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Kingship in Macbeth

English • 60 • 25 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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English
60
25 students
12 January 2026

Teaching Instructions

Create an engaging lesson plan for 6th year higher level English students (18 years old) focused on the theme of Kingship in Macbeth. Include learning objectives, success criteria, engaging activities such as stations or writing tasks, comprehension assessment, varied plenaries, and differentiation strategies for diverse learners including dyslexia-friendly reading options. Add extension activities for advanced learners. Ensure the lesson promotes understanding, appreciation, and enjoyment of literature, encouraging active thinking. The lesson should cover plot, characters, themes, symbols, and relationships related to Kingship in Macbeth.

Overview

This 60-minute lesson explores the complex theme of Kingship in Macbeth by William Shakespeare. Designed for Year 12 Higher Level English students (aged 18), the session aligns closely with the Irish Leaving Certificate English Curriculum (English HL: Drama) and the Junior Cycle Framework for Senior Cycle strands on Literary Understanding, Reading and Critical Thinking. It ensures students critically engage with Shakespeare’s plot, characters, symbols, themes, and relationships in the context of Kingship, while promoting differentiated and dyslexia-friendly strategies.


Curriculum Alignment

Leaving Certificate English HL: Drama

  • Learning Outcome:
    Explore and analyse key themes, characters, symbols, and dramatic techniques in a variety of texts (Drama)
    Use knowledge of authors, culture and genre to interpret and evaluate texts
    Engage expressively and critically in oral and written communication

Key competencies targeted:

  • Critical and creative thinking
  • Information processing and interpretation
  • Self-directed learning

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:

  1. Explain the concept of Kingship in Macbeth and its significance to the play’s plot and characters.
  2. Analyse how Shakespeare uses characters, symbols, and relationships to explore Kingship.
  3. Evaluate different perspectives on legitimate and corrupt kingship presented in the text.
  4. Demonstrate understanding through writing and discussion with appropriate literary terminology.

Success Criteria

  • I can identify and explain key scenes that develop the theme of Kingship.
  • I can describe how Macbeth, Duncan, Malcom, and other characters represent different aspects of Kingship.
  • I can use evidence from the text to support my analysis.
  • I can participate in group discussions and activities using subject-specific vocabulary.
  • I can write a persuasive paragraph discussing the nature of Kingship in Macbeth.

Resources

  • Print excerpts from Macbeth relevant to Kingship (dyslexia-friendly versions with simplified fonts, spacing, and glossary of archaic terms).
  • Station task worksheets.
  • Whiteboard and markers.
  • Copies of symbol maps and character charts.
  • Audio versions of key scenes (for dyslexic auditory learners).
  • Flipchart paper and coloured markers.

Lesson Structure

1. Starter (10 minutes) – Exploring Kingship through Definitions and Context

  • Task: In small groups, students brainstorm what “Kingship” means in general and in a historical context. They list qualities of a ‘good king’ vs ‘bad king’.
  • Teacher Input: Brief explanation of 11th-century Scottish kingship and Shakespeare’s political context to anchor discussion.
  • Differentiation: Provide printed key ideas and visuals for support. Dyslexic students can listen to a brief recording of the introduction.
  • Success criteria: Use key vocabulary correctly (e.g., legitimacy, tyranny, divine right, usurpation).

2. Main Activity (30 minutes) – Interactive Stations on Kingship in Macbeth

Students rotate in groups of 5 through three stations. Each station targets a different dimension of Kingship in Macbeth. They spend 8-10 minutes per station.


Station 1: Plot & Characters

  • Focus: Key scenes illustrating Kingship:
    • Duncan’s reign and murder (Act 1, Scene 4; Act 2, Scene 2)
    • Macbeth’s ascent and tyranny (Act 3, Scene 1; Act 4, Scene 1)
    • Malcolm’s testing and restoration (Act 4, Scene 3; Act 5, Scene 9)
  • Task: Match each character with kingly traits or failings using character cards and justify with quotes.
  • Differentiation: Dyslexia-friendly versions of extracts, with accompanying audio clips. Highlighted key phrases.
  • Success criteria: Identify character traits linked to Kingship; justify opinions with textual support.

Station 2: Themes & Symbols

  • Focus: Exploration of symbolic motifs:
    • Blood and its symbolism (guilt, violence)
    • The crown and sceptre (power, legitimacy)
    • Nature and disorder imagery (unnatural kingship)
  • Task: Students analyse short symbolic extracts and create a mind map connecting symbols to the theme of Kingship.
  • Differentiation: Colour-coded symbol cards; group support for mind map completion.

Station 3: Relationships & Power Dynamics

  • Focus: How relationships influence ideas of Kingship:
    • Macbeth and Lady Macbeth – complicity and ambition
    • Macbeth and Banquo – loyalty and rivalry
    • Macbeth and the witches – prophecy and manipulation
  • Task: Role-play short scripted dialogues exploring power struggles; answer reflective questions on influence over kingship.
  • Differentiation: Provide role cards with clear prompts; audio recording of the dialogues for modelling tone.

3. Written Task (10 minutes) – Persuasive Paragraph

  • Task: Individually write a paragraph:
    “Is Macbeth a legitimate king? Use evidence from the text to support your view.”
  • Support: Paragraph structure scaffolds provided; dyslexia-friendly writing frames with sentence starters and linking phrases.
  • Success Criteria: Clear argument, use textual evidence, correct use of literary terms.

4. Plenary (10 minutes) – Varied Reflection Options

Choose one or two plenary activities:

  • Exit Ticket: Write one new insight about Kingship and one question they still have.
  • Gallery Walk: Groups display mind maps and character cards; students circulate, add post-its with comments/questions.
  • Quick Debate: “Macbeth’s Kingship was doomed from the start.” Students vote ‘agree’ or ‘disagree’ with quick justifications.

Differentiation Summary

Learner ProfileStrategies Applied
Dyslexic learnersDyslexia-friendly print (Open Dyslexic font, increased spacing), glossary, audio versions, paragraph frames, role cards.
EAL studentsVisual aids, simplified texts, collaborative group work, explicit vocabulary instruction.
Advanced learnersExtension tasks at stations involving thematic analysis or exploring political allegories; encouraged to add original symbols or modern parallels.
Reluctant writersSpeaking-based tasks (role-play, debate), sentence starters, paired writing tasks.

Extension Activities for Advanced Learners

  • Compose a critical essay question answering: “To what extent does Shakespeare’s portrayal of Kingship in Macbeth reflect Jacobean political anxieties?”
  • Create a storyboard or direct a short scene focusing on the Coronation and its dramatic impact.
  • Compare and contrast Kingship in Macbeth with another Shakespeare play or modern political leader.

Teacher Reflection Prompts

  • Did students engage critically with symbolism and characterisation?
  • Were dyslexic supports sufficient for confident participation?
  • How effectively did the stations promote active thinking and peer collaboration?
  • What adjustments can enhance writing output and comprehension?

This lesson ensures that students not only understand the plot and characters but also probe themes, symbols, and relationships related to Kingship in an active, scaffolded, and differentiated learning environment. It balances textual analysis with creative and oral tasks promoting enjoyment and appreciation of Shakespeare’s work.

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