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Power and Freedom

English (ELA) • Year 10 • 60 • Created with AI following Aligned with Common Core State Standards

English (ELA)
0Year 10
60
19 February 2025

Power and Freedom

Lesson Overview

Subject: English Language & Literature (ELA)
Year Group: Year 10
Unit: Power and Freedom Unveiled (Lesson 1 of 17)
Duration: 60 minutes
UK Curriculum Area: AQA GCSE English Language & Literature (Applicable to other UK exam boards)

  • Reading: Understanding perspectives in non-fiction and literary texts
  • Writing: Exploring ideas and constructing arguments
  • Spoken Language: Developing discussion and debate skills

Lesson Objective:
Students will explore the themes of power and freedom by engaging with an anticipation guide, participating in a gallery walk, and analysing excerpts from influential figures. This will introduce them to the essential question that guides the unit:

How do individuals and societies navigate the balance between power and freedom?

Lesson Breakdown

Starter (10 minutes) – The Anticipation Guide

  1. Setup: Display the essential question on the board.
  2. Discussion: Provide students with a printed anticipation guide containing five provocative statements related to power and freedom (e.g., "Absolute freedom can never exist in society." / "Power is always corrupting.").
  3. Response: Individually, students mark statements as Agree or Disagree, writing brief justifications.
  4. Pair & Share: In pairs, students compare answers, discussing where they agree/disagree.
  5. Classroom Poll: Take a class vote on each statement and encourage a few students to justify their positions.

Activity 1 (15 minutes) – Gallery Walk: Power & Freedom in Images

  1. Preparation: Around the room, display six thought-provoking images depicting historical and modern examples of power and freedom (e.g., suffragettes, civil rights protests, authoritarian regimes, personal expressions of freedom).
  2. Silent Reflection: In pairs, students walk around, observing each image and writing down initial reactions (on sticky notes or in their books).
  3. Discussion: After five minutes, pairs select one image to discuss in more depth—how it represents power/freedom, who is affected, and its relevance today.
  4. Class Sharing: Invite a few pairs to share insights, emphasising different interpretations.

Activity 2 (25 minutes) – Jigsaw Reading: Perspectives on Power

  1. Grouping: Divide the class into five small groups, assigning each an excerpt from influential speeches, essays, or literary texts (examples below).
  2. Texts for Analysis:
    • Nelson MandelaLong Walk to Freedom
    • George Orwell1984
    • Mary WollstonecraftA Vindication of the Rights of Woman
    • Frederick DouglassWhat to the Slave is the Fourth of July?
    • Malala Yousafzai – UN Speech on education and women's rights
  3. Task: Groups read their assigned text, summarise its key message, and analyse how it presents ideas of power or freedom.
  4. Jigsaw Teaching: Students then form new groups (one person from each original group), teaching each other their respective texts.
  5. Whole-Class Reflection: Discuss emerging ideas and connections between the texts.

Plenary (10 minutes) – Exit Ticket: "One Word, One Phrase, One Sentence"

  1. Individual Task:
    • One word that captures today's lesson
    • One phrase from any discussion point that stood out
    • One sentence summarising their own perspective on power and freedom
  2. Reflection Discussion: Share a few responses, recognising diverse viewpoints.
  3. Preview for Next Lesson: Briefly introduce the next topic—analysing how writers manipulate language to express power and oppression.

Assessment & Differentiation

  • Formative Assessment:

    • Anticipation guide responses to gauge initial understanding.
    • Observation of discussions during gallery walk and jigsaw reading.
    • Exit tickets provide insight into student comprehension.
  • Differentiation Strategies:

    • Support: Provide scaffolding questions for students who need additional guidance with text analysis.
    • Challenge: Ask confident students to compare their assigned excerpt with another literary or historical source.

Resources Required

  • Printed anticipation guide
  • Six images for the gallery walk
  • Extracts from Mandela, Orwell, Wollstonecraft, Douglass, and Malala
  • Sticky notes/mini whiteboards for student reflections

Teacher Reflection Questions (Post-Lesson)

  • Which activities engaged students the most?
  • Did students effectively connect the texts with the essential question?
  • How can discussions be deepened in future lessons about power and freedom?

This lesson lays the foundation for a thought-provoking journey into power, freedom, and the voices that have shaped our understanding of both.

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