Book Club Directions
Now that we have book clubs put together, it's time to get working on them. The ultimate goals are many, but to name a few, your book club will be responsible for a final presentation. In this presentation, you will be pitching your text to the executive board of the Arts and Entertainment Company (that's your teacher and the rest of the class) in the hope that your novel will be selected for a new TV series, movie, mini-series or something similar.
- For your final presentation, you will present your pitch to the rest of the class. We will be talking about this more in-depth, but for now you should know that these presentations will be the whole class period long and involve multi-media, audience participation, skits and plays or reenactments, but lectures! Your goal with these presentations: make your audience see why this book is worth reading and why it's worthy of being developed for the big or small screen.
- At the end of the project, you will be asked to grade your fellow team members. Only I will see these grades. In grading, you will want to consider all of the elements of book club: attendance, participation, preparation, willingness to work as a team member, insight, etc.
Getting Started
One of the first things it is important to do is to decide upon a reading schedule and set up some discussions, either online (you can use the chat box (for real time/synchronous) or a forum (for asynchronous) in the blog or just share email address or whatever you want, such as the blog itself). I suggest getting the book read as soon as you can so the research and development of the final project can get going and isn't rushed.
Midterm Presentation
The mid-term report will be about the first half of the novel: what is the story about, who are the characters, are they compelling characters, what are the story's conflicts and/or themes, what is your assessment of the writer's style, what predictions do you make for the rest of the book, what themes seem to be emerging, and anything else you find of interest or importance in the text and your group discussions. All of these points MUST be addressed in about 12 minutes time total.
As a group, you are responsible for creating/revising a/the wiki in the class space covering the above listed topics. Be sure that everyone’s name is on it and that everyone contributes. In addition, each group will give a 12-minute oral report covering the same points. Each member of the group must deliver a roughly equal portion of the oral report. I suggest that the person who delivers the oral material on a particular portion of the topic also be the person responsible for writing up that material. Some group member can then take all the written material and put it into a single document.
Things to Cover
The below is what your project is expected to address at a minimum.
- Primary goal is to get others interested in the text. This goal might take something of a backseat with the mid-term presentation as you won't have much time to make your points;
- What the story is about: provide a faithful representation of the major elements of the action,
perhaps as a plot summary; - Who are the characters? Who are the essential/central and secondary characters and why are they of concern? Are they are compelling characters?
- What are the story's conflicts and/or themes and why might that matter then or now?;
- What is your assessment of the writer's style?
- What interesting information might compel somewhat to read the book?
- Discover what you believe to be “true” about the text and
back that up with evidence. - Provide some predictions about what might happen as the narrative progresses and the tale concludes. Build this on concrete elements within the text and not mere speculation;
- A "Works Cited" is required, and a page of links to other resources is also a good thing to include.
The Final Project
DO NOT PUT ALL YOUR EGGS IN ONE BASKET! USE A VARIETY OF "DELIVERABLES" TO GET YOUR POINT ACROSS
Your final project is to take the form of a "pitch" to turn your novel into a movie, television series or mini-series. You can make use of your audience in anyway reasonable, and take the class anywhere on campus you need in order to make your pitch. You may use podcasts, videos, brief lectures or what have you, but you must vary the mode of presentation over the course of the class. Do not expect your audience to simply sit and listen to a lecture from a PowerPoint or to listen to a 50 minute podcast or video. That won't work.
A few things you might do:
- Create or substantially revise, for the better, an entry on Wikepedia;
- Create a website regarding your work and share it with the classroom. This must be a solid repository of information, most of it original with documented sources;
Reader's Theater: Put on a dramatic production of some element of the text, one that highlights the major themes and conflicts of the text. Reader's theater does not require that you memorize your lines, but you should be able to read them with a minimum of prompting from the text. Costumes and some sort of set are also needed. This can happen in the class, or in some other locale that works for the class period;- Video Project: Produce a video somewhat along the lines of a reader's theater.
- Develop some interactive presentation that has the rest of the class engage in some activity that leaves them better understanding the novel you worked with;
- PowerPoint presentation to class, just be sure it has both power and a point! An alternative to PowerPoint is Prezi, found at prezi.com;
- Dramatized interview with one or more of the characters;
- Puppet show with same/similar expectations of reader's theater;
- Game show that is staged to engage folks who have not read the text while giving them an understanding of the text;
- Got another idea? Run it by me and we'll see.
What you must do:
create/revise a wiki entry for the class blog containing the basic information presented in the midterm, but through the whole novel. After that, how you use the 50 minutes is up to you.
Grading
Along with my making a determination of the project’s quality and effectiveness, you will also be grading the participation of each group member. Specific criteria can be found within the attached rubric.
A Note about Images and Sound
Both images and sounds are great things to have on websites, but they need to be done properly, especially from a copyright and intellectual property perspective. In short, you are not allowed to just snag sounds and images from the web
determine. If you are uncertain, I suggest you email the person who has the images you want to use and seek their permission. When that sound or image is then used, it is expected that attribution be provided so readers of the site know where the information came from. Sometimes, if you can't secure permission, the image or sound can be included by providing a link rather than placing the image itself within the site. We can talk about this as needed.
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