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Geoffrey Chaucer Hath a Blog - Geoffrey Chaucer et.al.
Grades
9 to 12
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Those studying Chaucer and Middle English will find this site hilarious, intriguing, and downright addicting! Besides the blogs all being in Middle English, it includes
"How to Read...more
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Those studying Chaucer and Middle English will find this site hilarious, intriguing, and downright addicting! Besides the blogs all being in Middle English, it includes
"How to Read My Writing; Basic Glossary; Notes on Translating Middle English; On my English; Elizabeth Renfield's Notes on Pronunciation and Vocabulary as sidelight links on the left.
Under the heading "Links of Sentence and Solaas," there are links to a variety of related sites rich in information and interest. A favorite was the Virtual Tour of Dante's Hell.
Under the heading "Links of Sentence and Solaas," there are links to a variety of related sites rich in information and interest. A favorite was the Virtual Tour of Dante's Hell.
In the Classroom
You are limited only by your imagination in the use of this site with high school students. Assigning different "translations" would be the least of the activities. Connecting and writing or reporting on the many related sites can create endless projects from "Market Day" to storytelling to panel discussions to powerpoint demonstrations.DO be aware the "Playing on my Ipod" will take students to other student sites, so you might want to limit and be specific about what you want them to do; checking that first yourself may prove that your school filtering blocks those sites anyway. There is also a link to buy shirts from zazzle.com with Chaucer-related sayings on them; again, your filtering may block this, or you might want to specifically deal with that issue. In any case, there is too much "good stuff" here not to use at least some of it for fun and learning if you teach Chaucer et. al. Teachers of gifted students may find this site a marvelous prototype for creating a similar author-centered blog or wiki.
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