Everyone has heard about William Shakespeare.His works are great and are sometimes called masterpieces.William Shakespeare’s plays are amazing and everyone William Shakespeare is a great writer but many people think that his plays should not be taught at school. But I think it should be taught at the 9th grade. Shakespeare is still relevant in the today’s society and shakespeare is changing the world and the people.
The first reason Shakespeare should be taught in school is because Shakespeare is still relevant in today’s society. The author petri wrote “These are not plays we read and see together as a generation or a country. They’re works we enjoy as a species. Shakespeare offers a road map to the human.” this quote is saying that the plays of william shakespeare are something we as humans enjoy. Thins quote shows us that the we can still enjoy plays written by shakespeare and this shows us that it can also reach 9th graders. Another quote from petri is “His plays tell the truth, boiled down to their
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Stephen Marche wrote “when you consider how often and how successfully Romeo and Juliet has been adapted into other media, into operas and ballads and musicals, its popularity is even more staggering.” This shows us that Romeo and Juliet is still relevant and having a huge impact on the media today. This quote also shows us that teens can still have some connection to Romeo and Juliet. Another quote is from Venkatrathnam and he said “The great thing about Shakespeare is that he speaks to everyone... Regardless of your political or ideological positions, you can find something that speaks directly you.” This quote shows us that Shakespeare can have a large impact on any body. This shows us that even 9th graders can share something in common with Shakespeare. But some people think that Shakespeare should not be taught to 9th
In ninth grade, we are required learn about Shakespeare and read one of his plays, Romeo and Juliet. Some people say that ninth graders should be required to learn about Shakespeare but others disagree and say that learning Shakespeare is irrelevant and that there’s more important things to learn about other than a book about two teens that fell in love at first sight. Shakespeare should not be in the ninth grade curriculum because there are more important things and events to learn about other than Shakespeare, such as the Holocaust but there are also reasons why Shakespeare should be in the ninth grade curriculum.
William Shakespeare wrote 37 plays in his life, with his best and most famous being Romeo and Juliet. This play is over 450 years old and since then has been made into a movie over 25 times and performed all around the world. Through the wide variety of themes, Romeo and Juliet still appeals to teenagers in the 21st century. Adolescents can still relate to 3 themes in Romeo and Juliet: relationships, parental control, and bullying, which applies to teenagers in the 16th century and the 21st century.
For as long as people today can remember there has always been Shakespeare in the classroom. Shakespeare is considered one of the greatest playwrights of all time and deserves to be presented as so, however his work is very old and as times have changed so has English. Teens don’t understand his work and struggle through these units in school. The least that should be done is changing a few allusions for an easier and deeper understanding for young minds. Teachers always talk about giving their students the tools that they need to succeed and this update is one of those necessary tools. In the words of Sir Winston Churchill, “To improve is to change; to be perfect is to change
As a testament to religion and a celebration of life, Romeo And Juliet will always ring true. Perhaps it's time that scholars reevaluated their estimation of the book. Though famous for portrayals of pathos in other works, Shakespeare will always be loved for his triumphant employment of dystopic future-vision in this book. All thanks to a person I like to call William Shakespeare.
Should Shakespeare be taught in the 9th grade curriculum? Shakespeare was a writer and an actor. Shakespeare lived from 1564-1616 and wrote 38 plays, poems, and sonnets. If you ask students if Shakespeare should be taught, most will say Shakespeare shouldn’t be taught. Shakespeare shouldn’t be taught in 9th grade curriculum because his plays were made to entertain and not to study, they’re difficult to understand, and lastly, he is irrelevant.
Do you think Shakespeare should be taught in schools? If you say no, then let me tell you why you are wrong; most people believe that Shakespeare shouldn't be taught because it’s hard to comprehend or that doesn't relate to us, the readers. But in reality, it gives us a new perspective on how people must have lived back then or on how they responded to situations that we might never have to go through in our lives. For example, in Romeo and Juliet, we are introduced to two young adults that are enemies but they fall in love to show that love is blind and that is true love might exist ( even though they moved on from their previous crushes, Rosaline and Paris ) , this gives me the first situation I want to talk about, which is the problems teenagers or people in general have to deal with and those are love and relationships or commitment . People who say that it doesn't relate to us, please let me explain why it wrong; first, everyone, who has been in a relationship will know that relationship aren't always perfect because you will have problem, arguments, and obstacles.
To conclude, reading the plays of Shakespeare is not only about an entertainment, there is more about learning manhood and the importance of the role that morality plays in everyday life. That is the reason of Shakespeare’s plays are so popular because through his work, he illustrates that: life is a play, which is performed on the earth stage, and his world stage will continue influences the past, modern and further.
Shakespeare is Important William Shakespeare’s plays are being made into box office film hits at an incredible rate. Films such as Much Ado About Nothing with Kenneth Branagh and Emma Thompson, Hamlet with Mel Gibson and Glenn Close, Othello with Laurence Fishbourne and Henry V with Kenneth Branagh have been seen by a surprising number of teenagers. Often they have not understood it all, or even half of it, but they have been affected by the powerful characters and by the Shakespearean magic which has affected audiences around the world for centuries. They want to know more, they want to understand, and what better motivation can any teacher ask for than that students WANT? That alone is sufficient reason for any English teacher to start a course in Shakespeare.
and that is to have a common knowledge in our societies. So many diverse groups of people can be brought together with Shakespeare's plays, for discussions, arguments, and more. The timeless ideas that are put into his plays are something that everyone can relate
Early in my academic career, I believed that Shakespeare’s works were unnecessary to be taught to my fellow classmates and myself. This was particularly bad for me when we had to read Romeo and Juliet. Despite never reading the story before, I thought I knew what mattered in the story: Romeo and Juliet’s families were feuding, Romeo and Juliet fell in love with each other, and Romeo and Juliet kill themselves at the end of the story. However, because I was willing to play to the belief game, I was willing see if I was wrong and if there was merit to this literature. Later on, I was glad to see that I was wrong in my assumption.
Even though that Shakespeare influenced the world over 400 years ago, his stories, sonnets and plays are all still relevant today. But why are William Shakespeare still so relevant today? It’s the idea and the issues that that Shakespeare addresses that constantly draw people towards him. Shakespeare had a very rare, but good, understanding of the daily situations and the many different emotions that human go through, which are portrayed in his characters.
In today’s world the quality of the art form called writing is said to be somewhat diminishing, it is important for English literature to keep some studies of classic literature, such as Shakespeare. I think well rounded education must have a strong foundation in both modern and classical literature, for the foundation in classical literature, an in-depth study of Shakespeare’s works would be more than sufficient. Not only was Shakespeare so skilled in his writing that he has become a significant point in the history of literature, but a majority of his works were written on such basic human themes that they will last for all time and must not be forgotten.
However, some people say that Shakespeare is important for the younger generation to learn about. It can be argued that the negative sides of Romeo and Juliet such as lost love, feuding with family and ending violence that is included in the play shows students the consequences of judging too quickly, also what can happen if they were to rebel. There is also the fact that Romeo and Juliet teaches kids new vocabulary and how to read 15th century
Shakespeare’s plays were written in the 14th and 15th century in England, yet until this day it still has a huge influence on American English class. Why? Well because Shakespeare has a universal appeal with a rich language, complex characters with a theme that is timeless. Shakespeare should be taught more, one play per semester because it is part of American literature culture, it challenges students reading levels and as it expands students vocabulary and enriches their speaking. Shakespeare plays are relevant today as the themes of the plays involved what teenagers like and experience such as love, betrayal, courage,politics and corruption.The themes can be set in such basic forms that the plays are universal and timeless, it can set in
William Shakespeare's Relevance Today For as long as formal education has existed in Britain it has been a largely standard assumption that teaching the works of William Shakespeare is relevant and necessary. Perhaps the relevance of his writing is taken for granted, perhaps it is necessary to re-examine the role of Shakespeare for the modern audience. There are indeed many people who question the relevance of this 440 year old playwright to a 21st century audience, taking it even as far as perhaps the greatest heresy of all, questioning the necessity of GCSE pupils learning Shakespeare at all.