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Analysing Mrs Midas

English • Year 11 • 50 • 25 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England

English
1Year 11
50
25 students
13 March 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 2 of 5 in the unit "Exploring Duffy's Midas". Lesson Title: Character Analysis: Mrs Midas Lesson Description: Students will delve into the character of Mrs Midas, examining her perspective and emotional journey throughout the poem. They will engage in close reading exercises and character mapping to understand her motivations and responses to Midas's transformation.

Analysing Mrs Midas

Lesson Overview

Unit: Exploring Duffy’s Midas
Lesson: 2 of 5
Duration: 50 minutes
Class Size: 25 students
Level: GCSE English Literature (AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC)
Curriculum Area: Poetry – Character Analysis

Lesson Objectives

By the end of this lesson, students will:

  • Analyse Mrs Midas’s emotions and reactions to her husband's transformation.
  • Evaluate how Duffy uses language and structure to convey her perspective.
  • Create a detailed character map showcasing Mrs Midas’s emotional journey.

Lesson Structure

1. Starter Activity – Sensory Recall (10 minutes)

  • Objective: Engage students by helping them empathise with Mrs Midas’s perspective.
  • Task: Students each write a short sensory description of the moment they received shocking or unbelievable news. They should describe:
    • What they saw, heard, or felt.
    • Their initial emotions vs. their emotions later that day.
  • Discussion (3 mins): Ask three students to share their response. Then, as a class, discuss how emotions evolve from shock to reflection.

2. Close Reading: Analysing Key Passages (15 minutes)

  • Objective: Identify how Duffy conveys Mrs Midas’s emotions and thoughts.

  • Task: Working in pairs, students will focus on one assigned stanza each and answer the following questions:

    1. What is Mrs Midas’s emotional state here?
    2. What language techniques does Duffy use to reflect this?
    3. How does the tone shift within this section?
  • Teacher Discussion (7 minutes):

    • Bring the class together and walk through the responses from different pairs.
    • Draw attention to key techniques (e.g., enjambment reflecting overwhelming thoughts, caesura mimicking Mrs Midas’s pauses in shock, and imagery of separation).

3. Character Mapping: Mrs Midas’s Emotional Journey (15 minutes)

  • Objective: Visualise Mrs Midas’s complex emotions.
  • Task: Groups of five will create timeline maps tracking her emotions across the poem. Each group takes a section and must:
    • Choose at least three key emotions from their section.
    • Provide a quote that illustrates each emotion.
    • Explain in one sentence how this moment contributes to Mrs Midas’s overall emotional journey.
  • Plenary Discussion (5 minutes):
    • Each group briefly presents their findings in chronological order, piecing together a class-wide timeline.

4. Exit Task – Mrs Midas’s Inner Monologue (10 minutes)

  • Objective: Deepen emotional engagement with the character.

  • Task: Individually, students write a short monologue from Mrs Midas’s perspective, recorded as though written in her diary that night.

    • Encourage internal thoughts rather than direct speech.
    • How does she feel about Midas—anger, loss, sorrow?
    • Does she blame him? Does she pity him? Both?
  • Quick Share (3 minutes): Ask two students to read aloud, prompting class reflections on the different perspectives emerging.

Differentiation & Challenge

  • Higher-achieving students can focus on alternative interpretations of Mrs Midas (e.g., is she selfish for leaving him, or is she asserting self-preservation?).
  • Students needing support will receive scaffolded prompts for close reading and sentence starters for monologue writing.

Assessment for Learning (AfL) Strategies

  • Mini whiteboards: Used during close reading to check instant comprehension.
  • Think-Pair-Share: Encourages reflection before sharing ideas.
  • Exit ticket: The monologue task acts as an informal assessment of their understanding of Mrs Midas’s emotional complexity.

Resources Needed

  • Copies of Mrs Midas poem
  • Mini whiteboards & markers
  • A3 paper for character mapping activity
  • Modelled examples of sensory writing & diary monologue

Reflection & Next Lesson

  • Teacher to note how confidently students identified Mrs Midas’s emotions—do they need more work on tone & meaning?
  • Lesson 3 Preview: Exploring Midas’s Perspective – comparing character viewpoints.

This lesson plan integrates active engagement, creative writing, and literary analysis while remaining adaptable to student needs. Let me know if you’d like refinements or extensions! 🚀

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