Books
Comments
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catefrances wrote:aaahh the so called classics.
there is nothing worse than being in a class discussing a book and realising that at least half the class have not read the book. i often wonder why they bother to come to class if they can not contribute. at uni i have had to read several books that in my everyday life i would not have picked up. jane eyre, women in love, madam bovary for example.
i think it would be better practice to have the students who have not read the book, write a cohesive argument as to why they felt they couldn't read the book. what was it about the book they found offensive or difficult to grasp and not accept a shrug of the shoulders of students who are just plain lazy. or in a perfect world, give an alternate reading.
They failed!0 -
Heineken Helen wrote:How am I out of my mind? That wasn't how I see books... that was my explanation for why books may not be so popular today as they were! Can you think of a better reason?
I never knew they were a feminine thing either.
I had not read the whole thread, time constraint thng, so I saw your remark out of context as well, and reacted pretty much the same way. Remember that people often come on to a thread at the end and placing your comment in context would have helped the misinterpretation.
I apologise for any offence.
As to the feminine thing, Steve Biddulph explains how boys are taught to detest reading, and unfortunately many of them shun books for too much of their lives. I make it a mission to try and turn that around, since reading and books have essentially saved my life, pretty much totally taking the place of the education system which utterly failed me. I have had some success there.
Rarely have I seen a film as good as the books. The LOTR series did complement the written word though, bringing to life scenes and providing a visual feast where Tolkein skimmed a little, the Balrogs and the City of Gondor being two remarkable examples.
The plot changes in the first one however, were unforgivable. I have been told they were done to accomodate the illiterate US audience, an equally unforgivable excuse.Music is not a competetion.0 -
nuffingman wrote:Ah, so it's not necessarily the curriculum's fault, it's possibly mine! You try asking a child to read if thay don't want to. What would happen if the teacher's didn't hand out notes? Answer, the kids would have to read the books.
I had to read Northanger Abbey when I was at school, hated it but had no choice but read it about 4 times. I've hated Jane Austen ever since.
Edit: We also live in a house with hundreds of books and they never see me without one. Seem to be more interested in effing MSN and other mind numbing exploits.
I remember reading Northanger Abbey... god, I was so much more intelligent as an 11/12 year old. I used to LOVE Jane Austen and ShakespeareThe Astoria??? Orgazmic!
Verona??? it's all surmountable
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lucylespian wrote:I had not read the whole thread, time constraint thng, so I saw your remark out of context as well, and reacted pretty much the same way. Remember that people often come on to a thread at the end and placing your comment in context would have helped the misinterpretation.
I apologise for any offence.
Rarely have I seen a film as good as the books. The LOTR series did complement the written word though, bringing to life scenes and providing a visual feast where Tolkein skimmed a little, the Balrogs and the City of Gondor being two remarkable examples.
The plot changes in the first one however, were unforgivable. I have been told they were done to accomodate the illiterate US audience, an equally unforgivable excuse.Also, ‘you’re out of your mind’ isn’t really a great counter argument
No offence taken though.
Also I never said films were as good as books! I like films, I like books… I haven’t read every book of every film I have ever seen though so I cannot say that outright books are better than their films.The Astoria??? Orgazmic!
Verona??? it's all surmountable
Dublin 23.08.06 "The beauty of Ireland, right there!"
Wembley? We all believe!
Copenhagen?? your light made us stars
Chicago 07? And love
What a different life
Had I not found this love with you0 -
Heineken Helen wrote:I'm not saying it's easy... but a parent cannot entirely blame a curriculum for their child not learning properly. You can teach your kids extra stuff at home or even move them to another school.
I remember reading Northanger Abbey... god, I was so much more intelligent as an 11/12 year old. I used to LOVE Jane Austen and Shakespeare
Hmmmm Jane Austen, all I can remember are descriptions of dresses and other nonsense. I'm sure the working title for the Pride and Prejudice film was "A lot of women running around squealing and listening at doors"0 -
nuffingman wrote:Unfortunately moving them to other schools doesn't help. It happens at all of them locally.
Hmmmm Jane Austen, all I can remember are descriptions of dresses and other nonsense. I'm sure the working title for the Pride and Prejudice film was "A lot of women running around squealing and listening at doors"Yes, I'm sure that will be a popular opinion in this thread
The Astoria??? Orgazmic!
Verona??? it's all surmountable
Dublin 23.08.06 "The beauty of Ireland, right there!"
Wembley? We all believe!
Copenhagen?? your light made us stars
Chicago 07? And love
What a different life
Had I not found this love with you0 -
when great novels are converted to film the story be reduced to an emaciated shadow of his former self,,,,,,,,,,take the Godfather, War&Peace, Cold Mountain, English Patient, Green Mile.........doesnt mean the films arent good in their own right but the original form has been condensed, literary bulemia is borne. Words and phrases that could make a work immortal can be omitted but thats okay, cut the oak tree down to size to suit the market. Next to a film books can appear intimidating and impenetrable but there is nothing wrong with a little bit of obesity, jusr want to take things in.
The appetite for a quick culture fix is the plague of our times. Witness the fashion for short books(abridged classics series, short films(maybe...), short theatre( not my thing but there is a reduced shakesphere company). Its a paradox of the affulent society that the more time we have on our hands the less we seem to have to fill the hours. Reading,as a result, becomes less of a pleasure and more of a chore.0 -
elmer wrote:The appetite for a quick culture fix is the plague of our times. Witness the fashion for short books(abridged classics series, short films(maybe...), short theatre( not my thing but there is a reduced shakesphere company). Its a paradox of the affulent society that the more time we have on our hands the less we seem to have to fill the hours. Reading,as a result, becomes less of a pleasure and more of a chore.
Short films, definitely aren't in fashion right now. A look at the latest summer blockbusters (Spiderman 3, Pirates 3) will show you that.
And the reduced Shakespeare company are actually a 3 -man comedy group who use Shakespeare as their source material. Their aim is not to condense Shakespeares plays to appeal to the masses. I have seen their main show (The Entire works of Shakespeare in an hour and a half) and it is hilarious - very clever comedy. I highly recommend seeing them if they're in your town
Again, I do agree with you. Just picking holes for the laughI'll Ride The Wave Where It Takes Me0 -
speaking from a teacher's point of view, the kids find reading an entire book 'long' so its better that they get what they need to pass the exam if reading the whole book isnt an option...
personally, i feel that's a cop out. and the bastards should read in silence in class until the book is finished.;) of course you then have the problems of fast and slow readers, the kids who will read the whole book at home in a weekend and others who put it down after the first page...
its tricky. I always loved reading. except, funnily enough, austen. why on earth is she so revered? its boring.0 -
clairenordon wrote:speaking from a teacher's point of view, the kids find reading an entire book 'long' so its better that they get what they need to pass the exam if reading the whole book isnt an option...
personally, i feel that's a cop out. and the bastards should read in silence in class until the book is finished.;) of course you then have the problems of fast and slow readers, the kids who will read the whole book at home in a weekend and others who put it down after the first page...
its tricky. I always loved reading. except, funnily enough, austen. why on earth is she so revered? its boring.
I remember when we did Wuthering Heights... I literally knew the entire book off by heart by the time I sat the exam. I could still quote quite a bit of it now.The Astoria??? Orgazmic!
Verona??? it's all surmountable
Dublin 23.08.06 "The beauty of Ireland, right there!"
Wembley? We all believe!
Copenhagen?? your light made us stars
Chicago 07? And love
What a different life
Had I not found this love with you0 -
you see, they can take a copy of the book in with them in most cases.
i personally favour making the whole class read the whole thing out loud, maybe setting chapters for homework, having tests on stuff, doing writing exercises and having class discussions as exam prep.
but more and more teachers are finding that kids cant get through a book, no concentration or desire to, they prefer to watch the film. Also, it can simply take too long to read the whole novel in class, when you have to deal with two other exams and coursework.
this is why im such an advocate of reading in general,it improves literacy skills and behaviour. But i think u need to have the kids interested in the book from teh off, or it doesnt work0 -
i dont think i would get the whole class reading silently to themselves anyway,
i used to love reading for a whole english class, just got right into the book, it made school more bearable for me...
but it seems thats no longer the case for students, you must hear the tales of graduates being incompetant, or not citing books in a dissertation, etc0 -
clairenordon wrote:you see, they can take a copy of the book in with them in most cases.
i personally favour making the whole class read the whole thing out loud, maybe setting chapters for homework, having tests on stuff, doing writing exercises and having class discussions as exam prep.
but more and more teachers are finding that kids cant get through a book, no concentration or desire to, they prefer to watch the film. Also, it can simply take too long to read the whole novel in class, when you have to deal with two other exams and coursework.
this is why im such an advocate of reading in general,it improves literacy skills and behaviour. But i think u need to have the kids interested in the book from teh off, or it doesnt workI really don't want to offend here but our English teacher just made everything fascinating. We watched the film of Wuthering Heights in class when we'd finished the book (the Ralph Feinnes one) and I'd say the vast majority of us would have chosen the book over the film.
I cant believe teachers are simply accepting failure and giving in to what kids want? :(The Astoria??? Orgazmic!
Verona??? it's all surmountable
Dublin 23.08.06 "The beauty of Ireland, right there!"
Wembley? We all believe!
Copenhagen?? your light made us stars
Chicago 07? And love
What a different life
Had I not found this love with you0 -
i dont think i would get the whole class reading silently to themselves anyway,
i used to love reading for a whole english class, just got right into the book, it made school more bearable for me...
but it seems thats no longer the case for students, you must hear the tales of graduates being incompetant, or not citing books in a dissertation, etc0 -
thing is different people have different tastes in books ... great literary works don't appeal to everyone ... i like the idea of letting students choose their books ...0
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polaris wrote:thing is different people have different tastes in books ... great literary works don't appeal to everyone ... i like the idea of letting students choose their books ...
Look, we don't have one of the best educational systems in the world for nothingThe Astoria??? Orgazmic!
Verona??? it's all surmountable
Dublin 23.08.06 "The beauty of Ireland, right there!"
Wembley? We all believe!
Copenhagen?? your light made us stars
Chicago 07? And love
What a different life
Had I not found this love with you0 -
Heineken Helen wrote:I'm not so sure about that... well ok, maybe there should be a selection of books but then there is NO way that the teacher could cover all the books. Unless there were a number of classes in one year and each class studies a certain book. You're in the class of the book you've decided to study but then kids being as influenced as they are, they'll just pick the books their friends pick.
Look, we don't have one of the best educational systems in the world for nothing
i've got irish friends and i'll refrain from commenting on that ...
shorter novels i think are ok in class ...
i just think that not everyone will enjoy every book ... if the goal is to get them to read and to explore their imagination and to learn from books - then you are better off allowing a kid to pick his or her own book ...0 -
polaris wrote:i've got irish friends and i'll refrain from commenting on that ...
shorter novels i think are ok in class ...
i just think that not everyone will enjoy every book ... if the goal is to get them to read and to explore their imagination and to learn from books - then you are better off allowing a kid to pick his or her own book ...
Shorter novels agreed! Our first book was 'walkabout', then for the junior cert we did to kill a mockingbird, and then wuthering heights for the leaving cert... so it got bigger and bigger
For example, the leaving cert, we had to study a novel, a play (we did the plough and the stars from Sean O'Casey, Romeo and Juliet for the Junior cert) and a certain number of poems... mainly Irish poets: Yeats, Kavanagh, etc. and some other ones.The Astoria??? Orgazmic!
Verona??? it's all surmountable
Dublin 23.08.06 "The beauty of Ireland, right there!"
Wembley? We all believe!
Copenhagen?? your light made us stars
Chicago 07? And love
What a different life
Had I not found this love with you0 -
Heineken Helen wrote:True... but without some kinda regulation, that could have disastrous consequences! Kids left to their own devices regarding education??? :eek:
Shorter novels agreed! Our first book was 'walkabout', then for the junior cert we did to kill a mockingbird, and then wuthering heights for the leaving cert... so it got bigger and bigger
For example, the leaving cert, we had to study a novel, a play (we did the plough and the stars from Sean O'Casey, Romeo and Juliet for the Junior cert) and a certain number of poems... mainly Irish poets: Yeats, Kavanagh, etc. and some other ones.
all i'm saying is if i had to read joyce - i would have quit school ...0 -
polaris wrote:all i'm saying is if i had to read joyce - i would have quit school ...
Maybe they read it to Saddam in prison or something!The Astoria??? Orgazmic!
Verona??? it's all surmountable
Dublin 23.08.06 "The beauty of Ireland, right there!"
Wembley? We all believe!
Copenhagen?? your light made us stars
Chicago 07? And love
What a different life
Had I not found this love with you0
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