
English (ELA) • Year 12 • 50 • 20 students • Created with AI following Aligned with Common Core State Standards
Setting the Stage: Use this CliffNotes video summary or another of your choosing to familiarize students with the overall plot and characters of The Tragedy of Macbeth.
Speech analysis: Today’s work is comparative in nature, so students should be carefully monitored for time as they work on the graphic organizer. Direct students to work through the speeches using the Big Ideas graphic organizer (they can make a copy of the document in order to have one for each speech). Teacher’s note: If timing is an issue, assign half the class to complete the graphic organizer with one speech and the other half of the class to complete the graphic organizer with the other speech. This will enable the next and central activity of the session. Compare and Contrast: Taking action is a fundamental element of human existence. The following tasks and questions can be worked through as a whole group, comprehensively in small groups, or jigsawed across small groups. Compare Macbeth and Lady Macbeth’s attitude towards taking action. Who do you personally identify with? Why? Do you think one approach is better than another? If so, which one, and why? Why does Macbeth’s speech begin with “If”? How does it reveal his attitude towards the issue of actions and consequences? Identify the commands that Lady Macbeth uses in her speech. How do they reveal her attitude towards the issue of actions and consequences?
Assessments: Big Ideas graphic organizer Text comparison (discussion or written responses, as directed by teacher)
Independent Assignment: Students should read and annotate the speeches for the next lesson in preparation for the next session. Students can use any annotation model instructed by the teacher, or they can annotate as they did with the initial practice passage (annotating the big ideas of the speech, noting any words they don’t understand or any phrases they can’t quite make sense of, and marking the literary or figurative devices they see).
Subject Area: English Language Arts (ELA)
Grade Level: Year 12 / Grade 12
Standards Alignment:
Common Core State Standards (CCSS) for English Language Arts:
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
| Time | Activity |
|---|---|
| 0:00–5:00 | Introduction & Video Summary |
| 5:00–20:00 | Speech Analysis (Paired or Divided among students) |
| 20:00–40:00 | Compare & Contrast Group Work |
| 40:00–48:00 | Whole-Class Discussion |
| 48:00–50:00 | Exit Ticket & Independent Assignment |
Objective: Ground students in the broader plot and introduce characters.
Teacher Tip: Use this moment to seed the idea that action (and inaction) shapes plot and character outcomes.
Objective: Understand characters' rhetoric and attitudes through close reading.
Teacher Note: Circulate to monitor engagement, push for higher-level thinking, and offer scaffolding for comfort with Shakespearean language.
Objective: Build deeper insight by synthesizing and debating characters’ perspectives on action.
Activity: Create four groups of 5 students. Each group should now contain members who worked on both speeches.
Group Tasks (choose based on teacher style): You can jigsaw these prompts or assign them sequentially.
Enrichment Prompt (if time allows): What role does gender play in their expression of power and action?
Ask each group to record their collective thoughts on a shared chart paper or sticky pad and prepare to contribute to a class compilation of perspectives.
Objective: Generate a cross-group understanding and connect learning to bigger themes.
Ask the class:
Exit Ticket (on an index card or digitally submitted):
“In one sentence, explain whose speech resonated more with you—and why.”
Independent Assignment:
Students must read the next assigned speeches (Act 1 Scene 7 & Act 2 Scene 2) and annotate:
Teacher Tip: Encourage students to colour-code their annotations (e.g., pink for vocab, green for theme) if working in physical copies.
To impress students and raise the rigor:
This detailed, multi-modal approach engages 12th-grade students in analyzing complex texts through analytical, interpersonal, and introspective pathways. It aligns with CCSS standards and fosters critical thinking, close reading, and evidence-based discussion.
Join thousands of teachers using Kuraplan AI to create personalized lesson plans that align with Aligned with Common Core State Standards in minutes, not hours.
Created with Kuraplan AI
🌟 Trusted by 1000+ Schools
Join educators across United States