Conflict in Hatchet
Overview
Year Level: Year 8
Duration: 50 minutes
Unit Focus: Survival Through Words
Lesson: 8 of 30
Lesson Title: Conflict in 'Hatchet'
Text: Hatchet by Gary Paulsen
Class Size: 20 Students
Curriculum Area: English – Level 8
Relevant Content Descriptions (Australian Curriculum – Version 9.0):
- AC9E8LE01 – Analyse and explain the ways that characterisation, events and settings are combined in narratives, and how they reflect human experiences.
- AC9E8LE02 – Explain how language features and language patterns contribute to the construction of characters, settings and events.
- AC9E8RU01 – Analyse how texts draw on readers’ knowledge of texts and language to interpret and create meaning.
Learning Intentions
By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:
- Identify and differentiate between internal and external conflicts in Hatchet.
- Analyse how conflict contributes to Brian’s development as a character.
- Explain the broader significance of conflict in survival narratives.
Success Criteria
Students can:
- Provide examples of internal and external conflicts in the text.
- Discuss how these conflicts shape Brian’s decisions and growth.
- Present a visual representation (e.g., Conflict Map) that shows connections between types of conflict and character development.
Required Materials
- Copies of Hatchet by Gary Paulsen (students’ own or classroom set)
- Whiteboard or SMART Board
- Sticky notes (two colours per student: one for internal, one for external conflict)
- Conflict Map Worksheet (provided for each student)
- Highlighters
- Timer or stopwatch
- A3 paper and markers (group activity)
Lesson Sequence
1. Warm-Up: Conflict Quick Write (5 minutes)
Purpose: Activate prior knowledge and link to previous lessons on survival.
Task:
Students respond in their journals to the prompt:
“Think of a time you faced a difficult situation alone. What were you thinking and feeling? What did you do?”
Teaching Strategy:
- Think-Pair-Share: Students write silently for 2 minutes then share with a partner, followed by a few volunteers sharing with class.
- Highlight similarities between students’ experiences and Brian’s journey.
2. Explicit Teaching: Understanding Conflict (10 minutes)
Purpose: Clarify the concept of internal vs. external conflict and link it to Hatchet.
Direct Instruction:
- Using the whiteboard, define Internal Conflict (Man vs Self) and External Conflict (e.g., Man vs Nature, Man vs Society).
- Provide literary examples from Australian young adult texts where possible (e.g., Tomorrow, When The War Began by John Marsden).
- Ask students to recall moments in Hatchet illustrating both types.
Teacher Example:
External: The plane crash – Brian vs Nature
Internal: Brian’s self-doubt about being able to survive alone
Student Note-Taking: Students copy definitions and examples into their English notebooks.
3. Guided Practice: Conflict Mapping (15 minutes)
Activity:
Students complete a Conflict Map Worksheet in pairs.
Instructions:
- Re-read key passages (Chapter 4 - Plane Crash, Chapter 7 - Survival struggle, Chapter 12 - Reflection on change).
- Use sticky notes to identify conflicts:
- Blue Sticky for internal conflicts
- Green Sticky for external conflicts
- Place sticky notes on a large Conflict Map (quadrant graph with axes "Internal/External" vs "Physical/Emotional")
Teacher Role: Circulate and prompt deeper thinking.
- “Is this moment about Brian’s abilities or his mindset?”
- “What is at stake in this conflict?”
4. Group Collaboration: Conflict Web Creation (10 minutes)
Activity: Groups of 4 students create a Conflict Web on A3 paper, showing how different conflicts are interconnected.
Instructions:
- Label key conflicts (up to 6) on the web.
- Use arrows to show cause-effect relationships.
- Add symbols or colour to show impact level on Brian’s character growth.
Example:
Plane crash → Loneliness → Self-reliance
Visual Literacy Element: Use of diagrams reinforces multimodal comprehension.
5. Individual Reflection and Exit Slip (8 minutes)
Task: Students complete an exit slip answering:
“Which conflict do you think was most important in Brian’s survival, and why?”
Extension Challenge:
“How would the story change if Brian never experienced internal conflict?”
Assessment Opportunity:
- Review exit slips for understanding of conflict types and their effect on narrative structure.
Differentiation
- Support: Provide scaffolded Conflict Map template and sentence starters for students needing literacy support.
- Extension: Invite capable students to compare Brian's conflicts to those in another Australian survival text.
- EAL/D Students: Visual supports and bilingual dictionaries permitted; focus on one key conflict with simplified guiding questions.
Assessment for Learning
| Strategy | Evidence Collected |
|---|
| Conflict Map | Grasp of conflict types and examples from text |
| Group Conflict Web | Depth of understanding; ability to synthesise |
| Exit Slip Reflection | Critical thinking and personal interpretation |
Teacher Reflection (Post-Lesson Prompt)
- Did students understand the distinction between internal and external conflict?
- How effectively did they connect conflict to Brian’s character arc?
- Were the group activities inclusive of all abilities?
- What misconceptions or gaps do I need to revisit next lesson?
Next Steps
Lesson 9 Preview:
Diving into how language and descriptive imagery build tension during conflict scenes in Hatchet. Focus on crafting sensory-rich responses.
Homework Task:
Students will find a real-world survival story (from news, documentaries, or family history) and identify one internal and one external conflict in it. Bring notes or a short paragraph for next class.
Wow Factor for Teachers 🌟
This lesson actively engages students with visual tools (Conflict Map and Web), encourages personal connection, and promotes synthesis through drawing and writing. It uses higher-order thinking and layered multimodal comprehension, aligned tightly to Australian Curriculum standards.