In this creative and analytical lesson, students will explore character development, relationships, and key events in a literary text by crafting a series of social media "tweets" from the perspective of assigned characters. Using a tweet generator tool, students will write 2–3 tweets and a reply that reflect the character’s tone, personality, motivations, and experiences from the text. Through this activity, students will practice close reading, perspective-taking, and narrative sequencing while making meaningful connections between literature and modern modes of communication. The lesson concludes with peer interaction, as students review and reply to one another’s character tweets, reinforcing their understanding of character relationships and textual evidence.
Students will:
- Analyze characters’ thoughts, motivations, and relationships using textual evidence.
- Create original content (tweets + replies) in the voice of a literary character.
- Use creative digital storytelling to demonstrate understanding of characterization, plot, and theme.
- Analyze character interaction through tone, diction, and subtext in social media form.
Before the Lesson
-
Select the Text and Characters
- Choose the novel, play, or short story students are working with.
- Create a list of primary and secondary characters to assign or offer for student choice.
- Decide whether students will be assigned characters or select their own.
- Create and print (or upload) the assignment directions.
- Prepare a student planning worksheet for drafting tweets, noting chapter references, tracking/planning character voice/tone and interactions with others.
- Test and bookmark the tweet generator (e.g., https://simitator.com/generator/twitter/tweet).
Materials Needed
- Devices with internet access (for tweet creation or screenshots)
- Google Slides or link to the fake tweet generator (e.g., HERE or https://simitator.com/generator/twitter/tweet)
- Copies of the novel/play/story or reading material
- Character list with assignments (optional)
- Rubric for assessment (optional)
- Student worksheet or planning doc (for drafting tweets)
- Sharing slideshow (linked here)
- A character-appropriate profile name and image
- Tweet tone and content that match the character’s personality and situation
- A reply to another character’s tweet that reveals their relationship (either directly or subtly)
- Optional: Create more tweets from other characters for context