Lesson Two - The Skating Party

Site: MoodleHUB.ca 🍁
Course: English Lang Arts 10-1
Book: Lesson Two - The Skating Party
Printed by: Guest user
Date: Thursday, 18 September 2025, 10:18 PM

Description

.

Introduction


startLesson Two - The Skating Party
Duration - 2 blocks (2 x 80 min + homework)
"What you don't know can hurt you, especially what you don't know about yourself." -  Uncle Nathan, in "The Skating Party"

Merna Summers was raised on a farm in northeastern Alberta. She worked as a reporter and freelance writer before turning to fiction. She has written three collections of short stories: The Skating Party (1974), Calling Home (1982), and North of the Battle (1988). Her clear and insightful writing delves into the everyday lives of ordinary people in small farming communities, and unearths the obsessions and deceptions that lie beneath the calm surface of their existence. The stories in The Skating Party, set in the fictional but highly realistic Willow Bunch, describe the old- fashioned views which govern the lives of its inhabitants and the grittier, more human qualities like passion and deceit that the small-town morality serves to mask. Summers brings her stories and characters to life with humour, tenderness, and irony.

Lesson


continue

Before you read, consider:

  • What is a "fateful choice"?
  • Can you think of any books you have read or movie you have seen in which the plot hinges on such a choice?

Assignment



 


assignmentASSIGNMENT 
(100 marks)
Open a new Word document. Label it E101U3L2surname 
In this document, write the good copy of your personal response to text as outlined below.
Submit this assignment using the Dropbox  for U3L2 Skating Party personal response

  • "What idea(s) does Merna Summers develop regarding choices?"
  • Review your NOTES on "writing a personal response to texts" before you begin.
  • Keep in mind that you may adopt a persona! (Uncle Nathan, the narrator, Delia, etc.)

In your writing you should

  • select a prose form that is appropriate to the ideas you wish to express and that will enable you to effectively communicate to the reader (short essay, rant, conversation, newspaper article, editorial, interior monologue, short story, personal observation, etc.)
  • discuss ideas and impressions that are meaningful to you
  • respond from a personal, critical and/or creative perspective
  • consider how you can create a strong unifying effect


Conclusion


stop iconNot every choice a person has to make is a fateful one - but such choices often catch people unprepared . . .