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Preview of Frankenweenie “It’s Alive!” Scene Comparisons: Intertextual Film Analysis

Frankenweenie “It’s Alive!” Scene Comparisons: Intertextual Film Analysis

In this lesson pack, students compare Tim Burton’s Frankenweenie reanimation scenes with iconic “It’s Alive!” sequences from Frankenstein (1931) and Young Frankenstein (1974). Through charts, guiding questions, and scaffolded prompts, they’ll analyze how motivation, sound, tone, mood, and theme shift across films — and what these choices say about science, responsibility, and parody. What’s Included: Comparison Chart: Sparky vs. Fish scenes (Frankenweenie)General Viewing Questions for compar
Preview of Cross Cultural Influences (19th C) FRQ 2 + Graphic Organizers - AP Art History

Cross Cultural Influences (19th C) FRQ 2 + Graphic Organizers - AP Art History

4.107 La Grande Odalisque - 4.115 Olympia - 4.121 The Coiffure - 4.123 Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? This lesson focuses on cross-cultural influences in 19th-century art. In addition to learning about form, function, content, and context for La Grande Odalisque, Olympia, The Coiffure, and Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?, students will be pushed to analyze 19th-century art through a continuity and change over time lens. This lesson is packed ful
Preview of Frankenweenie × Frankenstein Character Comparative Literature Analysis

Frankenweenie × Frankenstein Character Comparative Literature Analysis

Bridge literature and film with this Frankenweenie × Frankenstein Characterization Comparison Activity — a scaffolded, flexible resource for teaching comparative analysis across text and screen. Students examine how Victor Frankenstein, Mr. Rzykruski, M. Waldman, and Victor’s father each represent different perspectives on education, curiosity, responsibility, and creation. Designed for differentiation, this pack includes a master comparative chart and printable/digital handouts for indivi
Preview of Medieval Castle Model Project | Build and Label Middle Ages Activity

Medieval Castle Model Project | Build and Label Middle Ages Activity

This multi-day medieval castle model project helps students build a historically accurate castle. Students begin with a guided castle diagram and labeling activity, so they understand real castle design, defensive features, and daily life before construction starts. Working in groups of 3–4, students design, construct, and label a castle model with 15 required features, applying what they learn about medieval defense, layout, and function throughout the build. Planning tools and required feat
Preview of Characterization & Style Analysis in Frankenweenie (8-10 ELA)

Characterization & Style Analysis in Frankenweenie (8-10 ELA)

Tim Burton’s Frankenweenie offers a perfect case study for examining how filmmakers use caricature and exaggeration in character design. This activity invites students to analyze characters visually, decide whether each design feels liberative/creative, neutral/archetypal, or harmful/reductive, and defend their reasoning with evidence. Students then reflect on Burton’s choices and finish by designing their own Burton-style Halloween character. What’s Included Printable PDFs + editable Google
Preview of Frankenweenie “Monster Mash-Up” Scene Study – Film Analysis & Monster Comparison

Frankenweenie “Monster Mash-Up” Scene Study – Film Analysis & Monster Comparison

Unpack Tim Burton’s Frankenweenie through this engaging Monster Mash-Up Scene Study, perfect for Halloween or any time you’re teaching film, satire, or Gothic literature. Students compare the reanimated “monster” creatures created by Victor, Edgar, Toshiaki, Weird Girl, Elsa, Bob, and Nassor—then analyze the Monsters Reanimated scene (57:00–1:03:47) to explore how Burton builds suspense, tone, and parody through sound, cinematography, and visual homage. This activity combines monster compari
Preview of Visual Analysis Practice: AP Art History

Visual Analysis Practice: AP Art History

Help your AP Art History students build the essential skill of analyzing unfamiliar artworks with these ready-to-use Visual Analysis Worksheets! Perfect for warm-ups, sub plans, or unit assessments, these worksheets give students one new artwork and guide them through the process of breaking it down thoughtfully and confidently. What Students Will Do: ✔️ Identify form (materials, techniques, style) ✔️ Analyze content & symbolism ✔️ Explain the meaning or theme ✔️ Connect the work to its
Preview of Mind Map Creation Template

Mind Map Creation Template

This Mind Map Creation Template can be used for entry-level art classes, as well as advanced-level art classes. This template has students conduct research to help inform their art-making practices by looking at other artists that might influence them and their art-making. At the center, students begin with their own idea and what they intend to communicate in their art. They then investigate an inspirational artwork by any artist and reflect on the art movement and key characteristics, impacts
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