Revised 7/14/2011, this worksheet now has more clarity and depth and includes a great quote about mob mentality from Bart Simpson. It offers questions for the individual student and for groups of three. Although this was composed for the study of The Crucible, it can be used with any novel or short story where mob hysteria plays a crucial role.
The Crucible mob mentality comparing and contrasting



Help
Because one of my goals is to prove that studying literature, writing, vocabulary and grammar can be fun, I have created a number of innovative lessons for these strands of learning. Last year I collected many of them and compiled them in a book called Setting the Pace, for English teachers and college education students. Currently, the book is in revision; the title has been changed to NOVEL IDEAS, and it focuses on teaching literature as well as writing about literature. Veteran teachers and those aspiring to the field can utilize the hands on units and ideas for teaching while honing their skills on how to pace a lesson and to connect it to their state's standards of learning. I am an English teacher in the Fairfax County Virginia public school system, teaching English 12, Journalism 1,2,3 & 4 and Creative Writing 1, 2, & 3. As a result of the Teacher Performance Evaluation instituted by the county, I have been awarded the prestigious Career Two Exemplary level status three times. Besides the public high school venue, my teaching background includes an alternative secondary school for behaviorally disadvantaged adolescents, an adolescent psychiatric hospital, and a boys' reform school. Proud of my choice to be an educator, I have always hated the cliche, "Those that can, do; those that can't teach." Through my writing and my role modeling in the classroom, I show that not only do I teach, but I also practice what I preach.
