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Performance-Based
Assessment
Independent
Learning
Performance Task
Performance Task
Sonnet 12,
Sonnet 60, Sonnet
73 / Sonnet 32 /
Sonnet 75
from The
Naked Babe
and the Cloak
of Manliness /
from MacBeth
Introduce
Small-Group Learning
Macbeth Act V media
Introduce
Independent Learning
TRADE BOOKS
Julius Caesar: Act 5
King Lear: Act 5
TRADE BOOKS
Julius Caesar: Acts 3–4
King Lear: Acts 3–4
Suggested Trade Books
Julius Caesar
William Shakespeare
Lexile: 1320
Roman senators, driven both by fear of tyranny and by ambition,
assassinate Julius Caesar and attempt to survive the aftermath.
Connection to Essential Question
Brutus’s reverence for an ancestor who defeated the tyrant
Tarquin is among the reasons he decides he must slay Caesar
before it is too late. Caesar, meanwhile, ignores a prophecy of his
assassination. These characters are often driven by motivations
that resonate with the Essential Question: How do our attitudes
towards the past and future shape our actions?
King Lear
William Shakespeare
Lexile: 1330
The elderly king tries to divide his kingdom among his daughters,
and misunderstands which of them truly love him; tragedy
ensues.
Connection to Essential Question
Regan and Goneril care little about what someone has done
in the past if he can do nothing for them in the future. Both
of them cruelly turn out their own father, disconnecting their
actions from the past entirely, an unusual and vicious attitude
that helps highlight the importance of the Essential Question:
How do our attitudes towards the past and future shape our
actions?
T53
LIT21_TE12_U03_FM_Trade_Books.indd 53 08/04/21 2:18 PM