[eng] Addressing gender-related topics in the English as an additional language (EAL)
context has been defined as an important teaching goal in the curriculum
requirements set by the recent Ley Orgánica por la que se Modifica la Ley
Orgánica de Educación (LOMLOE). However, it is an area that has not yet been
fully explored in EAL classrooms. This education proposal aims at tackling this
absence through the deconstruction of gender stereotypes, with a particular
emphasis on ‘the beauty ideal’ in literary texts, and the extension of their influence
through popular culture.
To this end, students of the first course of Batxillerat will work with two different
narratives. First, the portrayal of Helen of Troy in Greek mythology and artistic
representations, as an example of the beauty standard and how the stereotypes
around the concept of the ‘beauty myth’ have been constant in Western literature
and other media. Second, students will have to engage with a critique of the
‘beauty myth’ through a careful reading and analysis of the first part of the poem
“Beautiful” by Carol Ann Duffy (2002), where the author rewrites the story of
Helen. By using authentic materials and their correlating activities, students will
not only have the opportunity to develop multiple competencies gathered in the
LOMLOE — including critical thinking, linguistic communication and value and
respect towards gender differences, rights and equality, amongst others —, but
also the different skills and grammar involved in the development of their learning
progress. Finally, students will use all the analytical elements, vocabulary and
grammatical structures worked in the previous sessions in their final project,
which will consist in creating a comic about the ‘beauty myth’ through the figure
of Helen. The ultimate purpose of this learning situation is to introduce a topic
which is meaningful beyond the limits of the classroom because students must
become aware of different forms of oppression, normalised through myths, fairy
tales or stories that affect the way they understand gender and consequently the
construction of their own identit