Series advice for a teacher
Posted: 27 Jun 2011, 19:35
hello there - I am SO glad to have Knightmare back in my life after all these years having been devestated that the series was pulled just after my friends and I have plucked up the courage to apply!
Anyways - I am currently a primary school teacher (teaching Year 3 and 4 - aged 7-9) who is inheriting a class of budding writers next year who have the skills in place but lack the imagination - been racking my brain on how to inspire them in preparation for September and have already got a list together of "visual texts" (AKA tv shows!) such as Dr Who, Sarah Jane Adventures etc but have decided I would like to use Knightmare as a stimulus for writing especially amongst the boys. It can be sued in some many ways (setting description, suspense, action, mystery etc) and eventually I envisgae my writing clasas creating a Choose Your Own Adventure style story via Powerpoint based on Knightmare.
But....which series would be best to introduce them to? Series 1 is too wordy - I need one to really stimulate the imagination and keep them entertained with the pace - this is the key - if it's too slow they'll lose interest.
Any ideas would be greatfully accepted - and thanks in advance.
D
Anyways - I am currently a primary school teacher (teaching Year 3 and 4 - aged 7-9) who is inheriting a class of budding writers next year who have the skills in place but lack the imagination - been racking my brain on how to inspire them in preparation for September and have already got a list together of "visual texts" (AKA tv shows!) such as Dr Who, Sarah Jane Adventures etc but have decided I would like to use Knightmare as a stimulus for writing especially amongst the boys. It can be sued in some many ways (setting description, suspense, action, mystery etc) and eventually I envisgae my writing clasas creating a Choose Your Own Adventure style story via Powerpoint based on Knightmare.
But....which series would be best to introduce them to? Series 1 is too wordy - I need one to really stimulate the imagination and keep them entertained with the pace - this is the key - if it's too slow they'll lose interest.
Any ideas would be greatfully accepted - and thanks in advance.
D