Woman in White Teacher's Notes
Woman in White Teacher's Notes
LEVEL 6
PART 1
Chapter 1: One night Walter meets a strange woman dressed all in white. They talk together and Walter is very much surprised to hear the woman talking about the place and the family he is on his way to see. Before he can ask her any questions, she disappears. Chapter 2: Walter goes to Cumberland. At Limmeridge House he meets his pupils, Marian and Laura, who are half-sisters. Walter notices that Laura resembles the woman in white very much. He tells Marian about the strange woman. She is keen to help him solve the mystery. Chapter 3: Walter enjoys his life at Limmeridge House. He falls in love with Laura and makes friends with Marian. But Marian advises him to leave Limmeridge House, because Laura is engaged to baronet Sir Percival Glyde, who is coming soon. Laura receives an anonymous warning against her future marriage, and Walter remembers the woman in white talking about some wicked and cruel baronet. He thinks the warning letter is from that woman. Chapter 4: Walter goes to the churchyard to see the strange woman who was seen there. They meet and she gives him her name, Anne Catherick, and that she has escaped from the asylum where Sir Percival shut her up. Then she gets frightened and runs away. Chapter 5: Before Walter goes away, he and Marian go to the village to find Anne Catherick to talk to her. When they arrive, they find that Anne has already gone. Chapter 6: Mr Gilmore, the family lawyer, comes to draw up the marriage settlement. He sends a copy of the warning letter to Sir Percival asking for an explanation. Walter leaves Limmeridge House. Laura is very unhappy as she is in love with Walter.
Summary
Late one night on a lonely road a young art teacher, Walter Hartright, meets a strange woman dressed all in white. They talk together and Walter is puzzled by the fact that the woman knows a member of the family he is about to start work with. Walter goes to Limmeridge House and
Teachers notes
LEVEL 6
PART 2
Chapter 1: Six months later Marian comes to Blackwater Park, Sir Percivals house, where she learns that Mrs Catherick has secretly visited to find out any news about her daughter. Marian decides to visit Mrs Catherick. Chapter 2: Sir Percival and Laura come from Italy with Count Fosco, Sir Percivals friend. Laura is very unhappy, its clear now that her husband married her for her money only. To clear out his debts he needs to obtain his wifes money. Marian overhears a conversation and tells Laura about it. Chapter 3: Sir Percival learns about Mrs Cathericks visit which makes him very angry. He tries to make Laura sign some document about her money but fails. Outraged, Sir Percival leaves Blackwater Park. Chapter 4: Marian and Laura go to an old boathouse and see a strange figure. They become frightened and go home, but someone is following them, and it is not Count Fosco. Laura goes to the boathouse again and meets Anne Catherick there. Anne tells her she wrote the warning and followed her last time. She also says she know a terrible secret about Sir Percival. Suddenly she gets frightened and runs away without revealling the secret. Chapter 5: Sir Percival comes back. Count Fosco, who has seen Lauras meeting with Anne, tells him about the meeting, and they go to the boathouse to wait for Anne
PART 3
Chapter 1: Marian, Laura and Walter rent a small flat in London. Marian tells Walter their story. After she recovered from her illness, she learned that Laura had died of a heart problem. Anne Catherick had been found and put in the asylum again. Her mental problems got worse and she thinks she is Lady Glyde. Marian went to the asylum and found Laura there. She helped Laura to escape, and they went to Limmeridge, where they met Walter. Chapter 2: Laura says that Count Fosco met her in London and took her to some place to meet her sister. There he gave her a cup of strange tea, she fainted and recovered in the asylum. Using their similar appearance Sir Percival and Count Fosco placed Laura in the asylum as Anne Catherick, and moved Anne to Count Foscos house, where she died as Lady Glyde. Chapter 3: Walter wants to find out Sir Percivals secret so he can use it to destroy him and goes to see Mrs Catherick. At the end of a difficult conversation, she tells him to go to the church and look at the book of marriage records.
The Woman in White - Teachers notes of 5
Teachers notes
LEVEL 6
Teachers notes
LEVEL 6
While reading
14 Role play: In pairs, students plan and act out the conversation between Sir Percival and Mr Gilmore about the anonymous letter Laura received. Student A is Sir Percival and explains why Anne was put in an asylum. Student B is Mr Gilmore and asks Sir Percival questions. 15 Write: Ask students to imagine they are Marian. Write a letter to Mrs Catherick asking for the information to prove Sir Percivals explanations. Dear Mrs Catherick, I am writing you to ask you about I hope to hear from you soon. Warm regards, Marian Halcombe
While reading
3 Discuss: Have students discuss the following questions: Whats Mr Fairlies attitude towards the girls? How do you think it will influence their lives?
After reading
4 Discuss: Put students into small groups, and ask them to answer the following: In each chapter, one or two strange things happen. Say what these strange things are. Is there an explanation for these events? If so, what is the explanation or what might it be? 5 Write: Ask students to imagine they are Walter Hartright. They write a letter to his mother describing his life at Limmeridge House.
After reading
16 Discuss: Have students discuss the following: What ideas did Sir Percivals lawyers note give to Mr Gilmore? 17 Research and discuss: Lauras marriage is an arranged marriage in other words, a marriage where the parents choose the marriage partner for their son or daughter. Have students do research on arranged marriages on the Internet. What are the advantages and disadvantages of arranged marriages? Do you agree with the idea of arranged marriages? 18 Research: Ask students to find out and write about the position of women in Britain in the nineteenth century. What role did a marriage settlement play in their lives?
While reading
7 Check: In groups, students check their ideas from activity 6. Who was most close to the book? 8 Role play: In pairs, students plan and act out the conversation about local news between the farmers wife and Anne Catherick. Student A is the farmers wife and tells Anne Catherick about the local news. Student B is Anne Catherick who looks pale and sad.
After reading
9 Discuss: Have students discuss the following questions: What is your opinion of the Woman in White so far? Do you think she is mad? Give reasons for your opinions. 10 Group work: In small groups students decide on an illustration for each chapter. The picture must illustrate the most important event in the chapter. Each group then describes their illustration to the class. 11 Role play: Imagine Walter and Laura express their true feelings for each other before they part. In pairs, students plan and act out their conversation. Student A is Walter and Student B is Laura.
c Pearson Education Limited 2008
After reading
21 Group work: In small groups, students write one sentence about each of the following characters. Each group then reads their sentences out to the class and the class votes for the sentence that best describes each character: Laura, Marian, Sir Percival Glyde, Count Fosco, Walter Hartright
The Woman in White - Teachers notes of 5
Teachers notes
LEVEL 6
While reading
34 Check: Have students check their answers to the questions from activity 33. 35 Write: Ask students to imagine they are Walter. Write a message to Marian describing his first meeting with Mrs Catherick.
After reading
25 Discuss: Ask students to discuss the following: In your opinion, what is the main motive of the following characters? In other words, what is it that makes them do the things they do? Marian, Laura, Sir Percival, Count Fosco 26 Discuss: Have students discuss this: Both Sir Percival and Count Fosco are wicked men. Which man do you think is worse? Give reasons for your opinion. 27 Group work: In small groups, students discuss the following question: What do you think is the most dramatic moment in each of these chapters? Then they put the dramatic moments in order from most dramatic to least dramatic and compare their order to other groups, giving reasons for their order.
After reading
36 Write: Have students imagine they are Mr Gilmore. Write a letter to Mr Fairlie informing him that Laura is alive and is coming to Limmeridge House. 37 Group work: In small groups, students tell the story of these chapters from the point of view of the following characters. Each student takes it in turns to say one sentence. a Marian b Laura c Walter
Extra activities
38 Project: In groups, students work on the following: What does this book tell us about the morals of the nineteenth century? Compare the social situation of those days with the present one. What has changed? Do you think the changes are for the better? Why/Why not? Present your findings in a book or magazine format. 39 Discuss and group work: Collinss advice to other writers was: Make em laugh, make em cry, make em wait. (em = them, i.e. the readers) In small groups, students discuss how Collins does this in The Woman in White. Students can look through the book to find examples. Then have a whole-class discussion about it.
After reading
29 Check: Ask students to answer the questions they wrote for activity 28. 30 Role play: Each student chooses one of the characters from the book. Have students walk around the class asking each other yes/no questions. They can ask up to five questions each. The other students must guess who they are. 31 Discuss and write: In small groups, students discuss whether or not they agree with the following statement, giving reasons for their opinion. After discussion, ask them to write one or two paragraphs about it. Marian is the real heroine of The Woman in White.
Vocabulary activities
For the Word List and vocabulary activities, go to www.penguinreaders.com.