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Poll: Did you read Shakespeare in High School? |
Discussion:
Shakespeare in School
Gordondon son of Ethelred
· 18 years, 11 months ago
As it is the Ides of March my friend was writing about Shakespeare. He said it was a shame that they didn't read Shakespeare in school any more. Is that true? Did you read Shakespeare in High School?
Yes, a bunch. Though I've been out of school for almost 12 years. :)
Freshman yr: Romeo and Juliet Sophmore yr: Julius Ceaser Junior yr: Macbeth Senior yr: Hamlet and Othello I wish they had let us study some of his comedies as well.� Midsummer Night's Dream�is one of the funniest plays i've ever seen, and i've heard great things about As You Like It.
That's pretty much what we read. I think that has been the standard for ages. We did read Midsummers... and Twelth Night.
K. D. Lurker
· 18 years, 11 months ago
Although Romeo and Juliet was the first Shakespeare play I ever read (it was in 8th grade, and I remember seeing the Zeffereli (sp?) movie and everyone giggling in the scene where Romeo and Juliet are lying in bed and you can see his butt) , it wasn't until my senior year when my English teacher took the class to see Twelfth Night performed live that I really learned to appreciate the Bard. I thought it was so funny, and I fell in love with Viola, one of the most adorable Shakespearean heroines ever.
sheryls
· 18 years, 11 months ago
in elementary school we read shakespeare comics!
similar to this only i dunno if that's the exact guy or not....
I'm in school.. and we're reading Shakespeare right now, actually. I have a project on Romeo and Juliet due next week. :)
Kris 'engaged' Bedient
· 18 years, 11 months ago
I don't think you could have a good high school education and not read Shakesspeare.
Your friend is drunk. :) At my high school we read Midsummer and R&J freshman year, Much Ado and Macbeth sophomore year. I was a freshman in 97-98. If that's not recent enough, even at the high school where I now teach - where many students read on about a 6th-grade level - English classes cover Shakespeare. The seniors are working on Othello right now.
dave "buh"
· 18 years, 11 months ago
King Lear, Romeo & Juliet, Midsummer Night's Dream, and Julius Caesar in high school.
In college I had a Shakespeare class. 8 plays (comedies) in 10 weeks: Measure for Measure, Much Ado About Nothing, Midsummer Night's Dream, As You Like It, The Tempest, Twelfth Night, Winter's Tale, and Comedy of Errors. Trust me after all of that by the final exam you can't remember which characters or plot lines go with which play. So when the essay questions have the constraint "Include examples from at least 3 plays" -- you're hosed :-) I know I've also read Merchant of Venice and Othello but I can't remember when (h.s. or college). I avoided all of the histories. :-)
dave "buh"
· 18 years, 11 months ago
.. Does anyone remember the episode of Moonlighting ("Atomic Shakespeare") that was based on Taming of the Shrew? Or is that showing my age? heh. I have it on my Tivo.
i forgot to list Merchant in the plays we read.
I saw the Zefferelli Romeo and Juliet in a theatre. The funny thing is that before I saw it, I saw that it won or maybe was just nominated for the best costume Oscar. I had heard about the film and my honest response was, "But I thought they didn't wear clothes?"
Josh Woodward
· 18 years, 11 months ago
Class of '95 = yes. Well, at least if by "did you read", you meant "were you assigned". ;-)
I love Moliere. I never read him but I have seen Tartuffe and The Misanthrope.
there was also a car 54, where are you? about the taming of the shrew. why do i know this? i have no idea.
but then, shakespeare-inspired works are a completely different topic that could probably take up a whole forum of their own.
How do you know this and not me. I actually watched Car 54 Where Are You when it was a first run show. I loved it.
K-Lyn
· 18 years, 11 months ago
I asked my cousin if they were going to be reading Shakespeare in school and she said that her class has read R&J, Much Ado About Nothing, and Hamlet. Then she told me they just had to read them so they could watch the movies.
sigh And then she told me about the new girl dressing as guy teen movie that is based on Twelfh Night. I'm out of touch. But I do remember 10 Things I Hate About You...and cringe. I absolutely love that episode. It's forever my favorite Moonlighting episode.� "WE HATE IAMBIC PENTAMETER!"� "Do bears beareth? Do bees bee-eth?" (It's been, like, a decade since I've seen it so I'm probably misquoting. :) )
derek harrison
· 18 years, 11 months ago
i'm currently doing my fifth (optional) year of high school. i have been on two fieldtrips to Shakespeare productions - Macbeth and As You Like It. and we've also read Hamlet, Much Ado About Nothing, and Twelfth Night. and if we read something in the ninth grade then i just can't recall what it was. so i think there's still a good amount of Shakespeare in my school. As You Like It was wonderful, and Hamlet was great in that it led me to Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead and the wonderful world of Tom Stoppard.
Woo Hoo Tom Stoppard! I love R&G are dead. I've seen it a few times. I've read it. I've seen the film, I've played the question game, I've told people that you "Can't not be, on a boat."
I remember we went on a field trip and saw Hamlet, with John-boy Walton and his giant mole as Hamlet.
Gordondon son of Ethelred
· 18 years, 11 months ago
Some of you might be intererested in this. Budgiedome Alumnus Groovelily is in a production of A Midsummer Night's Dream.
GrooveLily is woven into the fabric of That sounds like it is too much fun. I'm going. March 21-April 9 - Princeton, NJ ("A Midsummer Night's Dream" at McCarter) April 19-May 21 - Millburn, NJ ("A Midsummer Night's Dream" at Paper Mill)
what is a "fifth optional year of high school" and why in the name of #(*$#&( would you want to take one?
Hang on. That's in my town! Wowserz. I wonder if I can afford it.
What would be really funny is if went to H.S. in German and put on Romeo and Juliet in French.
it's a year where a student returns for additional credits. why? maybe that student needs them for post-secondary program requirements. for me, though, it's because i enjoy this school.
Elwenaur
· 18 years, 11 months ago
I'm a senior in high school right now, and I've read some Shakespeare every year (or at least it was assigned).
So far, we've done: 9th - Romeo and Juliet 10th - Julius Caesar 11th - Much Ado About Nothing - Twelvth Night 12th - Macbeth - Hamlet Shakespeare is very much alive.
Paul the KOA
· 18 years, 11 months ago
What if you graduated during 2000? Would that count as after the start of the 2000 year, or does after 2000 refer to after the end of 2000?
Aww, man. The Henry IVs are some of my favorite Shakespeare plays! You're missing out. :)
Well, nothing's like reading Macbeth in the original Klingon.
if you graduated during 2000, then you didn't graduate after 2000, so you would be in the "graduated after 1995" group
Until this post I had no idea this topic had a poll. Wow.
the poll was the raison d'etre for the forum.
Yes, I gathered that now. But I only ever view forums through the "recent posts" box, and when you click those links you don't see polls.
Gordondon son of Ethelred
· 18 years, 11 months ago
This was the results of my friend's informal survey:
What can explain the difference between the people he knows and us?
I have that same problem, and realized it at the same time you did.� I whine about it from time to time to Josh but nothing happens so I suspect either it's hard to change, or we're just an unappreciated minority. :)
Honors classes? I dunno. They're the only ones I had, so I don't know what was done in the other classes.
I don't know his family but I know he is really bright, seems like the same demographic. Maybe it is geographic. He's from St. Louis.
100% dainty!
· 18 years, 11 months ago
9th Grade:
Romeo and Juliet Merchant of Venice 11th Grade: Taming of the Shrew 12th Grade: King Lear Hamlet MacBeth Othello
Well Dickens is another story. The only Dickens I was ever assigned to read was "Great Expectations"-- once in high school and TWICE in college!!
You really just want to see how far you can go and still have my like you. You are testing the boundaries.
Yes I still like you., It just goes on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on... and on and on and on and ON AND ON AND ON
One more "ON" and you would have crossed the line!
If it's geographic I can't imagine how the region I teach in now is one of the regions that WOULD make kids read Shakespeare.
I dunno, the whole thing is a huge mystery to me.
i wonder for how much longer you will still be able to read shakespeare in HS.� right now it is possible for someone to graduate with an english degree from many colleges and NEVER take a shakespeare course.� the english majors�are crammed full of "theory" but have not learned much of the great literature.� english departments don't seem to teach much english lit any more.� a lot are like very bad sociology departments.
True. I mean, we read it, but we spent more or less 2 weeks on it, just reading it straight through. Not really learning much about it. To me, that's kind of defeating the purpose, and more reading just so they can say we read it.
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