As a high school or undergraduate English Literature teacher, you can use this climate fiction short story to teach literary analysis of fiction through narrative strategies such as dialogue, chronology, and descriptive richness as used in a short story, the use of figures of speech such as irony and personification, and the development of the element of pathos.
In this lesson plan, you can use a video and allow for a discussion to enhance the act of reading and the understanding of the story. Further, you can use the suggested homework assignment on creative writing to help the students to personally connect with the story. The underlying thread of the story is climate change and its effects on marine biology, with the example of hermit crabs.
Thus, the use of this lesson plan allows you to integrate the teaching of a climate science topic with a core topic in English Literature.
As a high school or undergraduate English Literature teacher, you can use this climate fiction short story to teach literary analysis of fiction through narrative strategies such as dialogue, chronology, and descriptive richness as used in a short story, the use of figures of speech such as irony and personification, and the development of the element of pathos.
In this lesson plan, you can use a video and allow for a discussion to enhance the act of reading and the understanding of the story. Further, you can use the suggested homework assignment on creative writing to help the students to personally connect with the story. The underlying thread of the story is climate change and its effects on marine biology, with the example of hermit crabs.
Thus, the use of this lesson plan allows you to integrate the teaching of a climate science topic with a core topic in English Literature.
The tools in this lesson plan will enable students to:
Teacher-submitted lesson plan, contributed by Dr. Pooja Sancheti, Visiting Faculty, IISER Pune, India
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Here is a step-by-step guide to using this lesson plan in the classroom/laboratory. We have suggested these steps as a possible plan of action. You may customize the lesson plan according to your preferences and requirements.
Reading(~10 min)
Use the list of definitions of literary terms like irony, personification, analepsis, dystopia, and pathos to explain to the students many terms integral to the story the students will be reading subsequently. Use this discussion to set the tone for the story to follow and equip students with some literary tools to explore the narrative.
A list of literary terms for a preliminary discussion and associated web links:
Video (~4 min)
The hermit crab is a character in the fictional story to be read in the next part of this lesson plan.
Thus, use this tool to describe to your students, a real-world scenario for hermit crabs to improve understanding of the plight of the hermit crab character in the following fictional story.
Reading (10-15 min)
Give each student a copy of Nathaniel Rich’s short story, ‘Hermie’ and ask them to read it carefully. Allow them to build their impressions of the story without intervention or guidance. Permit students to individually grasp nuances in the text and formulate their emotional responses as readers. Remind the students of the literary terms discussed before, to equip them with a sub-conscious grid to describe their interpretation of the text.
Classroom Activity (30-50 min)
Now, ask the students to offer their first impressions of the story in brief, and direct the discussion using the points mentioned below. Use these discussions to cover both close reading skills (for which students will refer to the text), and broad overview skills thus enabling students to glean information from text and be able to infer and interpret findings. You may need to write down certain key words on the whiteboard/blackboard to summarize the discussion
Use the following points to enable a group discussion for the literary analysis of the story:
Suggested questions/assignments for learning evaluation
This second part of the class activity requires a large world map (physical or digital). Ask the students to list all the geographical locations mentioned in the story. Use the map to locate the various places mentioned in the story, beginning with Salzburg. You can use a marker to indicate the connections between these places or thumb pins and a thread to connect these pins.
Then, use this information to discuss the following:
Use this lesson plan to help your students find answers to:
1 | Reading | Climate Fiction resource: An anthology titled ‘I’m With the Bears: Short Stories from a Damaged Planet’(Paperback) edited by Mark Martin. Verso, 2011 |
2 | Reading | “Glossary of Literary Terms.” Drama for Students. Retrieved March 18, 2019 from
This can be accessed here . |
1 | Literary Terms | Various sources:
College of Liberal Arts, Purdue University Cambridge Dictionary (Cambridge University Press); tor.com (Macmillan Community Network) |
2 | Video and image, “Crafty Hermit Crab finds a New Home in a Food Tin” | Produced by BBC Earth |
3 | Reading “Hermie” | Authored by Nathaniel Rich. This story is made available by Western Michigan University This story appears in the anthology, ‘I’m With the Bears: Short Stories from a Damaged Planet’, edited by Mark Martin, Verso, 2011. |
4 | Map-activity “World Map: A clickable map of world countries” | Presented by Geology.com |
5 | Additional Resources | “Glossary of Literary Terms.” Drama for Students made available by encyclopedia.com |
Here is a step-by-step guide to using this lesson plan in the classroom/laboratory. We have suggested these steps as a possible plan of action. You may customize the lesson plan according to your preferences and requirements.
Reading(~10 min)
Use the list of definitions of literary terms like irony, personification, analepsis, dystopia, and pathos to explain to the students many terms integral to the story the students will be reading subsequently. Use this discussion to set the tone for the story to follow and equip students with some literary tools to explore the narrative.
A list of literary terms for a preliminary discussion and associated web links:
Video(5 mins)
The hermit crab is a character in the fictional story to be read in the next part of this lesson plan.
Thus, use this tool to describe to your students, a real-world scenario for hermit crabs to improve understanding of the plight of the hermit crab character in the following fictional story.
Reading(10-15 mins)
Give each student a copy of Nathaniel Rich’s short story, ‘Hermie’ and ask them to read it carefully. Allow them to build their impressions of the story without intervention or guidance. Permit students to individually grasp nuances in the text and formulate their emotional responses as readers. Remind the students of the literary terms discussed before, to equip them with a sub-conscious grid to describe their interpretation of the text.
Now, ask the students to offer their first impressions of the story in brief, and direct the discussion using the points mentioned below. Use these discussions to cover both close reading skills (for which students will refer to the text), and broad overview skills thus enabling students to glean information from text and be able to infer and interpret findings. You may need to write down certain key words on the whiteboard/blackboard to summarize the discussion
Use the following points to enable a group discussion for the literary analysis of the story:
This second part of the class activity requires a large world map (physical or digital). Ask the students to list all the geographical locations mentioned in the story. Use the map to locate the various places mentioned in the story, beginning with Salzburg. You can use a marker to indicate the connections between these places or thumb pins and a thread to connect these pins.
Then, use this information to discuss the following:
Use this lesson plan to help your students find answers to:
1 | Reading | Climate Fiction resource: An anthology titled ‘I’m With the Bears: Short Stories from a Damaged Planet’(Paperback) edited by Mark Martin. Verso, 2011 |
2 | Reading | “Glossary of Literary Terms.” Drama for Students. Retrieved March 18, 2019 from
This can be accessed here . |
1 | Literary Terms | Various sources:
College of Liberal Arts, Purdue University Cambridge Dictionary (Cambridge University Press); tor.com (Macmillan Community Network) |
2 | Video and image, “Crafty Hermit Crab finds a New Home in a Food Tin” | Produced by BBC Earth |
3 | Reading “Hermie” | Authored by Nathaniel Rich. This story is made available by Western Michigan University This story appears in the anthology, ‘I’m With the Bears: Short Stories from a Damaged Planet’, edited by Mark Martin, Verso, 2011. |
4 | Map-activity “World Map: A clickable map of world countries” | Presented by Geology.com |
5 | Additional Resources | “Glossary of Literary Terms.” Drama for Students made available by encyclopedia.com |
6 | Images | Book “I’m With the Bears” Hermit Crab by H. Zell [CC BY-SA 3.0 |
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