an inspector calls - sheila essay 11x1

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Thursday 5th Feb An Inspector Calls Learning Intention: To respond to texts critically, using a range of textual detail to evaluate language and illustrate and support interpretations (AO1 and AO2) Key words: textual detail, interpret, analyse, evaluate First 15 mins - last 2 presentations!

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Page 1: An Inspector Calls - Sheila Essay 11x1

Thursday 5th Feb

An Inspector CallsLearning Intention: To respond to texts critically, using a range of textual detail to evaluate language and illustrate and support interpretations (AO1 and AO2) ! !Key words: textual detail, interpret, analyse, evaluate

First 15 mins - last 2 presentations!

Page 2: An Inspector Calls - Sheila Essay 11x1

Important things to consider

✤ Answers should….!

✤ be relevant – you don’t need to write everything you know about the text, only the things that relate to the question!

✤ be sufficiently detailed - it is better to give a lot of detail about a small part of the text than trying to cover lots of different points!

✤ be well structured with a clear introduction which addresses the question and a clear conclusion that returns to the question!

✤ use effective vocabulary including literary terms where relevant!

✤ use well-chosen evidence/quotations to support points.

Page 3: An Inspector Calls - Sheila Essay 11x1

Good candidate work will respond personally to the text, and will typically:

✤ explain the effects of Priestley’s uses of language, structure and form, e.g. “The Inspector is powerful, which is shown by the way he uses language to give commands but usually in a controlled, calm way‟.!

✤ use well-chosen quotations succinctly to support their points.!

✤ make appropriate comments on ideas/themes/settings, e.g. “Mr and Mrs Birling show how snobbish and uncaring society could be at that time‟.

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!

✤ To gain a top mark, candidates should show an enthusiastic, critical and evaluative response. The best candidates concentrate on comment, not content, and the author’s methods and achievements. Excellent responses are analytical and exploratory. This means that candidates “write a lot about a little‟, considering the impact of individual words and sounds and often thinking about possible alternative interpretations.

Page 5: An Inspector Calls - Sheila Essay 11x1

For example:

✤ “Gerald is presented as a character who wants to align himself with Mr Birling – perhaps he is just on his best behaviour, or perhaps he is trying to show his similarities to Mr Birling, the successful business-man and head of the family. There is one moment when what Gerald says provides a hint of past conflict between him and Sheila: “And I’ve told you - I was awfully busy at the works”. The use of “and” at the beginning of this statement suggests that this is not the first time he has had this disagreement with Sheila. Gerald is being presented as a character who is trying to fit in with the Birlings, but may have secrets that will come out. This establishes a sense of drama to be unfolded for the audience.‟

Page 6: An Inspector Calls - Sheila Essay 11x1

How does Priestley present the change in Sheila during the course of the play ‘An Inspector Calls’? How do you think this change

reflects some of Priestley’s ideas?

Page 7: An Inspector Calls - Sheila Essay 11x1

It is through Priestley’s portrayal of his characters that the audience understand his overarching messages in ‘An Inspector Calls’. The playwright’s utilisation of Sheila throughout the play explores the notion that the young are vehicles of change within society. Her use of language, her contrasting ideas to her parents and her evident change during the course of the play gives Priestley’s contemporary audience an insight into how modern society and the ideals it upholds, were perhaps fairer and more just than the Edwardian era in which the play is set. Priestley uses Sheila to convey ideas about the role of individuals in a society and the responsibility of each and everyone of us. !From the opening of the play, Sheila Birling is a central figure who is described in the opening stage directions as ‘very pleased with life, and rather excited.’ Her comfortable lifestyle is funded by men like her father and fiancé as women lacked defined working roles during the Edwardian era. The fact that she is ‘rather excited’ seems to suggest that she has a child-like demeanour and ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

How does Priestley present the change in Sheila during the course of the play ‘An Inspector Calls’? How do you think this change

reflects some of Priestley’s ideas?

Page 8: An Inspector Calls - Sheila Essay 11x1

Success Criteria !

Point/topic sentence linked to question

Evidence which has been precisely selected

Analysis of the quotation at word level

Development of interpretations

Evaluation of Priestley’s purpose and his intended effects on his audience

15 minutes- 2 paragraphs

How does Priestley present the change in Sheila during the course of the play ‘An Inspector Calls’? How do you think this change

reflects some of Priestley’s ideas?

Page 9: An Inspector Calls - Sheila Essay 11x1

PEER ASSESS- WWW and EBI

How does Priestley present the change in Sheila during the course of the play ‘An Inspector Calls’? How do you think this change

reflects some of Priestley’s ideas?

Band 6

Band 5

Band 4

Band 3

Band 2

Success Criteria !

Point/topic sentence linked to question

Evidence which has been precisely selected

Analysis of the quotation at word level

Development of interpretations

Evaluation of Priestley’s purpose and his intended effects on his audience

Page 10: An Inspector Calls - Sheila Essay 11x1

Apply your peer assessment target in your third paragraph

Page 11: An Inspector Calls - Sheila Essay 11x1

Half term homework - read and annotate Act 3.

BBC version - on YouTube - try to watch!

Page 12: An Inspector Calls - Sheila Essay 11x1

Points for Discussion

✤ Social vs. individual responsibility - “We don‟t live alone. We are members of one body.‟ So states Inspector Goole in his final speech. His character can be seen as a device to voice Priestley‟s views about social responsibility. To what extent do the other characters learn from their encounter with Goole, and how far do members of the audience agree with him?!

✤ Older vs. younger generations - “Why are Mr and Mrs Birling so much more concerned about the potential for “public scandal” than the consequences of their behaviour? Sheila and Eric Birling represent the future: surely there is still time for them to change and adapt to the new order? Can their relationships with the other characters, more entrenched in their views and social positions, survive?”!

✤ Staging - Detailed stage directions are provided, but Priestley himself makes clear that “an ordinary realistic set” may not do the play justice. What staging decisions can enhance the drama and tension, and how can recent productions inform our understanding of the lasting significance of this play?!

✤ Status and power - At first, the main characters are united in their desire for social status. The arrival of Inspector Goole undermines the natural paths of authority within the household, so how does power shift as the action progresses?!

✤ The place of women - Represented by Sybil and Sheila Birling, the servant Edna and the invisible but omnipresent Eva/ Daisy, women are seen variously as innocents, social climbers, victims and suspects. How are issues of gender played out and do they enrich or detract from the moral and political messages?!

✤ Genre - A murder mystery, a ghost story or a parable? The deceptively simple play follows the “three unities‟ (time, space and action) of Greek drama, but can be read in a number of ways.