Lesson Plans - Week 4

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

This is the next set 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 (15 mins approx.)

Show students a version of this scene – the Baz Luhrmann film adaptation is very good, or any filmed theatre performance you have access to.

Afterwards, discuss their first impressions – what roles did the individual characters play, who instigated and encouraged the violence, and who do they feel was to blame for the events? Did they agree with the punishment meted out to Romeo at the end?

Main activity (25 mins approx.)

Group students into threes and give them the Act III Scene 1 edit. Students should assign themselves either Romeo, Mercutio or Tybalt. Show students the three movements they are going to use in performing this scene together.

The first is ‘advance’ – stepping towards the person they are speaking to. The next is ‘retreat’ – stepping away from the person they are speaking to. The third is ‘manoeuvre’ – stepping around or to the side of the person they are speaking to.

When they speak their lines, they need to decide on each line whether they are advancing towards the other character(s) in an attempt to connect with them or appease them, retreating away from them in an attempt to get away or showing disagreement, or manoeuvring around them in an attempt to persuade or bend them to their will.

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

Plenary (15 mins approx.)

Ask the students to think about what this scene shows us about violence in the world of Romeo and Juliet. It is common to hear male violence and toxic masculinity discussed in reference to the play, but in this scene, while we see plenty of men committing acts of senseless violence, we also see men trying to prevent this violence.

What makes Tybalt and Mercutio so keen to fight? What drives Romeo to try and prevent this violence? And what motivates Romeo to then go on and attack Tybalt?

Ask students to write down the motivations for each character’s behaviour and share them with a partner. What do they think this reveals in terms of what Shakespeare is using this moment in the text to convey to the audience?

Ask students to summarise their thoughts in writing, using evidence from the text.

A group of people wearing white fight each other.

LESSON 2

Starter (15 mins approx):

Ask students to independently reread Act 3 Scene 1 and write down any questions they have – this can be a question about meaning, or a question to Shakespeare about why he made a particular choice.

Give students an opportunity to ask their questions and have other students answer them – and if no one can, write them on the board so that they can remain there during the lesson. Perhaps by the end, they will be answered!

Main activity (30 mins approx.)

Ask students to work in groups of 5 or 6 for this activity. Their first task is to decide on 4 key moments in the scene they are going to stage. They need to select a short edit for each of these 4 key moments. They then need to decide how they will stage each moment, thinking where characters will be in relation to each other, how they will move on the stage, and how they can effectively show the characters’ motivations and tactics.

They need to assign roles and rehearse, paying particular attention to how they move between each moment – they may like to devise a short movement sequence to ‘fill in’ the missing parts, or have a brief narration, to join each moment in the text.

If there is a student who really doesn’t feel comfortable performing, they can play the role of the director. Give everyone time to rehearse at least twice through.

Plenary (10 mins approx.)

Ask for one group to volunteer to show everyone their performance. Discuss their choices and how these compare with the choices others made in their groups. What does this reveal about the scene and the characters within it?

Revisit any questions written on the board at the beginning of the lesson – have answers been found? Can they answer any of the questions now they’ve staged their own performance?

A man places a rapier against the throat of another man, whilst a group of people look on.

LESSON 3

Starter (10 mins approx)

Ask students to share what they already know about Juliet’s parents, and how parenthood might differ in the world of the play compared to parenthood now. Encourage them to use textual evidence to support their views.

Explain that in this scene, Juliet’s parents tell her that they have arranged a marriage for her with Paris, who is an excellent match – what do they predict as being the result of this? Do they think Juliet will act as a daughter ‘should’, according to the conventions of her world, or not?

Main activity (30 mins approx)

Watch the scene with students and get their first impressions before focusing in on the section provided in the Act III Scene 5 edit.

Ask students to work individually with the edit to start with, highlighting all the adjectives Capulet uses to describe Juliet in one colour. Can they group the adjectives into categories? What do these categories tell us about Capulet and his feelings in this scene? How do students respond to this behaviour?

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

Plenary (1 mins approx.)

Ask students to choose either Juliet or Lord Capulet. They need to imagine they are a Director, writing notes to the actor playing the part of the character they have chosen. What would they tell them about their character and how to play their role in this scene?

Students should think about how their character is feeling, what they’re thinking, what they want, and what tactics they are using to try and get what they want. They should use quotations to point to specific elements of the text.

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