Sample Horror Story w/ Analysis Activities

About This Product

This no-prep short horror story with analysis activities is perfect for a 1-2 day sub plan or as an introduction to a larger unit on story-genre or creative writing. Richard Post’s “The Bloody Eye” will appropriately introduce the elements of horror stories to your students, and the included analysis questions and response essay assignment are designed to build strong analysis and writing skills.

Planning a week-long unit around this resource could not be easier! Start by handing out the story and analysis questions to your students and let them read the story and answer the questions (or read the story aloud and answer the questions as a discussion - your choice!). Once you feel your students are ready for their understanding of the story to be assessed, hand out the literary analysis essay assignment. The essay's prompt is based upon response questions and the worksheet also includes literary analysis writing tips, a peer review checklist, and Common Core-aligned rubric for straightforward grading.

Your download includes the following:

  • - The short horror narrative "The Bloody Eye," by Richard Post (written exclusively for The Language of Educational Art)

  • - 10 accompanying response questions (w/ answer key) designed to further your students' understanding of the structure and thematic concepts found in horror stories

  • - A self-checking Easel activity version of the analysis questions

  • - A literary analysis essay assignment that builds on students' thematic understanding of "The Bloody Eye" and how horror narratives are structured (40 points - tied to 4 Common Core Standards)

SYNOPSIS OF ‘THE BLOODY EYE’:

A first-year teacher struggles to keep up with a heavy work-load while confronting a classroom haunted by mysterious knocking sounds, a river of blood, possessed students, the ghost of Mrs. Draclaus, and the Bloody Eye.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Richard Post came late to writing YA literature, but he has been a storyteller and raconteur his entire life. When he’s not writing short stories for The Language of Educational Art, he enjoys fishing for rock bass on Higgins Lake, hunting pheasants on the farms of mid-Michigan, bottling sun pickles (here's his famous recipe), hosting “whoopie” parties for his grandchildren, and playing cribbage. He lives with his wife Beverly in St. Louis, Michigan and Orange Beach, Alabama.

Although this resource can be fitted for any secondary Language Arts classroom, it has been carefully designed to work best in grades 9 through 12. The included activities and rubric are subtly but specifically tied to Common Core ELA Standards for Language (1 and 2), Reading Literature (2), and Writing (2). This resource is provided as a print-ready, bookmarked, and adjustable PDF file.

This resource contains 10 pages.

Resource Tags

short story analysis literary analysis sample work reader response

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