Bulletin Board of Finished Humumet Projects |
When teaching mood, the first step in my 8 grade classroom is
of course, discussing what mood is and how it differs from tone. Typically I storm in
at the start of class and start demanding in an irritated tone that they get
out their books, some paper and that they need to get busy. I try to act
extremely grumpy and irritated. I don’t let it go long before I stop and smile
and ask two questions.
- What attitude did I have? (answers range from grumpy to mean to aggravated and others that will go unmentioned ;)
- How did it make you feel? (nervous, upset, angry)
I tell students that my attitude was expressed partly
through what I had to say- my tone. How I made them feel was mood. They really
seem to get that.
We begin identifying mood with supporting detail using art
work. Students examine works of art in small groups, identify the mood and
select images/color, etc. from the art work as support. We practice writing
paragraphs that use the A.C.E. (Answer/Cite/Explain) or P.E.E.
(Point/Example/Explain) method. This is
an interesting and less threatening method to begin identifying mood with
supporting ideas, and students seem to enjoy it. I was very pleased with the
discussion that occurred as they debated the mood and how the art work supported
that mood.
Examples of Student Response for Mood from Paintings (Using ACE/PEE paragraph method for SCR)
The mood of the painting, The Boating Party, is lighthearted. There are cheery colors, like
the baby’s pink clothes and the yellow boat. The mom has a loving, calm look on
her face, so you know she’s not unhappy or anything. Cheerful colors and loving
expressions give it a lighthearted feel.
The mood of the painting, House by the Railroad, is foreboding. The dark, blue colors make it
seem suspenseful. They give off a feeling that something bad happened and that
there is a dark feeling in the air. The shadows give off an eerie feeling,
which is foreboding.
The mood of The
Boating Part is light hearted. I know this because the mom is smiling, the
baby is calm and not crying, and the boat ride itself appears to be peaceful.
The painting itself is also brightly colored, which suggests a happier mood. This
is how I know the painting portrays a light hearted mood.
Next we
looked at various short excerpts from many
YA novels and other sources. The Raven Boys | Maggie Stiefvater is a
great book with many descriptive passages that we used to decipher mood both in
small groups and as a class.
We start by reading (and re-reading) and deciding if the
mood is negative or positive and then we select the words/phrases that make it
so. Finally, students choose a mood word and they continue practice in writing a short constructed
response using the A.C.E. or P.E.E. method.
The biggest issue with finding
supporting detail is that after underlining or highlighting all the
words/phrases that help to create the identified mood, students sometimes chose
the weaker examples as support. When writing a short constructed response,
students have a very limited number of lines in which to answer. They needed to
choose the strongest examples and I particularly wanted them to be sure to
choose the figurative language, identifying it as such, since the writer chose
that simile or metaphor to specifically help create the mood.
In practicing to
choose the strongest examples of word/phrases that help to create the mood,
students created Humumet (hew-mew-met).
You can see what Humumet is and where it originated HERE. (See "Intro" Link)You can also see the
blog post that inspired this idea HERE, although tone was the objective in that
lesson. (There are several more ideas on this blog post that can be incorporated to teach either tone or mood, including the use of Google Forms to collect student responses).
In creating Humumet, students had to select the strongest
words/phrases that created the mood, boldly boxing those words in. (We did this on several shorter passages
before beginning this
project.)
Next, using colored pencils, they had to create art
work that also depicted the mood. Some choose to depict the mood symbolically
and others created the scene the passage described. Students had to defend
their art work in a paragraph or more, explaining why/how their image supported
the mood of the passage. In creating
Humumet, the art work should not completely cover over/block out the words of
the passage and those words/phrases boldly boxed, should remain untouched
inside the box.
Examples of how Key words/phrases are boxed in. |
The artwork should cover the entire page and colored pencils
work best since it allows for the picture without obliterating the text. The idea is that with the picture/coloring and
the boxed words- together one can interpret the mood of the passage.
The above are using The Book Thief by Markus Zusak |
This image used an excerpt from The Road by Cormac McCarthy |
Finally, students were put to the ‘test’ and they analyzed
text on their own to determine mood with supporting detail from the passage.
You can see a couple examples below. I was very pleased that students used key
academic vocabulary in their answers and this was a direct result of using that
vocabulary from the art work analysis at the beginning to the Humumet projects
and the group practice of shorter excerpts. It took approximately two days to
complete one Humumet.
Overall the Humumet project and previous use of artwork
allowed those students with weak verbal learning style to see another pathway
into the idea of mood and how to identify it. I made sure to reinforce the key
academic vocabulary throughout (connotation, figurative language, negative/positive,
etc.) and it paid off when it came time to write short constructed response
answers.
Bulletin Board Closeups |
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