Here you will find all the non-discussion-based assignments for our course, including presentations and written work.

Presentation #1 Due 9/14 (before class)

For this first presentation, choose a picture book to read an excerpt to us. In your video, we should be able to see YOU reading to us for the majority of the video. You may share the images if you wish, either via a physical book, or digitally, or choose to just read the text to us. Your video should be between 3-5 minutes long. Tell us in a few sentences why you chose the book to introduce it to us. You do not need to tell us your choice ahead of time.

You will post your video to our class Presentation page. You will add a new “post”. You will need to upload your video to YouTube first (which has some basic editing available) so that you can embed that link in your post. Your video should be set to unlisted rather than private on YouTube (as opposed to private) so that you classmates can view it. The posts with those videos will remain password protected on this site.

Vocal Exercises

Each module has weekly corresponding vocal exercises to try at home.

The Big Fairy Tale Assignment – What you are looking for…

Choose a single story that you will use for the first half of this course.  This can be a fairy tale or folk tale.  It must be approved.  No more than three individuals may choose the same story.

Look for SEVEN versions of the story and one academic article about your story.  These will be used for your annotated bibliography but will also influence your presentations.

  1. An older version of the TEXT written pre-1900.  This may be published in a more recent edition, but you are looking for an early version of the story – most likely one by one of the major collectors of folk tales (Perrault, Grimm, Jacobs, etc.)
  2. A picture book version of the story
  3. A version of the story written AFTER 1970 that is written for an older audience.  This will be used for your third presentation. This can be for an Adult, Young Adult, or Middle-Grade audience.  The point is to look at a book or story that expands the story giving it new detail and scope either be a retelling, adaptation or serve as an inspiration.  
  4. A version on film.  This could be a film, animation, youtube, etc. but should tell a version of the story in its entirety. 
  5. A visual version.  A single image or series of still images or other visual object based on the story.   We will look at some possibilities collectively.
  6. A version meant to be performed.  This might be a ballet, an opera, a musical, a school play, a song, a storyteller’s version.  
  7. Another version of your choice.
  8. Academic article or book chapter
2nd Presentation – The Fairy Tale

You should tell us the story in whatever way you wish in under five minutes.

Your performance can be based on any of the versions you looked at, a combination of them, or something original based on your tale.  Keep in mind the elements that make a good story work that we will discuss in class.  Factors to consider this performance include narrative arc, consistent tone, character, vocal performance, physical performance, and setting. 

Be as creative as you want to be! People have done incredible things with this. But don’t worry if you only feel comfortable reading a story aloud to us at this point.

When you post your video please let us know with the post if your presentation is appropriate for children or not.

Due:

Presenting by Video

Presenting in Person

3rd Presentation – An Expanded Fairy Tale for MG/YA/Adult Audiences

You are responsible for presenting an excerpt of approximately 3-4 minutes of a version of your post-1970 fairy tale written for an older MG, YA, or adult audience.  Your presentation should include a 2-3 minute introduction to your material that tells us what you are performing as well as some context. When was the story written? By who? Tell us something about them? How does the author use the fairy tale? How has it been or not been modernized? Is the book a retelling, an adaptation, or inspired by the story?  Does it mix in other stories you know? Why do you think they chose this particular fairy tale? Is it commenting in some way on the base story that we ‘know’?

Try to keep the whole presentation under 6 minutes.

Only one student can work on each title. Please email me with your choice including the title and author. Make sure you determine if you can get your hands on the book early.

Due:

Presenting on Video

Presenting in Person

Annotated Bibliography

Provide citations and a 1-2 paragraph analysis of each source.  Don’t just summarize the plot, start to dig into the themes and ideas and what makes these variations interesting and unique.   Dig deeply.  Why this story at this time and place? How does it make you rethink the story as you have known it? What kinds of symbolism are you starting to see? What are the deeper themes and ideas that underlie these variations?  Are they the same or do they differ?  What does a particular version pull out of the story?  Think about how each variation supports or complicates the pattern of the story it is using and why. 

Citations should be done properly a style of your choice (I recommend MLA or Chicago).    Please indicate what style you are using on your document.

Citations Only: Due

Full bibliography with annotations: Due:

This is a condensed sample of an annotated bibliography for “Little Red Riding Hood.”

Presentation #4 – Assigned Book

You are responsible for presenting an excerpt of approximately 3-4 minutes from this book that at one time has been considered a classic of youth literature.  Your presentation should include a 2-3 minute introduction to your material.

Give us context for the excerpt. We need enough of the plot overview to know where this excerpt occurs and tell us any information that we might need.

Tell us about the book: When was the book written? By who? Was there a reason? What is the writing like? What are themes found in the book? Why do you think it might have been a classic? Should it still be considered one and read by kids today?

Try to keep the whole presentation under 6 minutes.

Presentation #5

For your final assignment, I want you to choose a book that you feel represents a voice that we haven’t heard at all or enough in the traditional children’s literature canon.  As you choose a book for this final assignment think about the relationship between classic and canon and what might mark a book as a potential classic.  Does the book you chose have the potential to become a classic? Is it especially timely for right now? Do you think it will speak to children in the future as well?  

Read us an excerpt and use your introduction to make the case for why this book should be added to expand the canon of literature for young people.

When you post your video on the classroom stream, please include 3-4 sentences of introduction to entice your classmates to read your book/listen to your presentation. 

You will be recording a video for this final presentation.

This book can be for any age range that you consider ‘children’s literature.
Your video should be approximately 5-7 minutes total.

Self Reflection/Grade Appointments

At least 24 hours before your appointment, please email me a 500-word self-reflection about your experience in this course.

Questions you may consider include: What have you learned about yourself as a speaker? As a listener? As a critical thinker and interpreter of sources? What worked for you or didn’t work for you in terms of this course overall? Were there exercises, readings, or discussions that were particularly helpful? Particularly awful? In terms of preparing for presentations what helped? What might you take away from this course for the future? What do you feel you still could improve on or work towards? Were there things you took away that could apply to other areas of school or life?
Look back at the initial course learning outcomes – do you feel you’ve made progress toward these?

Finally, what grade would you give yourself? What is your justification for this?

As with any writing, the more you can support your statements with examples, the stronger it will be.

This self-reflection process is meant to solidify for you what you have learned this semester in terms of both concrete and abstract ideas. Please think critically and be honest. Please be honest with yourself and with me as it is the best way for both of us to improve as learners. Remember, this and our individual grade meeting are considered your final exam and failure to submit it will affect your grade outcome.

Your reflection is due a minimum of 24 hours before your grade meeting.