
English (ELA) • Year 11 • 40 • 15 students • Created with AI following Aligned with Common Core State Standards
Demo Lesson Plan: Harlem Renaissance Poetry
Introduce yourself: Hi I’m Dr. Benchimol but you can call me Dr. B
Quick question: I heard you just finished A Raisin in the Sun, is that correct. What did you guys think of it? Did you like it?
Do Now: What do you know about the Harlem Renaissance? If you haven’t heard of, based on context clues, what do you think it could be about?
Write down ideas on the board ( make mindmap) make list
Give QUICK OVERVIEW OF HARLEM RENNASSIANCE
a. primalrily based in New York b. A way for black artists to express their identity
Transition to Georgia Douglas Johnson and hand out poem ( “Let Me Not Hate” with vocabulary words on bottom
Note to them: If you typically annotate and that’s part of your practice or you just wanna listen great
I read poem outloud
have student read it outloud
Think Pair Share: Break up into three groups: Metaphor Imagery Symbolism
Have students in the groups closely read the poem using these specific devices. Ask them to find 2 or 3 examples.
Share
Grade Level: Year 11
Subject: English Language Arts (ELA)
Lesson Duration: 40 minutes
Curriculum Alignment: Common Core State Standards (CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.11-12.1, RL.11-12.4, SL.11-12.1)
Lesson Focus: Poetry analysis, historical context, and personal reflection
By the end of the lesson, students will:
Provide a brief but engaging overview of the Harlem Renaissance:
Transition Statement:
"Now, let's experience a piece of poetry that emerged from this era and explore its deeper meaning."
Lead a closing discussion:
Encourage responses that link the Harlem Renaissance to modern discussions about race, resilience, and storytelling.
Final Thought:
"The Harlem Renaissance gave Black artists a voice that still echoes today. Poetry doesn't just reflect history—it helps shape it."
Formative Assessment:
Differentiation Strategies:
This lesson blends literary analysis with personal reflection, fostering empathy, historical awareness, and analytical skills—all crucial for Year 11 students preparing for deeper thematic exploration in literature.
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