Bother. I had been planning to use the same syllabus as I taught this fall in my spring section of Freshman English, same texts and all. And now, having looked at my roster and discovered my class is more than half boys, and almost all students in the sciences, I'm wondering if I'd be sadistic (or would it be masochistic?) to try and teach Pride
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There's also The Wizard of Oz, if we want to mention another of my obsessions.
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Hm, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is pretty short, isn't it? That's got a lot of spin-offy type adaptations... especially if you count The Hulk, which maybe you shouldn't. But then, I've never read the book...
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What about The Odyssey? Or some of the Shakespeare plays?
Although I don't know that it would be so bad to have them read P&P....
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I did P&P with my class this semester, and I don't think most of them hated it, but I do suspect that most of them didn't actually read it. I don't want to underestimate the new bunch... I just don't want to torture them, either. I don't know.
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It's just cowardice on my part. I know I have to get over this to be a good professor, but I hate when I teach things I like and the students dislike them. And with 85% of the boys and half the girls expecting to hate P&P, it just feels like setting myself up for exactly that experience.
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I hate when I teach things I like and the students dislike them
Oh man, I know. My consolation is that sometimes it goes the other way--that I teach something that students were expecting to dislike and they at least discover that there's more to it than they thought--but it's hard. There's something about having to be the "dispassionate," "objective" teacher that makes it harder for me, too--because I frequently feel like it's not even my *place* to tell them what I love about the work in question, because I don't want to shoot down or invalidate their feelings.
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