Merchant of Venice might be a politically incorrect play, but it is too good for us to ignore. While it makes moderns uncomfortable because the Jew is made to forcibly convert in the end, it is – particularly for its time – an anti-anti-Semitic play.

The plot, the speeches, and the themes all deserve attention and affection – and this simple set of homeschool lesson plans will help you build just that.

Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice for Kids

Merchant of Venice’s schemes and antics appeal to kids. They appreciate the obsurdity of requiring a pound of flesh for a bad loan, and also the trick that the wives play on their husbands in the end. Shylock’s laments about his runaway daughter are funny (Oh my daughter! Oh my ducats!) as are the overacted suitors being foiled by the casket test.

Merchant of Venice is a great play to engage and amuse children with Shakespeare.

1. Introduce Merchant of Venice

We always begin our study of a new play by reading a picture book version. Far from being a “spoiler,” a good retelling introduces the story and makes it easier to interpret the original play afterwards.

The retelling we used was the one found in Leon Garfield’s Stories from Shakespeare


2. Memorize Lines from Merchant of Venice

There are so many good lines to choose from in Merchant of Venice – it was hard to pick!

Here’s what we went with:

The man that hath no music in himself,

Nor is not moved with concord of sweet sounds,

Is fit for treasons, stratagems, and spoils;

The motions of his spirit are dull as night,

And his affections dark as Erebus.

Let no such man be trusted.

Mark the music.

and

All that glisters is not gold;

Often have you heard that told:

Many a man his life hath sold

But my outside to behold:

Gilded tombs do worms enfold.

and I couldn’t resist this one-liner:

You speak an infinite deal of nothing.

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3. Watch a Movie or Live Production of Merchant of Venice

If you can find a live stage performance, that’s always preferable (assuming it’s well done and appropriate) – but not usually possible.

I always attempt to have my children watch Shakespeare before reading him, though. After all, Shakespeare was meant to be seen – he wrote stage productions, not books.

For Merchant of Venice, we watched YouTube clips of the Al Pacino movie (the entire play in his version is, not surprisingly, not decent or appropriate). In class we watched the casket scenes and Portia’s defense of mercy from this version, and they made the play more intelligible and interesting.

But for a full-length version, we gathered with friends and watched the Laurence Olivier production.


4. Listen & Read Along to Merchant of Venice

After watching the play and getting a sense of its flow, characters, and action, we listen to an audio and read along.

The Archangel audio productions of Shakespeare are excellent, and Merchant of Venice was no exception.

Merchant of Venice is 2 hours, 16 minutes long, so this portion of the study will take 10 15-minute class periods.

5. Play Merchant of Venice

The way kids make Shakespeare their own and learn to love it is by playing with the stories in their own way. Sometimes that might be by building a scene with LEGO or by acting out the story with puppets or dolls or simply by dressing up and acting out their favorite parts in the yard.

One way to play with Merchant of Venice with a class might be to act out the court scene – with Shakespearean lines or by paraphrasing. The casket tests also make for great play-acting material.

Another way might be to draw a comic strip of their favorite story line – Shylock’s, the casket trials, or the ring trick.

By ending with some sort of artistic and personal rendition of the play, kids will identify with the story better and fond memories will last longer.

Put it together: Lesson Plans for Merchant of Venice

Class Time: 20 minutes, 2 times a week (plus time to watch the movie)

Total length: 8 weeks

Class Procedure

  • Repeat the lines to memorize together once or twice
  • Do the day’s lesson
  • Ask a question to get a narration/discussion going for a few minutes

Class Lessons

  1. Read 1/2 the picture book. Have a student narrate.
  2. Ask each student to name & describe a character. Read the rest of the picture book.
  3. Review play’s plot, then watch YouTube scenes of the casket & court speeches.
  4. (over the weekend, have a movie night)
  5. Discuss the story, plot line, and movie – ask kids for favorite parts or characters. Let them ask questions.
  6. Listen to 15 minutes of Merchant of Venice on audio while following along. (The Merchant of Venice is 2 hours 16 minutes, so this will take 10 class periods).
  7. Have students present either mimed or play acted scenes or present artwork done to tell the story.

 

 

Shakespeare Lesson Plans

As we study Shakespeare plays together in our homeschool, I am making available our lesson plans and resource lists. Here are the links to each of the plays we’ve studied so far. Included in each one is a downloadable pdf set with not only the lesson plans, but also the printable quote cue pages we use for memorizing select lines from each play!

Download the lesson plans and memory sheets:

How to have fun with Shakespeare for kids simply and easily, even if you think it's too hard – it's not!

Learn more about reading Shakespeare with kids.

Sign up and get instant access to all the Shakespeare memory sheets and lesson plans I’ve created to date.

4 Comments

  1. Thank you, Mystie! This is our Shakepeare play this term – we started reading the Garfield retelling last week. After reading/listening to the play myself, I’ve wondered how to deal with the anti-Semitism expressed by some of the characters (as well as the way Portia speaks about some of her suitors!). I also wondered about all the innuendo in the last act – seems a bit hard to skip altogether. How did you approach it? I suppose it’s not much worse then what my oldest two have encountered in the Iliad, and it might just go over my 9-year-old’s head, but this aspect of Shakespeare does bother me.

    1. The “I slept with the clerk last night” joke? We all got a kick out of it, actually. Even the kids who don’t know what “shared a bed” fully means know that married people share a bed and sleep next to each other – and also that the wives themselves were the ones with the rings the whole time. We all thought it was hilarious, and I didn’t even explain any of it to anyone.

      I think the Jew’s “do we not bleed” speech is the counter to the character’s anti-Semitism. Their remarks show that he has a right to be offended and his bitterness is understandable. He has a reason to hate and want revenge. But those who dig a pit fall into it – and the Christians end up having mercy and not exacting it.

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