SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1. Far far from gusty waves, the children’s faces.
2. Like rootless weeds, the hair torn around their pallor.
These children were cut off from the hustle and
bustle of life – the rest of the poem makes clear
how cut off from the world these children are.
There is something wrong with each child
making them social misfits and later on it states
that the school windows were the confines of
their world and that they live (metaphorically) in
crammed holes. – METAPHOR.
British term for primary school.
A city area of poor living conditions
and old buildings in despair.
Windy/ blowing in
sudden strong
rushes.
The children were social misfits. Their
faces were lost-looking and deprived.
The children were deprived – as is
shown by the boy with rickets – and
they were certainly social misfits cut off
from the world.
Simile.
The poem is made up of largely non-sentences, in
other words, sentences with no main verb. It is the
written equivalent of flashing still images on a
screen, one after the other. It has a shock effect:
your mind has no sooner registered one image than
the next presents itself.
It is as if pulled away from their faces, to let
their faces peer through the unkempt hair. PALLOR: i) There is little sunshine in
England.
ii) The narrow, dirty streets in England’s
slums don’t let in light and are unhealthy.
iii) The children were undernourished and
unhealthy.
In 1930’s living in slum was an appalling experience because of very poor buildings, narrow streets and bad hygiene. During 1930
Depression there was huge unemployment. So, despite government feeding schemes, people were near starvation and children in
particular suffered from food deficiency diseases.
SIMILE: Their hair = compared to weeds. The
common ground is that neither is looked after
or rooted in its place. The faces of under-
nourished students are compared to weeds
without roots.
3. The tall girl with her weighed-down head. The paper-
4. seeming boy, with rat’s eyes. The stunted, unlucky heir
5. of twisted bones, reciting a father’s gnarled disease,
Compound adjective.
Rat’s eyes are furtive,
frightened eyes, and so this
poor boy was probably abused
at home.
Someone who
inherits something.
Prevented from growing
fully.
Literally: speaking out loud
something learnt.
Twisted.
Probably rickets, a children’s disease
caused by lack of Vitamin D provided
by sunshine and good nutrition. (It
makes the bones become soft and
bent, and is common among poor and
disadvantaged people.
6. his lesson from the desk. At back of the dim class
7. one unnoted, sweet and young. His eyes live a dream
8. of squirrel’s game, in tree room, other than this.
This one boy seems to have aspirations
and hopes and ideals beyond the “lack” of
“dreams” around him. He seems to be
inventing fantasies of his own that speak
of a different, more pleasant world.
Is the boy speaking what he was supposed
to learn?
OR
Does this phrase describe the “disease”? Is it
the boy’s lesson from his father’s “desk”?
Dark.
Antithesis with “rat’s eyes”
in line 4.
Is he pretending he is hiding
away in a hole in a tree?
9. On sour cream walls, donations, Shakespeare’s head,
10. cloudless at dawn, civilized dome riding all cities.
11. Belled, flowery, Tyrolese valley. Open-handed map
12. awarding the world its world. And yet, for these
Unpleasant.
Gifts – maybe
someone’s cast-offs. 3 Donations: are a
mockery in this place
and for these children.
From a developed
social system /
having smooth
social manners.
Round shape (in this
case the top of a head).
Has travelled extensively /
experienced the delights of the world.
Tyrol is a region in
Europe.
13. children, these windows, not this world, are world,
14. where all their future’s painted with fog,
15. a narrow street sealed in with a lead sky,
16. far far from rivers, capes, and stars of words.
The world offered on the maps and pictures on the wall have nothing to do with these children.
The grimy windows of the classroom represent the limits of their world: this is all they know.
Everything they know beyond these windows is blurred by fog and hemmed in by a grey sky.
Dense, think mist.
A piece of land with water on 3
sides / a small peninsula.
17. Surely Shakespeare is wicked, the map a bad example
18. with ships and sun and love tempting them to steal –
19. for lives that slyly turn in their cramped holes
20. from fog to endless night? On their slag heap, these children
21. wear skins peeped through by bones and spectacles of steel
22. with mended glass, like bottle bits on stones.
23. All of their time and space are foggy slum
24. so blot their maps with slums as big as doom.
The pompous image of Shakespeare and the pictures and maps on the wall offer the children a world they will never have or even be able to
aspire to. The mislead them into thinking such a good world can be stolen from those that have it.
Persuading, inviting or making
someone do something wrong.
Literal and
figurative.
With wicked
cleverness, secretly. Coal dump.
Make ugly marks on
paper.
Destruction / a
terrible fate.
25. Unless, governor, teacher, inspector, visitor,
26. this map becomes their window and these windows
27. that shut upon their lives like catacombs,
28. break O break open till they break the town
29. and show the children to green fields, and make their
world
30. run azure on gold sands, and let their tongues
31. run naked into books, the white and green leaves open
32. history theirs who language is the sun.
Member of school
governing body.
Underground cemeteries.
Sky blue.
Move freely, unhindered
by anything.
He suggests that a different way of teaching them would be to take them out of this environment of deprivation – take them,
for example, to open fields / to the seaside – also give them the right kind of literacy experience, to open their minds & world.

More Related Content

What's hot

From the diary of anne Frank class 10 ppt
From the diary of anne Frank class 10 pptFrom the diary of anne Frank class 10 ppt
From the diary of anne Frank class 10 ppt
Jnv sarang
 
Madam rides the bus
Madam rides the busMadam rides the bus
Madam rides the bus
ArpitaSharma93
 
Power sharing
Power sharing Power sharing
Power sharing
Geeta Bhandari
 
Animals
AnimalsAnimals
Animals
NVSBPL
 
PPT-Bholi - Copy.pptx
PPT-Bholi - Copy.pptxPPT-Bholi - Copy.pptx
PPT-Bholi - Copy.pptx
ISHA843672
 
Madam Rides the Bus
Madam Rides the BusMadam Rides the Bus
Madam Rides the Bus
Noopur Sharma
 
Globalization economics-class10
Globalization economics-class10Globalization economics-class10
Globalization economics-class10
Tibetan Homes School
 
Silk Road English Chapter Grade 11 CBSE
Silk Road English Chapter Grade 11 CBSESilk Road English Chapter Grade 11 CBSE
Silk Road English Chapter Grade 11 CBSE
MathewMammen3
 
No men are foreign
No men are foreignNo men are foreign
No men are foreign
somu rajesh
 
Bholi
Bholi Bholi
Manufacturing Industries Class 10
Manufacturing Industries Class 10Manufacturing Industries Class 10
Manufacturing Industries Class 10
Aswin Babu
 
For anne gregory
For anne gregoryFor anne gregory
For anne gregory
NVSBPL
 
Leo Tolstoy's Biography
Leo Tolstoy's BiographyLeo Tolstoy's Biography
Leo Tolstoy's Biography
So Ma
 
Childhood
ChildhoodChildhood
Childhood
viky telang
 
Gender Religion And Caste
Gender Religion And Caste Gender Religion And Caste
Gender Religion And Caste
Sadhna Sharma
 
Class x madam_rides a bus m1-ppt-converted
Class x madam_rides a bus m1-ppt-convertedClass x madam_rides a bus m1-ppt-converted
Class x madam_rides a bus m1-ppt-converted
FoxinMail
 
Manufactuing Industries class 10
Manufactuing Industries class 10Manufactuing Industries class 10
Manufactuing Industries class 10
Aswin Babu
 
A Baker from Goa | PPT | English | Seminar | Class 10 | Studious Wiz
A Baker from Goa | PPT | English | Seminar | Class 10 | Studious WizA Baker from Goa | PPT | English | Seminar | Class 10 | Studious Wiz
A Baker from Goa | PPT | English | Seminar | Class 10 | Studious Wiz
Studious WiZ
 
Lifelines of national economy ( social )
Lifelines of national economy ( social )Lifelines of national economy ( social )
Lifelines of national economy ( social )
Akilan Kennedy
 
Amanda
AmandaAmanda

What's hot (20)

From the diary of anne Frank class 10 ppt
From the diary of anne Frank class 10 pptFrom the diary of anne Frank class 10 ppt
From the diary of anne Frank class 10 ppt
 
Madam rides the bus
Madam rides the busMadam rides the bus
Madam rides the bus
 
Power sharing
Power sharing Power sharing
Power sharing
 
Animals
AnimalsAnimals
Animals
 
PPT-Bholi - Copy.pptx
PPT-Bholi - Copy.pptxPPT-Bholi - Copy.pptx
PPT-Bholi - Copy.pptx
 
Madam Rides the Bus
Madam Rides the BusMadam Rides the Bus
Madam Rides the Bus
 
Globalization economics-class10
Globalization economics-class10Globalization economics-class10
Globalization economics-class10
 
Silk Road English Chapter Grade 11 CBSE
Silk Road English Chapter Grade 11 CBSESilk Road English Chapter Grade 11 CBSE
Silk Road English Chapter Grade 11 CBSE
 
No men are foreign
No men are foreignNo men are foreign
No men are foreign
 
Bholi
Bholi Bholi
Bholi
 
Manufacturing Industries Class 10
Manufacturing Industries Class 10Manufacturing Industries Class 10
Manufacturing Industries Class 10
 
For anne gregory
For anne gregoryFor anne gregory
For anne gregory
 
Leo Tolstoy's Biography
Leo Tolstoy's BiographyLeo Tolstoy's Biography
Leo Tolstoy's Biography
 
Childhood
ChildhoodChildhood
Childhood
 
Gender Religion And Caste
Gender Religion And Caste Gender Religion And Caste
Gender Religion And Caste
 
Class x madam_rides a bus m1-ppt-converted
Class x madam_rides a bus m1-ppt-convertedClass x madam_rides a bus m1-ppt-converted
Class x madam_rides a bus m1-ppt-converted
 
Manufactuing Industries class 10
Manufactuing Industries class 10Manufactuing Industries class 10
Manufactuing Industries class 10
 
A Baker from Goa | PPT | English | Seminar | Class 10 | Studious Wiz
A Baker from Goa | PPT | English | Seminar | Class 10 | Studious WizA Baker from Goa | PPT | English | Seminar | Class 10 | Studious Wiz
A Baker from Goa | PPT | English | Seminar | Class 10 | Studious Wiz
 
Lifelines of national economy ( social )
Lifelines of national economy ( social )Lifelines of national economy ( social )
Lifelines of national economy ( social )
 
Amanda
AmandaAmanda
Amanda
 

Similar to An elementary classroom in the slum

An elementary school classroom in a slum
An elementary school classroom in a slumAn elementary school classroom in a slum
An elementary school classroom in a slum
FUNDILE SAMBO
 
An elementary school classroom in a slum
An elementary school classroom in a slumAn elementary school classroom in a slum
An elementary school classroom in a slum
Shivani Singh
 
The elementry classroom in a slum
The elementry classroom in a slumThe elementry classroom in a slum
The elementry classroom in a slum
RanjanKumar616
 
An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum Notes
An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum NotesAn Elementary School Classroom in a Slum Notes
An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum Notes
Parveen Kumar Sharma
 
An elementary school classroom in a slum
An elementary school classroom in a slumAn elementary school classroom in a slum
An elementary school classroom in a slum
SATYADEOVISHWAKARMA
 
Poem 2 an elementary school classroom in a slum
Poem 2   an elementary school classroom in a slumPoem 2   an elementary school classroom in a slum
Poem 2 an elementary school classroom in a slum
alkavashisht
 
AN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CLASSROOM IN A SLUM
AN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CLASSROOM IN A SLUMAN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CLASSROOM IN A SLUM
AN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CLASSROOM IN A SLUM
ASHWINI KUMAR
 
An Elementary school classroom in a Slum
An Elementary school classroom in a SlumAn Elementary school classroom in a Slum
An Elementary school classroom in a Slum
MRINAL GHOSH
 
_An Elementary School Classroom in a slum.pptx
_An Elementary School Classroom in a slum.pptx_An Elementary School Classroom in a slum.pptx
_An Elementary School Classroom in a slum.pptx
Rishav949534
 
12ENG-POEM-2_-MOD-2of2_(1).pptx
12ENG-POEM-2_-MOD-2of2_(1).pptx12ENG-POEM-2_-MOD-2of2_(1).pptx
12ENG-POEM-2_-MOD-2of2_(1).pptx
Kartiktyagi43
 
Presentation 1
Presentation 1Presentation 1
Presentation 1
MinuAbel
 
Heir Conditioning (Note 1)
Heir Conditioning (Note 1)Heir Conditioning (Note 1)
Heir Conditioning (Note 1)
Miz Malinz
 
Using effective language and structure
Using effective language and structureUsing effective language and structure
Using effective language and structure
dean dundas
 
An elementary school classroom in slum
An elementary school classroom in slumAn elementary school classroom in slum
An elementary school classroom in slum
currencyverma
 
Entire Practice Test Grade 7b.pdf
Entire Practice Test Grade 7b.pdfEntire Practice Test Grade 7b.pdf
Entire Practice Test Grade 7b.pdf
AcademicPlayground
 
Shalini
ShaliniShalini
Shalini
ShaliniShalini
English project
English projectEnglish project
English project
jasvin2
 
"An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum"
"An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum""An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum"
"An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum"
AmritaNath4
 
P113TGAWRINKLEINTIMEfinal
P113TGAWRINKLEINTIMEfinalP113TGAWRINKLEINTIMEfinal
P113TGAWRINKLEINTIMEfinal
Catherine Miller
 

Similar to An elementary classroom in the slum (20)

An elementary school classroom in a slum
An elementary school classroom in a slumAn elementary school classroom in a slum
An elementary school classroom in a slum
 
An elementary school classroom in a slum
An elementary school classroom in a slumAn elementary school classroom in a slum
An elementary school classroom in a slum
 
The elementry classroom in a slum
The elementry classroom in a slumThe elementry classroom in a slum
The elementry classroom in a slum
 
An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum Notes
An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum NotesAn Elementary School Classroom in a Slum Notes
An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum Notes
 
An elementary school classroom in a slum
An elementary school classroom in a slumAn elementary school classroom in a slum
An elementary school classroom in a slum
 
Poem 2 an elementary school classroom in a slum
Poem 2   an elementary school classroom in a slumPoem 2   an elementary school classroom in a slum
Poem 2 an elementary school classroom in a slum
 
AN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CLASSROOM IN A SLUM
AN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CLASSROOM IN A SLUMAN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CLASSROOM IN A SLUM
AN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CLASSROOM IN A SLUM
 
An Elementary school classroom in a Slum
An Elementary school classroom in a SlumAn Elementary school classroom in a Slum
An Elementary school classroom in a Slum
 
_An Elementary School Classroom in a slum.pptx
_An Elementary School Classroom in a slum.pptx_An Elementary School Classroom in a slum.pptx
_An Elementary School Classroom in a slum.pptx
 
12ENG-POEM-2_-MOD-2of2_(1).pptx
12ENG-POEM-2_-MOD-2of2_(1).pptx12ENG-POEM-2_-MOD-2of2_(1).pptx
12ENG-POEM-2_-MOD-2of2_(1).pptx
 
Presentation 1
Presentation 1Presentation 1
Presentation 1
 
Heir Conditioning (Note 1)
Heir Conditioning (Note 1)Heir Conditioning (Note 1)
Heir Conditioning (Note 1)
 
Using effective language and structure
Using effective language and structureUsing effective language and structure
Using effective language and structure
 
An elementary school classroom in slum
An elementary school classroom in slumAn elementary school classroom in slum
An elementary school classroom in slum
 
Entire Practice Test Grade 7b.pdf
Entire Practice Test Grade 7b.pdfEntire Practice Test Grade 7b.pdf
Entire Practice Test Grade 7b.pdf
 
Shalini
ShaliniShalini
Shalini
 
Shalini
ShaliniShalini
Shalini
 
English project
English projectEnglish project
English project
 
"An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum"
"An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum""An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum"
"An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum"
 
P113TGAWRINKLEINTIMEfinal
P113TGAWRINKLEINTIMEfinalP113TGAWRINKLEINTIMEfinal
P113TGAWRINKLEINTIMEfinal
 

An elementary classroom in the slum

  • 1. 1. Far far from gusty waves, the children’s faces. 2. Like rootless weeds, the hair torn around their pallor. These children were cut off from the hustle and bustle of life – the rest of the poem makes clear how cut off from the world these children are. There is something wrong with each child making them social misfits and later on it states that the school windows were the confines of their world and that they live (metaphorically) in crammed holes. – METAPHOR. British term for primary school. A city area of poor living conditions and old buildings in despair. Windy/ blowing in sudden strong rushes. The children were social misfits. Their faces were lost-looking and deprived. The children were deprived – as is shown by the boy with rickets – and they were certainly social misfits cut off from the world. Simile. The poem is made up of largely non-sentences, in other words, sentences with no main verb. It is the written equivalent of flashing still images on a screen, one after the other. It has a shock effect: your mind has no sooner registered one image than the next presents itself. It is as if pulled away from their faces, to let their faces peer through the unkempt hair. PALLOR: i) There is little sunshine in England. ii) The narrow, dirty streets in England’s slums don’t let in light and are unhealthy. iii) The children were undernourished and unhealthy. In 1930’s living in slum was an appalling experience because of very poor buildings, narrow streets and bad hygiene. During 1930 Depression there was huge unemployment. So, despite government feeding schemes, people were near starvation and children in particular suffered from food deficiency diseases. SIMILE: Their hair = compared to weeds. The common ground is that neither is looked after or rooted in its place. The faces of under- nourished students are compared to weeds without roots.
  • 2. 3. The tall girl with her weighed-down head. The paper- 4. seeming boy, with rat’s eyes. The stunted, unlucky heir 5. of twisted bones, reciting a father’s gnarled disease, Compound adjective. Rat’s eyes are furtive, frightened eyes, and so this poor boy was probably abused at home. Someone who inherits something. Prevented from growing fully. Literally: speaking out loud something learnt. Twisted. Probably rickets, a children’s disease caused by lack of Vitamin D provided by sunshine and good nutrition. (It makes the bones become soft and bent, and is common among poor and disadvantaged people.
  • 3. 6. his lesson from the desk. At back of the dim class 7. one unnoted, sweet and young. His eyes live a dream 8. of squirrel’s game, in tree room, other than this. This one boy seems to have aspirations and hopes and ideals beyond the “lack” of “dreams” around him. He seems to be inventing fantasies of his own that speak of a different, more pleasant world. Is the boy speaking what he was supposed to learn? OR Does this phrase describe the “disease”? Is it the boy’s lesson from his father’s “desk”? Dark. Antithesis with “rat’s eyes” in line 4. Is he pretending he is hiding away in a hole in a tree?
  • 4. 9. On sour cream walls, donations, Shakespeare’s head, 10. cloudless at dawn, civilized dome riding all cities. 11. Belled, flowery, Tyrolese valley. Open-handed map 12. awarding the world its world. And yet, for these Unpleasant. Gifts – maybe someone’s cast-offs. 3 Donations: are a mockery in this place and for these children. From a developed social system / having smooth social manners. Round shape (in this case the top of a head). Has travelled extensively / experienced the delights of the world. Tyrol is a region in Europe.
  • 5. 13. children, these windows, not this world, are world, 14. where all their future’s painted with fog, 15. a narrow street sealed in with a lead sky, 16. far far from rivers, capes, and stars of words. The world offered on the maps and pictures on the wall have nothing to do with these children. The grimy windows of the classroom represent the limits of their world: this is all they know. Everything they know beyond these windows is blurred by fog and hemmed in by a grey sky. Dense, think mist. A piece of land with water on 3 sides / a small peninsula.
  • 6. 17. Surely Shakespeare is wicked, the map a bad example 18. with ships and sun and love tempting them to steal – 19. for lives that slyly turn in their cramped holes 20. from fog to endless night? On their slag heap, these children 21. wear skins peeped through by bones and spectacles of steel 22. with mended glass, like bottle bits on stones. 23. All of their time and space are foggy slum 24. so blot their maps with slums as big as doom. The pompous image of Shakespeare and the pictures and maps on the wall offer the children a world they will never have or even be able to aspire to. The mislead them into thinking such a good world can be stolen from those that have it. Persuading, inviting or making someone do something wrong. Literal and figurative. With wicked cleverness, secretly. Coal dump. Make ugly marks on paper. Destruction / a terrible fate.
  • 7. 25. Unless, governor, teacher, inspector, visitor, 26. this map becomes their window and these windows 27. that shut upon their lives like catacombs, 28. break O break open till they break the town 29. and show the children to green fields, and make their world 30. run azure on gold sands, and let their tongues 31. run naked into books, the white and green leaves open 32. history theirs who language is the sun. Member of school governing body. Underground cemeteries. Sky blue. Move freely, unhindered by anything. He suggests that a different way of teaching them would be to take them out of this environment of deprivation – take them, for example, to open fields / to the seaside – also give them the right kind of literacy experience, to open their minds & world.