Why classical myth and autism?

Why classical myth and autism?

The idea for this project started to take shape at a meeting in 2008 with a special needs teacher, who mentioned that, in her experience and those of her colleagues, autistic children often enjoy classical myth. I began to wonder why this might be the case, and whether – as a classicist who researches, and loves, classical myth – there was anything I could contribute. I started this blog to report on my progress which was often sporadic until the launch of the Warsaw-based European Research Council-funded project Our Mythical Childhood (2016-22) to trace the role of classics in children’s culture.

My key contribution to the project is an exploration of classics in autistic children’s culture, above all by producing myth-themed activities for autistic children. This blog shares my progress, often along Herculean paths, including to a book of lessons for autistic children focusing on the Choice of Hercules between two very different paths in life. The image above, illustrating the homepage of this blog, is one of the drawings by Steve K. Simons, the book's illustrator, of a chimneypiece panel in a neoclassical villa at Roehampton in South West London. The lessons centre on this panel.

Wednesday 23 September 2020

What I'm currently doing while not blogging yet immersed in writing about Hercules

I've been visiting this blog a good deal lately - indeed, I've recently re-read pretty well each posting I've out up since I got going in early 2009. But this engagement with my own previous postings hasn't been translating in to creating new posts.

Here's why: I am throwing myself into writing the book I've mentioned in earlier postings. It's a book which introduces then presents a set of lessons using classical myth for autistic children. So, just when I'm working more intensively than ever on the project, I'm quieter than I sometimes am on the blog.

I'm close to finishing a draft of the introduction - currently at 12,298 words. Here's the current version of the first paragraph:

This book – part of the series Our Mythical Childhood – is concerned with a particular kind of “mythical childhood,” an autistic childhood. It is a book which presents a set of activities which are each concerned with classical myth. The second part of the book presents the activities, which are divided into ten lessons. This first part of the book explains the purpose of the lessons, what they focus on and why they take this focus. I spend quite a bit of time giving the background for two key reasons. One is to help any teacher, or other adult, who is interested in using some or more of the lessons, know about the mythological background to the activities. The other key reason is to set out why I have developed the activities.


Now I must to get back to the book!




 

Wednesday 9 September 2020

"To marry him?": When a second class of students at an autism base met Hercules...

In the previous posting, I ran through what happened at a session on “Meeting Hercules” at a primary school’s autism base a couple of years ago. Now, as promised, I am going to turn to the second of the two lessons that took place om the same day. 

The first lesson had been observed by the then researcher, Effie Kostara, alone. I joined Effie for this second lesson, again for students between 8 and 11. To give some brief background, classes at the school are taught following a four-fold pattern which combines being given initial information, brainstorming opportunities, hands-on activities and opportunities for in-depth engagement with a given topic. Classes are small in size, led by a class teacher, with teaching assistants to support the students further.

“Meeting Hercules” formed the Topic lesson for the day. The teacher started the lesson, like all her lessons, by picking up a bucket and taking out of it something relevant to the session. This time, she had but in a card with the word “video” on it. Showing this led into the second, “Talk about…”, part of the lesson, which began with an introduction to Hercules via the trailer for the Disney Hercules – which the children looked entranced by. 

The teacher then showed this picture of a statue of Hercules, and asked the students to discuss what they saw:

They rose to this task, making lots of comments including about the lion on his head, and his eyes, which one student found ”scary.”

Then the teacher introduced the chimneypiece panel which produced a response of “wow” from one of the children. It was the women that especially interested them. They were full of ideas as to how the women are reacting to Hercules. One said “they both want his attention.” Another suggested that they both want to marry him.

As for Hercules, one student thought that he might be bored, another that he looked like he is flirting. Others thought that he might not be paying any attention to the women with one student wondering whether he was looking up at the sky to find a planet, and another commenting that he could be looking at the sea.

When it was time for the next stage of the class, called “your turn,” the students coloured in a picture of Hercules: the same one that the previous class had coloured in:

As they did the task, the students kept asking questions. There was a lot of working together and sharing of ideas as well as sharing their colours and looking at what others were drawing.

For the final stage of the lesson, the teacher asked the children which picture of Hercules they liked better. They all said that they preferred the picture of Hercules alone to the one of him with the women.

Then – because the teacher invited me to – I told them the story that is being depicted on the panel. The children listened carefully to the story about the choice that the women asked Hercules to make. They said that they thought that Hercules looked scared. One of the children impersonated his pose.

I asked them what they thought he should chose: the easy life or the life of adventures. They all said: the easy life.

Here are some thoughts on what took place and how what came up in the class is shaping what I am now doing,

With the class teacher present along with two teaching assistants, Effie and myself, there must have been as many adults as children in the room. Yet my memory is that there were more children present than adults. That I remember there being more students that adults testifies perhaps to how student-centred the class felt.

I was struck by just how much the children liked hearing about Hercules, and how proactive they were in coming up with their responses to what he looked like, what he might be feeling and how he was interacting with others. Likewise, I was struck by just how much the children engaged with what was going on in the scene – not only with Hercules but with how the women were responding to Hercules.

The children’s responses showed just how many ways there can be of making sense of Hercules. Like the children suggested, he might be ignoring the women for instance, or he might be flirting with them. Or his attention might be elsewhere – he might be looking at the sky, or at the sea. 

The activity also showed just how much colouring in is something worth doing as an activity. After the session, I learned how controversial colouring in is in children’s education, with some arguing that it is often done in place of teaching students and that, as an activity, colouring might go so far as to impede student learning. But what I saw were students turning with enthusiasm to the task, looking thoughtfully at the image, noticing new things and – all the time – reflecting on what they responses to Hercules and to the scene on the panel.

Had the session ended with the final task planned by the teacher – the comparison between two depictions of Hercules – it would have achieved some useful things. For example, the students would have had opportunities to think about Hercules and about feelings and about how he communications with others.

But due to what happened in the closing minutes – where I outlined to the students what mythological episode is being depicted on the panel –  I gained a sense of the potential for this aspect of the panel too. As I only told the story close to the end of the class, there wasn’t much time for thinking about choices, let alone causality. However, there was enough time for a brief chat about how the students thought about what Hercules might be feeling. The students were very willing to think about what they themselves would choose faced with comparable options.

Indeed, one thing I took from the session is that Hercules’s choice can be introduced in a single lesson. I am now thinking about a way to make this the focus of a discrete session – one where students get an opportunity to think about choices and about the implications of what they choose for the future.

More soon…!

Tuesday 1 September 2020

Meeting Hercules: with students at a primary school's Autism Base

A couple of years ago, I experienced for the first time something key for the classical myth-themed resources I have been designing for autistic children. This was when Effie Kostara and I visited a local primary school with an autism base while Effie was working at Roehampton as a Researcher for the autism project. 

Two classes, each comprised of students aged between 8 and 11, took part in a lesson called “Meeting Hercules.” Each lesson was based on the first of a set of activities I had developed several months earlier and for which Effie had written a Teachers’ Guide. Effie observed both of the sessions, and I observed the second one and ended up taking part as well. I hadn’t planned this but did so on the teacher’s invitation.

Right now, I am revisiting the report that Effie wrote afterwards as I prepare the activities for a book I am writing. I am now going to run though what happened in the first of the lessons. I’ll follow this with some reflections what happened and the implications for my project. Then, in the next posting, I’ll share what happened in the other lesson.

The focus was different in some respects from what I had been envisaging. What I had designed was a set of activities where, starting with “Meeting Hercules”, students would go increasingly deeply into a particular mythological encounter where – at a curious place – Hercules meets two women who task him with making a choice between two distinct ways of life. 

But what happened at the school were two stand-alone, one-off lessons. Both of these lessons followed the standard four-part structure for lessons at the school: introduction, discussion, activity, more complex activity.

The first lesson – for a class of 5 children, all boys – formed the History lesson of the day. The teacher began by showing the class a photo of the chimneypiece panel – the artwork on which the activities are based.

Choice of Hercules chimneypiece panel, Adam Room, Grove House, Roehampton.
Photo by Marina Vorobieva

Without saying anything about classical myth or about the kind of artwork the panel is, the teacher asked who the people in the scene might be. Straightaway, the children became super animated and came up with all sorts of possibilities as to who the figures are and how they are interacting with one another. They were especially interested in the woman on the right – asking, for example, whether she is a servant, and wondering if she is saying “help!” 

After that, the teacher introduced Hercules – as someone who is always taking part in adventures. She showed them a picture of Hercules wearing the lionskin and wielding his club.

Hercules wearing lionskin -
from image shown to children during
 "Meeting Hercules" lesson

The teacher asked the students what they thought now about Hercules on the picture of the panel. What especially interested them was how adventurous they thought Hercules was. They said that he looked like an adventurous person but the he wasn’t being very active here. One pupil commented that he looks like he is thinking. Another commented that he looks like he is sleeping. Another said that he looks to be thinking about his next adventure.

When the teacher asked what he was holding, they got very interested in his club and how it could function as a weapon.

The teacher asked next what kind of adventure Hercules might be going to face. Among the responses was that he was going to rescue someone; meanwhile, another pupil said that Hercules was going to look for a lost temple.

The teacher then told the students about one of the labours performed by Hercules – his encounter with the Lernean Hydra. The children loved hearing about this encounter, and asked for more monster stories in the future. 

Then the children were given a picture of Hercules: the very provisional one I had created before Steve Simons created the high-quality vector drawings of the panel.

Hercules drawing used during the class
Hercules drawing created since the class took place by Steve Simons

The students were set a task – of colour in Hercules. A lot of thought went into which colours to choose and which colours to use for different parts of the drawing.

For the final part of the lesson, the students were asked to look again at the two picture of Hercules and compare and contrast them. They were asked to write down the words they were thinking of to describe Hercules. As they did this, the students continued to talk about the hero and how adventurous he is. They wanted to learn more about his labours.

I’ll end with a few things that especially struck me about the lesson. One was that knowing who Hercules is isn’t vital: the students made some thoughtful observations about the panel, and the communications between the three people, before they found out who Hercules is and who the women might be.

But what the lesson also showed is just how much the students enjoyed finding out about Hercules, especially as someone who performed tasks, particular tasks involving monsters. The word “adventurous” is one that kept coming up. As a result, I am planning more than I had initially intended around different aspects of Hercules, and how these form a backdrop to what is taking place on the panel. Indeed, what is taking place on the panel can itself count as an adventure.

The session has also shown me that, as we well as producing a series of lessons about Hercules, it is worth developing standalone sessions. I’ll say more about this in due course.

In the next posing, I shall turn to the second session which followed the same broad structure but took some distinctive turns…