Lesson Plans - Week 1

Three lesson plans for your first week of teaching Romeo and Juliet

This is the first of six weeks of lesson plans for Romeo and Juliet. Follow along with them week by week, or choose activities from them to supplement your teaching. All lessons come with downloadable PDFs of activities and plans.

LESSON 1

Starter (10 mins approx.)

Put students into groups of 4. Give each one the title of a statue they must make in their group:

  • The perfect daughter
  • Teenager
  • Parent and child
  • Love at first sight
  • A Prince and his subjects
  • Street fight
  • A betrayal of trust
  • A family in mourning

Ask each group to show their statue in turn.

What similarities and differences do they notice between each image? What themes are coming through from these images that might give us clues about what to expect in the play? 

Write these themes on the board and ensure students copy them down in their notes, to serve as reminders to keep returning to as you progress through the scheme of work.

Main activity (25 mins approx.)

Ask students to work in groups of three. Give each group one of the plot points on the ‘Romeo and Juliet Plot Points’ resource.

Ask them to create a freeze frame to depict their plot point.

See the downloadable lesson plan for the full activity, prompt questions and more.

Download the Romeo and Juliet Plot Points

Plenary (10 mins approx.)

Ask students to come up with a title for each of the moments in the plot that were depicted in the freeze frames/short performances.

What do they notice about how the plot progresses over time? What behavioural patterns can they see? Who appears to have/not have power? What themes are being explored in the story? Is this just a story about love or are there other elements at play?

Ask students to summarise in 5 bullet points what they have learnt about Romeo and Juliet today and record this in their notes.

Two actors look at each other romantically, one leans in close to the other

LESSON 2

Starter (10 mins approx):

Show students the quotations from the first scene of Romeo and Juliet.

Ask students to discuss in pairs/table groups what these quotations tell us about the world of Romeo and Juliet.

What are the rules of this world? What do people talk about? What occupies their time? What matters to them? What is acceptable behaviour and what isn’t acceptable behaviour? What kind of mood is in the air?

Once they have discussed these questions for a few minutes, ask them to share their ideas with the class and explore together what they have been able to surmise from these quotations about the world Shakespeare creates in the play.

How is this world different from and similar to our own? How might this affect our interpretation of the characters’ actions?

Main activity (25 mins approx.)

In pairs or table groups, ask pupils to revisit the work of last lesson – the plot summaries of Romeo and Juliet. If students are struggling to remember, give them the plot summary document provided.

Coupled with the quotations given at the beginning of the lesson and the discussions they have just had about what the rules of this world might be, ask them to use all the information they have so far to create a guide to the world of Romeo and Juliet.

See the downloadable lesson plan for the full activity, prompt questions and more.

Plenary (15 mins approx.)

Ask each group to present their guides to the rest of the class. How have their interpretations of the world of Romeo and Juliet aligned and differed? What expectations has this piece of work set up for them as they prepare to approach the text next lesson?

Two actors, one kneeling, the other sitting on wooden steps, reach out their arms to each other, their fingers and palms touching.

LESSON 3

Starter (10 mins approx)

Give each student a copy of the Prologue and read it through together three times – the first to familiarise, the second to allow students to start to make sense of it, and the third to enable them to begin understanding meaning.

After the third reading, ask students if there is any vocabulary they don’t understand and spend some time going through to make sure that the sense of every line is grasped.

Don’t worry about interpreting at this stage – just ensure that the literal meaning of each line is understood.

Main activity (25 mins approx)

Explain to students that they are going to be working in pairs, using rehearsal room activities to unlock meaning in the Prologue.

The first activity involves students taking it in turns to speak alternate lines of the Prologue to each other. On each line, before they start reading, they will need to repeat a key word or phrase from the previous line spoken by their partner before saying their own, phrasing this key word or phrase as a question.

See the downloadable lesson plan for the full activity, prompt questions and more.

Plenary (15 mins approx.)

Ask students to now consider who might speak the Prologue and what impact this might have on how the audience approaches and interprets the events of the play.

The play’s stage directions tell us that the ‘Chorus’ enters, but ‘Chorus’ is not a character, and could potentially be spoken by anyone in the play.

Some productions have chosen to have a character from within the play who is still alive at the end – such as the Prince, or Friar Lawrence, speak the Prologue. Others have chosen to have a Stage Manager or an actor wearing their normal clothes speak the Prologue, emphasising the fact that the Prologue is a metanarrative device.

Given what we have already learned about how the Prologue works in terms of setting us up with a particular perspective on the play, who do they think would be an interesting person to speak the Prologue, and why?

Ask students to discuss on their tables before sharing their ideas.

Remind students that there are no right or wrong answers, and Directors’ choices on this casting will depend on what angle/perspective they are exploring in their productions.

Finally, ask students to write a short summary paragraph to explain what they have learned today in their exploration of the Prologue.

Supplement your lesson plans with our free-to-access learning resources.