13 easy, engaging lessons for Romeo and Juliet

by mindroar | Aug 22, 2021 | blog | 0 comments

Looking for lessons for Romeo and Juliet ? Are you teaching Romeo and Juliet in high school and desperately looking for activities and resources for the Shakespearean tragedy? Check out these 12 Romeo and Juliet teaching resources.

Pre-reading lessons

1. shakespearean insult lesson.

If your students are unfamiliar with English from the Elizabethan era, it can be a steep learning curve. And it can make it difficult to teach Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet .

Students often feel intimidated by the language and find it hard to get into. And if you’re teaching one of Shakespeare’s plays for the first time, you can feel intimidated yourself. I know I was when I first started!

A great way to overcome this fear factor is to have some fun activities for teaching Shakespearean language and the specific play you will be teaching.

One of my favorite ways to start any unit about Shakespeare is by having a Shakespearean Insult Lesson (see h ere for my blog post about it and here for my digital and in-class lesson ).

Not only is the Shakespearean insult lesson lots of fun, but it also helps reduce the fear factor of Shakespearean language.

2. Watch a video about Shakespeare and his plays

Another great way to introduce students to Shakespeare and his plays is to watch a short video about Shakespeare’s life and his tragedies.

There are heaps of videos around, but some of my favorites are the Crash Course videos: this one , which is all about Shakespeare’s life, and this one , which is about Shakespeare’s tragedies.

Both videos are short and sweet, less than fifteen minutes. The video about Shakespeare’s tragedies covers King Lear in more depth, so you can also stop the video at about eight minutes and fifteen seconds if you’re short on time.

These are also great activities to set as homework because they are short and easy to get into. Plus, if you had to choose between a video and solving algebraic equations, which would you choose?

The videos are funny and engaging, and they use illustration, a presenter, and quotes to delve deeper into Shakespeare’s life and plays. That series also has a video about Shakespeare’s comedies, just in case you teach any of those too.

If you’re looking for a worksheet to go with the videos, check out our Shakespeare life and plays bundle on TPT.

While reading lessons

Now, once you’ve introduced Shakespeare, gotten your student more comfortable with his language, and begun reading Romeo and Juliet , you’ll probably be wondering what other lessons for Romeo and Juliet you can use in class.

1. Romeo and Juliet Crash Course Literature videos

The Crash Course Literature series also has two videos specifically about Romeo and Juliet . Again, I rate these highly as they’re short, entertaining, and cover important content such as plot, characters, and themes.

If you’re looking for worksheets for these, we have some too. Check out the Romeo and Juliet mini bundle , which has worksheets for both of the videos.

Be warned that the videos do have plot spoilers though, so if your students don’t already realize that R+J die, you may want to hold off until you’ve read the whole play.

2. Romeo and Juliet Text Messaging Activity

This great lesson by The English Teacher’s Pet asks students to choose a scene from the play and recreate the scene through text messages on Romeo’s phone. And the best part? This lesson plan for Romeo and Juliet is free.

This Romeo and Juliet activity includes an explanation of the activity and a model answer, an evaluation sheet, and a text-message printable worksheet for students to write on.

3. Read some comics

These comics by David Rickert give an introduction to the main events of each act and have activities that explain an important concept or literary device.

Using comics is a great way to take away that fear that students often have of not understanding Shakespearean language. As an added bonus, the visuals in comics help with comprehension.

4. Learn about the characters using body biographies

These body biographies by Danielle Knight of Study All Knight are another great lesson for Romeo and Juliet . In the activity, students analyze characters from the play in an engaging way. In completing the projects, students have to:

  • find direct quotes
  • analyze how the character has changed (or stayed the same)
  • explore the characters’ inner thoughts/feelings
  • analyze the characters’ values and beliefs
  • explore the characters’ strengths/weaknesses
  • identify the characters’ goal/s in the play
  • describe what the character/s look like
  • choose the characters’ best accomplishment/s
  • identify symbols
  • and describe the characters’ background, family, personality, and conflict

5. Using Romeo and Juliet to learn how to integrate quotes and paraphrasing in literary analysis

This lesson helps students understand how to quote and paraphrase in literary analysis using Romeo and Juliet quotes. Included in the lesson, useable in both print and digital, are:

  • a scaffolded introduction with examples of how to integrate quotes
  • independent practice with rubrics
  • suggested answers
  • an editable homework task and quiz
  • bellringers for the play

6. Romeo and Juliet photo booth printable props

This Romeo and Juliet activity would be a great way to get students to revise the play as they go. At the end of each scene, students could do a fun comic-book style photo-booth scene summary that they act out, write dialogue for, and then print and put in a comic-book template .

It would not only be fun, but it would also help students identify the important elements of each scene and remember what happened in the plot of the play.

After reading lessons

So you’ve finished reading or watching Romeo and Juliet , and now you come to the pointy end where you need to review before an assessment task. These great Romeo and Juliet review activities are sure to be a hit with your students.

1. Digital escape room review

This digital escape room review by Gamewise is a great no-prep escape room that is paperless and completely online. You just buy the game, give students the link and password, and set them loose.

Even better, for students to get to the completion page, they need to answer all of the questions correctly.

The game covers topics such as:

  • the plot of the play
  • the main characters in the play
  • language and technique analysis
  • close reading of Romeo’s soliloquy in the tomb

2. Escape room review for Romeo and Juliet

If you prefer your students to do a paper-based escape room, this one by Nouvelle ELA can be used as an escape room with clues hidden around the room. Or it can be used as a breakout box, with students remaining in their desks to complete the tasks. It covers elements such as:

  • figurative language
  • plus, it can be increased in difficulty using ‘You’ve been poisoned’ cards

Romeo and Juliet movie lesson plans

If your students are going to watch a video version of the play, this lesson for Romeo and Juliet helps students compare the Baz Luhrman movie adaptation to the play.

This film to play comparison by Visual Thinking Classroom is a great Romeo and Juliet movie lesson plan because it includes a no-prep instructional slide deck, as well as scaffolding to help students compare the original play to the Baz Luhrman adaptation.

The Romeo and Juliet movie lesson plan also helps students focus on important elements such as characters, story elements, and important moments in the play.

Romeo and Juliet entire unit lesson plans

Now, maybe you’ve read through all of the Romeo and Juliet lesson plans so far, but what you’re really after are Romeo and Juliet unit lesson plans for a whole unit instead of individual lessons. If so, keep reading.

1. Laura Randazzo’s Romeo and Juliet unit lesson plans

This five-week Romeo and Juliet unit of lesson plans contains the following:

  • a calendar with suggested pacing and activities
  • scene-by-scene study questions in both PDF and Google Drive versions
  • life in Elizabethan England team speech activity including many topics and a rubric
  • a lecture and craft activity about Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre
  • a Shakespearean comedy presentation about puns and oxymorons
  • a presentation about the power of tone and line delivery with interactive activities for 27 students
  • Shakespearean sonnet lecture and creative writing activity
  • one-question quizzes to hold students accountable for reading
  • Shakespearean slam contest
  • art assignment to illustrate Mercutio’s Act 1, Scene 4 monologue
  • an Act 2 prologue activity
  • plot timeline to review play’s chronology
  • quote review challenge
  • 50-question exam using matching, true/false and quote identification
  • in-class end-of-unit essay prompts

2. The Daring English Teacher’s Romeo and Juliet Teaching Bundle

This final resource with lessons for Romeo and Juliet is this differentiated teaching bundle by The Daring English Teacher. This bundle includes writing prompts, cloze activities, character analysis, and vocabulary.

But one of the best things about this product is that it is easy to differentiate – the one unit of work enables you to run Romeo and Juliet ESL lessons but can also be adapted to suit other learners too.

Want more English lesson and resource ideas?

Hopefully, the resources listed above have been helpful for your lesson plans for Romeo and Juliet. If you are an English teacher, you may be interested in my other blog posts with lesson ideas and resources for other texts, including:

  • 12 excellent teaching resources for Macbeth – make Macbeth easy
  • Teaching Lord of the Flies: 12 awesome activities & wonderful worksheets
  • How to improve research skills when you have NO time
  • 5 awesome free resources to teach Shakespeare
  • Fun, engaging, and easy Shakespearean insults lesson you have to try
  • 9 quick and easy study skills lesson plans for high school

The Daring English Teacher on Teachers Pay Teachers Secondary ELA resources Middle School ELA High School English

10 Activities for Teaching Romeo and Juliet

romeo and juliet text messages assignment

Romeo and Juliet is one of those classic pieces of literature I think everyone has read. Even students who haven’t read the Shakespeare play have probably heard of the story or will relate to the plot as it has been retold in various films and literature. If you need some fresh ideas before you start this unit, read on. 

Here are 10 activities for teaching Romeo and Juliet

1. relatable bell ringers.

If you’re going to focus on a Shakespeare play, you must go all in. Immersing students into a unit from start to finish is such a perfect way to help students understand a topic in-depth. Start off each class with these Shakespeare Bell Ringers . Each one includes a famous Shakespearean quote and a quick writing prompt. Students will explore various writing styles based on the quote.

2. Character Focus

Help your students identify and organize characters with these graphic organizers . This resource has two sets for almost every character in the play. Students will identify characters as round or flat, static or dynamic, and other basic qualities. This will also require them to provide textual evidence. The second organizer focuses on tracing emotions and motivations throughout the play. It’s a creative way for students to organize the play’s characters and is also a great resource for ESL students and struggling readers. 

3. Get Interactive

I can remember interactive notebooks becoming all the rage. And while the paper notebooks are creative, a motivator for some students, and it’s generally pretty easy to put an interactive spin on old ideas already at hand. Having a digital version is just one more layer to add something unique to the interactive notebook. My digital notebook resource can work as its own unit and includes analysis activities covering characters, symbols, major events, writing tasks, and response questions. Digital notebooks are great for classrooms trying to limit paper use, use more technology, prepare students for tech demands, and for any classes that need to work with mobile options.

4. Engaging Writing Tasks

Help students understand and analyze the play by giving them unique writing assignments. Have students explore different writing styles, analyze universal themes, and study character development. My Writing Tasks resource does all this and more. Each act has its own unique writing assignment, and I’ve included brainstorming organizers for each. You’ll be able to use this with differentiated instruction, and there are several additional resources and organizers included. 

5. Read “Cloze”ly

Prep passages for students to summarize to help them understand events from the play. This is an ideal activity for review, comprehension, or even assessment. Cloze reading is an ideal way to help students understand what is happening. Cut your prep time down by using this resource, with 6 passages ready to use AND written in modern-day English. Use as an individual assignment or collaborative activity. 

6. Use Office Supplies

Increase student engagement with hands-on activities using sticky notes. You can use various colors to coordinate different aspects of study (literary elements, major events, character development, etc). It’s an easy and quick way for students to organize thoughts and notes, and the bits of information can be manipulated and moved around for different assignments. Students can gather relevant information for various essays, or can organize their sticky notes in a way that makes sense to them (by topic, or chronologically, as an example). Check out my Sticky Note Literary Analysis activity that includes 12 sticky note organizers. 

7. Make Use of Bookmarks

There are many creative avenues when it comes to bookmarks. Have an activity where students pick a favorite quote, draw a scene, or draw what they know about the play prior to reading (they can use the back to draw after reading the play). Consider a foldable version like this one where you can jam-pack a variety of questions, vocabulary, literary analysis and more. These are foldable, interactive, fun, engaging – and it saves you time passing out one activity to be used throughout the play. 

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8. Plan an Escape 

Escape rooms live up to the hype. Challenge your students with a fun and engaging review escape challenge. Have students work together in groups to complete collaboratively and spark authentic discussion. This escape room activity includes 40 timeline events to sort from the play correctly.

9. Don’t Forget Vocabulary

Vocabulary is an important aspect of understanding any work, but Shakespeare is on a whole other level. In addition to reading an older version of English in poetic form, students must grasp key vocabulary to understand the play more deeply. Engage your students with hands-on activities to learn vocabulary, whether that be through graphic organizers, visual dictionaries, or word puzzles. Check out my ready-to-print vocabulary packet that includes word lists, puzzles, organizers and quizzes for the entire play. 

10. Practice Annotations

Start at the very beginning with an engaging activity for the prologue. This will allow students to explore the Shakespearean language and the set-up to the drama that is Romeo and Juliet’s tragedy. Using this resource , students will read and annotate the prologue, be introduced to Elizabethan English, and have context and background information before reading the play. Students then will rewrite the prologue in modern-day English following the same sonnet form. I love having students explore language, and this activity fits perfectly into the unit. 

If you’re starting fresh with activities to fill a unit, or you’re looking to refresh your tried-and-true activities, check out my 5-week unit plan for Romeo and Juliet here . It’s full of goodies including a pacing guide, pre-reading activities, bookmarks, vocabulary, passages, writing tasks, essays, review activities, and more. 

Put a new spin on the classic tragedy by refreshing your activities and finding new ways to present to students. Just a few simple updates and changes can keep students engaged and help them relate to the material. I love seeing what others do in their classrooms, so please share your favorite ideas in the comments below. 

Is Teaching Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet Still Revelant?

In an earlier blog post , I discuss if teaching Shakespeare is still relevant.

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romeo and juliet text messages assignment

Romeo and Juliet

William shakespeare, ask litcharts ai: the answer to your questions.

Love and Violence Theme Icon

Love and Violence

“These violent delights have violent ends,” says Friar Laurence in an attempt to warn Romeo , early on in the play, of the dangers of falling in love too hard or too fast. In the world of Romeo and Juliet , love is not pretty or idealized—it is chaotic and dangerous. Throughout the play, love is connected through word and action with violence, and Romeo and Juliet ’s deepest mutual expression of love occurs when…

Love and Violence Theme Icon

Though much of Romeo and Juliet is driven by the choices its main characters make and the actions they take, there is a dark undercurrent running throughout the play: the suggestion that fate, not free will, is behind the entirety of the human experience. Repeated references to fate and fortune throughout the play underscore Shakespeare’s suggestion that humans are merely pawns in a larger cosmic scheme—invisible but inescapable fates, Shakespeare argues throughout the play, steer…

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Individuals vs. Society

When Romeo and Juliet fall in love, their individual desire for each other—which flies in the face of their families’ “ancient grudge” and thus the social order of Verona, a city run by noble families like the Montagues and Capulets—places them in direct opposition with the society of which they’re both a part. As Romeo and Juliet fall deeper and deeper in love, they come up against their friends, their families, and the political and…

Individuals vs. Society Theme Icon

Language and Wordplay

Shakespearean scholars have identified upwards of 175 instances of puns and wordplay throughout the text of Romeo and Juliet . Though the play is, perhaps, Shakespeare’s most famous tragedy, there is no shortage of comic relief throughout the action—and the play’s comedy often comes from Shakespeare’s free dispensation of double entendre, homonyms, puns, and sexually explicit twists of phrase. Throughout the play, Shakespeare uses language and wordplay to radical ends: language is a tool of…

Language and Wordplay Theme Icon

Family and Duty

Though the forbidden love between Romeo and Juliet lives at the heart of the play and drives much of its action, their love is only forbidden in the first place due to the “ancient grudge,” or feud, between the noble houses of Capulet and Montague. The source of the age-old fight between the two families is never explained or even hinted at—all that is clear is that these houses loathe each other and will leap…

Family and Duty Theme Icon

IMAGES

  1. Romeo And Juliet Text Messaging Assignment by Hannah

    romeo and juliet text messages assignment

  2. Romeo And Juliet Text Messaging Assignment by Hannah

    romeo and juliet text messages assignment

  3. Romeo And Juliet Text Messaging Assignment by Hannah

    romeo and juliet text messages assignment

  4. Romeo And Juliet Text Messaging Assignment by Hannah

    romeo and juliet text messages assignment

  5. Romeo & Juliet(Act 2-Scene 2)Text Message

    romeo and juliet text messages assignment

  6. TextMessagingwithRomeoandJulietaFunLesson-1.pdf

    romeo and juliet text messages assignment

VIDEO

  1. Romeo and Juliet at Alter HS

  2. English, Romeo and Juliet Assignment ruined by Mangy Mutt 😡📝🦮#DogAteMyHomework

  3. Mortimer In: The Romeo And Juliet Experience

  4. Act 2 Scene 2 Romeo and Juliet (Text Conversation)

  5. Romeo And Juliet Soundtrack Project

  6. ‘Prologue' Analysis from Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet

COMMENTS

  1. Text Messaging with Romeo and Juliet- a Fun Lesson

    This seven page document gives a fun- yet school appropriate- lesson for students to recreate a scene from Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Included is the assignment and evaluation explained, an example to model from, and printable sheets of texting balloons for filling in the texts. Ready to print and pass out; your students will love the update!

  2. PDF ROMEO & JULIET

    Courting Via Text Messages (assignment) Act 1 Scene 5 - The Capulet's Part & Romeo and Juliet's first conversation (7 pages long; read all) Act 2 Scene 2 The Blacony Scene & the exchange of love vows with a promise to marry. (9 pages long; read all) Act 2 Scene 4 Romeo with his friends and the nurse establishing a plan for the wedding.

  3. PDF Romeo & Juliet Text Message Activity

    D i re c ti on s: I f Romeo and Juliet were alive today, they would most likely send each other text messages instead of exchanging lines from Juliet's balcony. Choose SEV EN specific lines (they do not have to be sequential) from the famous balcony scene in Act II, Scene 2 of Rome o & J ul i e t and rewrite them as text

  4. Romeo and Juliet Activities, Teaching Ideas, and Lessons

    Romeo and Juliet Unit Plan. The unifying elements of this Romeo and Juliet unit plan are the Interactive Notes and Acting Troupe Drama Activities. They're incorporated through the entire unit plan for Romeo and Juliet, ensuring that your students not only understand Shakespeare's language but also bring it to life.The interactive notes help students decipher the text and encourage critical ...

  5. Romeo and Juliet: Courting Through Text Message

    Description. For this assignment students are asked to rewrite Romeo and Juliet's conversation from the balcony scene (act two, scene two) using text messages. They are asked to look back at the beginning of the scene for what they talk about. Students can start anywhere they'd like in the scene and are asked to specify where they are ...

  6. Romeo and Juliet: A Free Texting Assignment

    Products. $160.64 $286.85 Save $126.21. View Bundle. Ninth Grade English ELA Year Long or Semester Long Unit & Save over 30%. I have taught ninth grade for most of my twenty-seven years in the classroom and bundled everything that you will ever need. I've included lessons for The Odyssey, Romeo, and Juliet, and A Sound of Thunder, Weekly ...

  7. 13 easy, engaging lessons for Romeo and Juliet

    4. Learn about the characters using body biographies. These body biographies by Danielle Knight of Study All Knight are another great lesson for Romeo and Juliet. In the activity, students analyze characters from the play in an engaging way. In completing the projects, students have to: find direct quotes.

  8. 10 Activities for Teaching Romeo and Juliet

    Here are 10 activities for teaching Romeo and Juliet. 1. Relatable Bell Ringers. If you're going to focus on a Shakespeare play, you must go all in. Immersing students into a unit from start to finish is such a perfect way to help students understand a topic in-depth. Start off each class with these Shakespeare Bell Ringers.

  9. PDF Texting with Romeo and Juliet

    enemies. Romeo and Juliet, nevertheless, have found an ingenious way of communicating with each other: text messaging! Due to a careless moment, however, Romeo's cell phone was destroyed when he dropped it on Verona's cobblestone streets. Your job is to recreate the text messages that were lost from Romeo's phone. Assignment

  10. Text Messagingwith Romeoand Julieta Fun Lesson-1

    messaging! Due to a careless moment, however, Romeo's cell phone was destroyed when he dropped it on Verona's cobblestone streets. Your job is to recreate the text messages that were lost from Romeo's phone. Assignment Working individually, completely recreate a scene in the play as it would be communicated through text messaging.

  11. PDF ROMEO AND JULIET

    version of Romeo and Juliet. • Instruct them to navigate to Act 1, Scene 5 (0:30:30-0:35:15), where Romeo and Juliet meet for the first time at the Capulet Ball. • During this scene, two 'star-crossed' lovers have just met at a party and it was love at first sight. The attraction is mutual, but they're from two feuding families with ...

  12. DOC Chandler Unified School District / Home Page

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  13. Romeo and Juliet (complete text) :|: Open Source Shakespeare

    Go, some of you, whoe'er you find attach. Pitiful sight! here lies the county slain, And Juliet bleeding, warm, and newly dead, Who here hath lain these two days buried. 3145. Go, tell the prince: run to the Capulets: Raise up the Montagues: some others search: We see the ground whereon these woes do lie;

  14. Left on Read: Romeo and Juliet Text Message Paraphrase Assignment

    Students will paraphrase Act 4 Scene 1 of Romeo and Juliet by translating the most important lines into text language and utilizing images to accurately portray both the text and characters featured in this scene. This is a perfect assignment for either a writing assignment, formative assessment, or reading comprehension check. Total Pages.

  15. Ms. Silverman English 9H || Romeo and Juliet Extra Credit Assignments

    Romeo and Juliet - Extra Credit Assignments. Choose one assignment to complete. Your assignment must fulfill all the criteria, be neat, legible, and demonstrate considerable effort in order to earn full credit. ... Write a modern correspondence between Romeo and Juliet. Make the format e-mail, IM chat, blog, text message, or social networking ...

  16. Romeo and Juliet Themes

    Shakespearean scholars have identified upwards of 175 instances of puns and wordplay throughout the text of Romeo and Juliet.Though the play is, perhaps, Shakespeare's most famous tragedy, there is no shortage of comic relief throughout the action—and the play's comedy often comes from Shakespeare's free dispensation of double entendre, homonyms, puns, and sexually explicit twists of ...

  17. PDF Courting

    messaging! Due to a careless moment, however, Romeo's cell phone was destroyed when he dropped it into his bathtub. Your job is to recreate the text messages that were lost from Romeo's phone. Assignment Working individually, completely recreate a scene in the play as it would be communicated through text messaging. Be sure to do the following: 1.

  18. Romeo and Juliet

    Toggle Contents Act and scene list. Characters in the Play ; Entire Play The prologue of Romeo and Juliet calls the title characters "star-crossed lovers"—and the stars do seem to conspire against these young lovers.Romeo is a Montague, and Juliet a Capulet. Their families are enmeshed in a feud, but the moment they meet—when Romeo and his friends attend a party at Juliet's house in ...

  19. Romeo and Juliet Writing Assignment

    Included in this Romeo and Juliet Writing Text Message Assignment: ️ Star-Crossed Texting Romeo and Juliet Writing Assignment: Share this ready-to-print, eye-catching graphic organizer with students with two cell phones where they can write a texting conversation between Romeo and Juliet after they meet at the Capulet party. Students will use ...

  20. PDF Performance Assessment: Performing and Analyzing a Scene of Romeo and

    Your assignment is to work with a group to interpret, rehearse, and perform a scene from Romeo and Julietas well as to provide an actor's or director's notebook for this scene that analyzes your character and the overall scene. Steps. 1. Read your assigned scene several times to become familiar with it and to clarify meaning.

  21. Khan Academy and Microsoft partner to expand access to AI tools that

    In English class, Tatum and his classmates were asked to read "Romeo and Juliet"and then write a story that changed some of the scenes. Tatum prompted Khanmigo to describe a scene he had trouble remembering. "It was a genuine question I had about Act 1 Scene 3," he said.

  22. 'Verona's Romeo & Juliet' Release Date Set Following ...

    Set in 1301 at the end of Medieval times, Verona's Romeo & Juliet finds our most famous star-crossed lovers turning the tides on the history Shakespeare based his own story on, as they reveal ...

  23. Romeo and Juliet Text Assignment by Common Cents Assignments

    This assignment will task students with translating Shakespeare's early modern English into modern English relevant to them. They will create a text conversation between Romeo and Juliet for the famous balcony scene. Included is the complete lesson plan with learning target, "I can" statement, warm-...