I expect that I am going to get pilloried for this, by the
four people who read this blog (hello mum!), but it is something that has been
troubling me for years. The situation is
this: several lessons spent exploring rhyme and rhythm is exciting,
ground-breaking ways: borrowing drums
from the music department to patter out a bit of dactylic tetrameter, or
whatever; having students scurry around with letters to identify rhyme schemes;
students marching around the room to iambic pentameter. All of this just to get the basic premise in
their head.
You then spend time applying it – identifying what effect
the various schemes have. And this is
where it all goes wrong. You tell them
that iambic pentameter was used by Shakespeare as it is the closest
approximation to normal speech patterns.
You tell them that it echoes the sound of a heartbeat, which links with
the tension in Romeo and Juliet. You tell them that the rhythm of ‘The Charge
of the Light Brigade’ was designed by Tennyson to echo the sound of horses’
hooves. And all the time, the part of
your brain still devoted to your subject is screaming ‘but this is bullshit!’
at the top of its interior voice.
At an academic level these things can be, and are discussed. But they are discussed at a complex level –
that is their nature. It is hard to say
anything clever about rhythm when you are a C grade GCSE student, and yet we
try to foist it on them, believing it to be the only way to get them thinking
about that most mysterious spectre-on-the-markscheme: structure. Trouble is, they invariably write absolute
bobbins about rhyme and rhythm. They
spend half the task time on diligently writing ‘ABABCDCD’ next to the lines of
the poem, and writing in their essay ‘this poem is written in couplets, which
makes it sound like a song’. No marks
for that, fella. They may approach
something approximating insight: ‘Tennyson makes the rhythm sound like horses
to make us feel like we are there’, but this is still pretty poor stuff,
especially when their work on language is often so detailed and clever. The contrast can be
upsetting. And it’s our fault.
This over-teaching of rhyme and rhythm is totally
unnecessary. By all means, make them
aware of it – do the exciting, kinaesthetic lessons. Just don’t expect them to analyse these
techniques convincingly, especially in your average group. To get them engaging with structure, focus on the order of events and key words at
the beginning and end of lines. Caesura
and enjambment can be analysed effectively by almost all students, so encourage
that. Discourage slavish identification
of rhyme schemes and rhythms, and any attempt to make a bland statement about
their use. They won’t get any marks in
the exam, but crucially, wouldn’t be of any use anywhere else either.
Summary:
- · Rhythm and rhyme can be great fun to teach, but often pay back very little in return.
- · Even the brightest students tend to write obvious and fairly empty comments about them.
- · There are possible ways to engage them with structure:
o
Narrative/event ordering
o
Words in obviously prominent positions
o
Caesura and enjambment
- · Probably time for a cup of tea and a biscuit.
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