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Friday, February 12, 2010
60Second Recap
I found this site today and I have to share it with everyone. As an English teacher, it is tough to get students to read "Classics". They complain about the language and want to know how this will ever be important. I spend countless hours coming up with lessons to intorduce the novel in a fun way in the hopes to hook some of the reluctant readers. 60Second Recap is a great site to use to really help students get a handle on what the story is about.
Here is their Mission Statement:
"60second Recap™ wants to make the great works of literature accessible, relevant, and, frankly, irresistible to today's teens. Through 60second Recap™ video albums, we seek to help teens engage with the best books out there ... not just to help them get better grades, but to help them build better lives."
I love this mission statement. It really expresses the goal of all literature teachers. I watched the first video on Hamlet, my favorite Shakespeare play, and was very happy with what I saw. Hamlet, played by Jenny Sawyer, is taking the online quiz, "Are you Mad?" It gives a nice bit of information about different aspects of the play. There are videos on Motif, Theme, Plot, Symbols, and the Characters in the play. It was a very well put together piece that I cannot wait to show to my students and the other teachers in my building.
60Second Recap currently offers recaps of some great pieces of Literature. Here are just a few:
Animal Farm
Brave New World
Fahrenheit 451 (On my Top 5 All Time List)
The Adventure of Huckleberry Finn
The Catcher in the Rye (On my Top 5 All Time List)
The Great Gatsby (On my Top 5 All Time List)
There are many more great pieces of Literature that get the 60Second Recap treatment. I strongly encourage all Literature teachers to give this site a look over and use them with your students.
- @TheNerdyTeacher
What a great resource! Just enough fun information to really engage someone and increase their interest in reading the story. Also a good prompt for key items and themes to look for in a story.
ReplyDeleteI just watched "The Catcher in the Rye" with my class and a few of my study hall kids said they want to read the book over break. I really liked it. It gave some important information, but left some things out that a student would have to read to understand. It's really great!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment. :-)
60 second recap is great...it has gotten my students to read books that they would have never considered otherwise. Also take a look at www.bookwink.com.
ReplyDeleteThis is a great site and I've encouraged other teachers to use it and consider letting their students respond to a text by making their own 60 second recap.
ReplyDelete