The Final Culminating Activity for my Grade 12 course will be a multi-genre project and presentation providing students with the opportunity to synthesize their learning from the semester and demonstrate their learning achievements in the areas of reading, writing, oral communication, and media studies.
A few weeks ago, I had the students each select a relatively recent novel from a list I’d created based on identities, the theme that has loosely tied the semester together. We’ve been considering identities that we create on our own, those shaped by our biggest influences, and those scripted by society.
Though we are still three weeks away from the Letter of Intent that each student must write for me, and another month from the first draft of the assignment, the requirement that they both select their novel and post a related reading reflection on their student blog has encouraged students to get a copy in hand and, in most cases, delve into it. I’m glad to see them starting well in advance, because I know that’s going to translate into more considered, interesting projects.
As an aside, I tried to emphasize relatively contemporary novels in the list from which students could choose. I had a couple of reasons for doing so. First, I wanted students to exit high school with at least a passing familiarity with modern, and possibly Canadian, fiction. Second, and perhaps more importantly, I surmised that the material available online for students to pillage and plagiarize would be much smaller, and therefore much less tempting, for more recent and sometimes obscure novels. We shall see.
For those of you who are interested, here’s the list that we’re working from this year. Next time around I hope to remove all of the older works and include more current (mostly Canadian) novels.
- Mercy Among the Children — David Adams Richards
- The Lost Highway — David Adams Richards
- The Friends of Meager Fortune — David Adams Richards
- Alias Grace — Margaret Atwood
- The Handmaid’s Tale — Margaret Atwood
- The Blind Assassin — Margaret Atwood
- The Penelopiad — Margaret Atwood (read with Homer’s Odyssey)
- Possession — A. S. Byatt
- The True History of the Kelly Gang — Peter Carey
- The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay — Michael Chabon
- The Jade Peony – Wayson Choy
- The River Thieves — Michael Crummey
- J-Pod — Douglas Coupland
- Fifth Business — Robertson Davies
- The Piano Man’s Daughter — Timothy Findley
- The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime — Mark Haddon
- A Thousand Splendid Suns — Khaleid Hossein
- Never Let Me Go — Kazuo Ishigiro
- The Colony of Unrequited Dreams — Wayne Johnston
- The Poisonwood Bible — Barbara Kingsolver

- The Stone Angel — Margaret Laurence
- The Way the Crow Flies — Ann-Marie MacDonald
- Two Solitudes — Hugh Maclennan
- No Great Mischief — Alistair MacLeod
- Life of Pi — Yann Martel
- Such a Long Journey — Rohinton Mistry
- Anil’s Ghost – Michael Ondaatje
- The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz — Mordecai Richler
- A Complicated Kindness — Miriam Toews
- The Stone Carvers — Jane Urquhart
- The Englishman’s Boy — Guy Vanderhaeghe
- The In-Between World of Vikram Lall — M. G. Vassanji
- I Am Charlotte Simmons — Tom Wolfe
- English Passengers — Matthew Kneale