The following is a small package of resources for To Kill a Mocking Bird. It comprises of the following:
Essay Writing:
To Kill a Mockingbird
When you write an essay you should organise it carefully and you should EXPLORE and EXPLAIN your ideas. Each section of the essay should be about an important idea. You must make a point, explain it fully and then explore it, using evidence from the novel Here is an example of what I mean. The essay is about Atticus as a hero. I have written an example of one paragraph and the start of the next paragraph. It is taken from the middle of the essay. Look carefully at how I have used quotations and at how the second paragraph is linked to the first one.
Atticus is a proud, dignified man. It isn't just that everyone respects him: he also respects himself. He has to defend Tom Robinson because if he refuses to then he "couldn't hold up [his] head in town" - he would be ashamed of himself. This self-pride is far more important to Atticus than mere cheap popularity. "I've got to live with myself' is how he explains to Scout his determination to defend Tom Robinson. Of course pride is not always admirable. Proud people are often conceited and snobbish; but Atticus is neither: although he is "the deadest shot in Maycomb County" he never boasts about this talent and would certainly disapprove of Scout boasting on his behalf. Despite his many talents, Atticus is a modest man. Yet, despite his achievements, his career and his education he never looks down on others, never assumes anyone is inferior to himself. When Walter Cunningham comes to lunch Scout is arrogant enough to declare, "he ain't company..., he's just a Cunningham", but Atticus converses at length with Walter as though they are equals: "they talked together like two men," Scout reports in amazement.
However, although Scout has much to learn, it is her own fierce pride that bonds her to her father and allows Atticus to show us another of his admirable talents: as teacher and adviser. He knows that Scout will always lose her self-control "if her pride's at stake" but he knows that lecturing, or threatening her will not be effective in changing her behaviour .............
Open your copy of the book and read pages 82 (from the start of chapter 9) to page 85 (down to "Then Christmas came and disaster struck"). When you have finished reading you should write answers to the questions below.
Try to answer each question as fully as possible.
Self Test Questions on Chapters 1 - 7
To Kill a Mocking Bird
Uncover the plot
Delete two of the three alternatives given, to find the correct plot. Beware possible misconceptions and muddles.
Jean-louise (Dill/Boo/Scout) and her brother John/Jem/Jack live with their father, Atticus, and their cook, Caroline / Maudie / Calpurnia, In Maycomb County, Alabama. It is the 1830s / 1930s / 1960s, and slavery / prejudice / economy, both racial and class-conscious, rages strongly. While Atticus practices criminal law / economy / tyranny the children spend their time at school and at play with their friend Walter / Burris / Dill. Their favourite game involves acting out the life of Arthur / Nathan / Chuck (Boo) Radley, a neighbour who has been shut away / dead / ill for so long that superstition surrounds him. As the game progresses (with Atticus' delight / disapproval / amusement) it becomes apparent that it is not going unnoticed by someone on the Finch / Crawford / Radley estate. During a night visit to the house, Jem loses his trousers: when he collects them they have been burned / stolen / folded and inexpertly darned. Small gifts are left in the knot-hole of a Radley oak, until Atticus / Boo's father / Boo's brother - claiming that the tree is dying - fills the hole with cement.
Who? What? Why? When? Where? How?
Who Is this?
Names and nicknames
Answer the following questions as FULLY as possible; read ALL the questions before you answer the First one.
When you answer the rest of the questions, explain your ideas fully and try to write about bits of the book that show what Atticus is like. Use quotations (bits copied out of the book) if you like but never use more than seven words at a time. Show quotations by putting them in speech marks at the "beginning and at the end of the quotation" - like I just did.
Studying the Novel on your own
You are now ready, to finish the novel on your own, make notes about it, and ask your teacher and friends for advice and ideas when you need them. In other words, you are ready to study independently.
brave, proud, arrogant, superior, snobbish, prejudiced, evil, cruel, kind, wise, perceptive, patient, humorous, determined, heroic, imaginative, selfless, naive.
Next to the name of each important character write the words from the list above that are true of that character. Do this with a friend if possible to see if you can agree. Look for evidence in the text to support your choices.
Write a letter to the film's director about three episodes in the novel that must not be cut out. Explain your choices in detail. In your letter you could also include advice about which real actors would be best suited to some of the major roles. You must explain and you must persuade.
You could hand this in as your coursework instead of number 6 that follows.
Atticus says, "Scout, you aren't old enough to understand some things yet." Write about the things that happen to Scout and how she learns from these experiences.
Plan your essay carefully. It should be about 800 words long (about three sides of A4). Plan your essay in sections (or paragraphs). The opening should be a general introduction to the, novel in which you define the character of Scout (describe what she is like as a person) without going into close detail.
The next few paragraphs should each deal with an important Maycomb event, how Scout reacts to it, how she is affected by it, and how she is changed in some way. Everything that happens teaches her an important lesson. Try to make a central point in each paragraph, provide evidence to back up the point, and then discuss (write about) that evidence. EXPLORE the text; don't just make statements. Try to make each paragraph link to the next one.
Finally, write a concluding paragraph in which you draw your points together and consider whether in Scout's case experience is the best teacher. You can also consider how much she has matured and changed by the end of the novel.
I would recommend that you try to make each one of your paragraphs at least 100 words long otherwise the points you make will tend to sound superficial.
Incidentally, if you are wondering what 800 words look like then I can tell you that there are 614 in this 6 part exercise!