Who is it intended that Juliet should marry?
  7. Who are Anthony and Potpan? 
  8. What do Romeo and Juliet do at the end of the sonnet formed by the first words they speak to each other? 
  9. Is it Romeo or Juliet who says ‘Deny thy father and refuse thy name’? 
  10. Is it Romeo or Juliet who says ‘What light through yonder window breaks’? 
  11. Which two characters agree to help Romeo and Juliet marry? 
  12. Why is Romeo and Juliet’s marriage unlawful? 
  13. Who is fatally wounded by Tybalt in Act 3 Scene 1?
  14. Who kills Tybalt in Act 3 Scene 1? 
  15. Where is Romeo banished to? 
  16. What object does the Nurse bring to Romeo in Act 3 Scene 3? 
  17. What is Capulet talking about when he tells Paris ‘A Thursday let it be’?
  18. What is in the ‘vial’ that Friar Laurence gives Juliet in Act 4 Scene 1? For how long are its effects felt?
  19.  At the end of which scene does Juliet drink the contents of the vial?
  20. Why does ‘festival’ turn to ‘black funeral’ in the Capulet household?
  21. Why doesn’t Friar Laurence’s message reach Romeo?
  22. Where does the final scene of the play take place?
  23. What happens to Paris at the end of the play?
  24. How do the two lovers kill themselves? 
  25. Who gives Prince Escalus the letter than explains the events leading to Romeo’s suicide? 

 

  • Some excellent resources to support students’ understanding of and engagement with the play’s storyline are Anna Claybourne’s Short Sharp Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet, Michael Cox’s modernised prose retelling, and the three differentiated graphic novel versions of the play (quick text, plain text, original text) produced by Classical Comics.

 

Epilogue: Teacher's Note

There are further activities relating to genre within the Key Stage 4/5 materials on this play under Themes.

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