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https://sbt-www-us-east-v3.azurewebsites.net/lesson-plans/the-yellow-wallpaper-by-charlotte-perkins-gilman/plot-diagram
Activity Overview
Template and Class Instructions
Rubric
Activity Overview Accordion Arrow

Activity Overview


A common use for Storyboard That is to help students create a plot diagram of the events from a story. Not only is this a great way to teach the parts of the plot, but it reinforces major events and helps students develop greater understanding of literary structures.

Students can create a storyboard capturing the narrative arc in a work with a six-cell storyboard containing the major parts of the plot diagram. For each cell, have students create a scene that follows the story in sequence using: Exposition, Conflict, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action, and Resolution.



“The Yellow Wall-paper” Plot Diagram Example

Exposition

The narrator’s husband, John, has rented a house in the country for the summer while his wife recovers from temporary nervous depression shortly after the birth of their child. The narrator’s husband and brother are both physicians, and they seem to be unconcerned with how the narrator feels and insist that she abstain from most activity until she is well again. The narrator, on the other hand, thinks that change and excitement would do her some good.


Conflict

The narrator’s husband chooses a room with hideous yellow wallpaper for their bedroom, and the narrator spends a great deal of time in the room. It is an old nursery, and the wallpaper has a strange and unsettling pattern wherever it hasn’t been peeled off. The narrator begins to focus heavily on the wallpaper each day, hating the color and becoming almost angry at the pattern.


Rising Action

As the days wear on, the narrator continues to write secretively behind John’s back, as John believes writing will make the narrator’s nervousness worse. The narrator feels intense guilt at not being more of a help to John, and for her nervousness getting in the way of their lives. She continues to become more isolated as John continues to stress that it is up to the narrator’s own self-will to get better. She fancies that the pattern on the wallpaper begins to move.


Climax

The narrator continues to study the wallpaper each day, and begins to notice that the pattern changes as the light in the room changes. She begins to see a woman creeping around behind the wallpaper, and the wallpaper begins to assault her senses even when she is not in the room. The narrator doesn’t really sleep anymore, and intently watches the woman in the wall creeping around the room.


Falling Action

The narrator begins to see the creeping woman wandering around in the arbors and the garden. The narrator grows sure that her husband and Jennie are growing suspicious of her behavior. The day before they are supposed to return home, the narrator begins to strip the wallpaper from the walls to set the creeping woman free. She locks herself in the room and throws the key down onto the front path.


Resolution

John comes home and begins to bang on the bedroom door, calling for an axe to break it down. The narrator tells him where the key is, and when he finally opens the door, begins crying out at what he finds. The narrator tells him that she’s gotten out of the wallpaper finally in spite of him, and she has pulled off most of the wallpaper so that he can’t put her back. She creeps around the room and over John’s body after he faints.



Template and Class Instructions Accordion Arrow

Template and Class Instructions

(These instructions are completely customizable. After clicking "Copy Activity", update the instructions on the Edit Tab of the assignment.)



Student Instructions

Create a visual plot diagram of "The Yellow Wall-paper".


  1. Separate the story into the Exposition, Conflict, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action, and Resolution.
  2. Create an image that represents an important moment or set of events for each of the story components.
  3. Write a description of each of the steps in the plot diagram.

Lesson Plan Reference

Switch to: Common CoreArizonaCaliforniaColoradoFloridaGeorgiaIowaKansasMarylandMassachusettsNebraskaNew JerseyNew YorkNorth CarolinaOhioOklahomaPennsylvaniaUtah

Rubric Accordion Arrow

Rubric

(You can also create your own on Quick Rubric.)


Plot Diagram Rubric (Grades 9-12)
Create a plot diagram for the story using Exposition, Conflict, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action, and Resolution.
Proficient
25 Points
Emerging
21 Points
Beginning
17 Points
Try Again
13 Points
Descriptive and Visual Elements
Cells have many descriptive elements, and provide the reader with a vivid representation.
Cells have many descriptive elements, but flow of cells may have been hard to understand.
Cells have few descriptive elements, or have visuals that make the work confusing.
Cells have few or no descriptive elements.
Grammar/Spelling
Textables have three or fewer spelling/grammar errors.
Textables have four or fewer spelling/grammar errors.
Textables have five or fewer spelling/grammar errors.
Textables have six or more spelling/grammar errors.
Evidence of Effort
Work is well written and carefully thought out. Student has done both peer and teacher editing.
Work is well written and carefully thought out. Student has either teacher or peer editing, but not both.
Student has done neither peer, nor teacher editing.
Work shows no evidence of any effort.
Plot
All parts of the plot are included in the diagram.
All parts of the plot are included in the diagram, but one or more is confusing.
Parts of the plot are missing from the diagram, and/or some aspects of the diagram make the plot difficult to follow.
Almost all of the parts of the plot are missing from the diagram, and/or some aspects of the diagram make the plot very difficult to follow.


Activity Overview


A common use for Storyboard That is to help students create a plot diagram of the events from a story. Not only is this a great way to teach the parts of the plot, but it reinforces major events and helps students develop greater understanding of literary structures.

Students can create a storyboard capturing the narrative arc in a work with a six-cell storyboard containing the major parts of the plot diagram. For each cell, have students create a scene that follows the story in sequence using: Exposition, Conflict, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action, and Resolution.



“The Yellow Wall-paper” Plot Diagram Example

Exposition

The narrator’s husband, John, has rented a house in the country for the summer while his wife recovers from temporary nervous depression shortly after the birth of their child. The narrator’s husband and brother are both physicians, and they seem to be unconcerned with how the narrator feels and insist that she abstain from most activity until she is well again. The narrator, on the other hand, thinks that change and excitement would do her some good.


Conflict

The narrator’s husband chooses a room with hideous yellow wallpaper for their bedroom, and the narrator spends a great deal of time in the room. It is an old nursery, and the wallpaper has a strange and unsettling pattern wherever it hasn’t been peeled off. The narrator begins to focus heavily on the wallpaper each day, hating the color and becoming almost angry at the pattern.


Rising Action

As the days wear on, the narrator continues to write secretively behind John’s back, as John believes writing will make the narrator’s nervousness worse. The narrator feels intense guilt at not being more of a help to John, and for her nervousness getting in the way of their lives. She continues to become more isolated as John continues to stress that it is up to the narrator’s own self-will to get better. She fancies that the pattern on the wallpaper begins to move.


Climax

The narrator continues to study the wallpaper each day, and begins to notice that the pattern changes as the light in the room changes. She begins to see a woman creeping around behind the wallpaper, and the wallpaper begins to assault her senses even when she is not in the room. The narrator doesn’t really sleep anymore, and intently watches the woman in the wall creeping around the room.


Falling Action

The narrator begins to see the creeping woman wandering around in the arbors and the garden. The narrator grows sure that her husband and Jennie are growing suspicious of her behavior. The day before they are supposed to return home, the narrator begins to strip the wallpaper from the walls to set the creeping woman free. She locks herself in the room and throws the key down onto the front path.


Resolution

John comes home and begins to bang on the bedroom door, calling for an axe to break it down. The narrator tells him where the key is, and when he finally opens the door, begins crying out at what he finds. The narrator tells him that she’s gotten out of the wallpaper finally in spite of him, and she has pulled off most of the wallpaper so that he can’t put her back. She creeps around the room and over John’s body after he faints.



Template and Class Instructions

(These instructions are completely customizable. After clicking "Copy Activity", update the instructions on the Edit Tab of the assignment.)



Student Instructions

Create a visual plot diagram of "The Yellow Wall-paper".


  1. Separate the story into the Exposition, Conflict, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action, and Resolution.
  2. Create an image that represents an important moment or set of events for each of the story components.
  3. Write a description of each of the steps in the plot diagram.

Lesson Plan Reference

Switch to: Common CoreArizonaCaliforniaColoradoFloridaGeorgiaIowaKansasMarylandMassachusettsNebraskaNew JerseyNew YorkNorth CarolinaOhioOklahomaPennsylvaniaUtah

Rubric

(You can also create your own on Quick Rubric.)


Plot Diagram Rubric (Grades 9-12)
Create a plot diagram for the story using Exposition, Conflict, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action, and Resolution.
Proficient
25 Points
Emerging
21 Points
Beginning
17 Points
Try Again
13 Points
Descriptive and Visual Elements
Cells have many descriptive elements, and provide the reader with a vivid representation.
Cells have many descriptive elements, but flow of cells may have been hard to understand.
Cells have few descriptive elements, or have visuals that make the work confusing.
Cells have few or no descriptive elements.
Grammar/Spelling
Textables have three or fewer spelling/grammar errors.
Textables have four or fewer spelling/grammar errors.
Textables have five or fewer spelling/grammar errors.
Textables have six or more spelling/grammar errors.
Evidence of Effort
Work is well written and carefully thought out. Student has done both peer and teacher editing.
Work is well written and carefully thought out. Student has either teacher or peer editing, but not both.
Student has done neither peer, nor teacher editing.
Work shows no evidence of any effort.
Plot
All parts of the plot are included in the diagram.
All parts of the plot are included in the diagram, but one or more is confusing.
Parts of the plot are missing from the diagram, and/or some aspects of the diagram make the plot difficult to follow.
Almost all of the parts of the plot are missing from the diagram, and/or some aspects of the diagram make the plot very difficult to follow.





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