Myths Secondary
Myths Secondary
Myths Secondary
Tricksters in Mythology
By Charlotte Rance
Segment: Secondary
Level: Intermediate
Materials: The worksheet and text (divided into A, B, C sections)
The lesson
1. Write the following questions on the board and ask students to discuss them with a partner:
Do you ever play tricks or jokes on your friends and family? Can you think of any characters from
films or books that like to play tricks on people? Encourage the students to extend their answers.
2. Explain that in today’s lesson you will be looking at the character of ‘the trickster’. Elicit ideas from
the class about what role this character plays in stories. Encourage students to use their examples
from the discussion at the beginning of class to support their ideas.
Background Information
Tricksters are characters that can be found in the myths of many different cultures. They are known
for their habit of breaking rules, and they often openly question and mock authority figures. Tricksters
are typically cunning and intelligent, and they can often change their shape. The role of the trickster
is to bring changes to society: their jokes often make the other characters angry, but the results often
benefit everyone around them.
3. Hand out the worksheet and ask students to look at Exercise A. Explain that words 1 – 8 are all
connected to tricksters. Ask students to work on their own to match the words to their definitions
(a – h). Once students have completed the activity, ask them to check their answers with their
neighbour, then confirm the answers as a class.
Answers
4. Explain to the students that they will learn about three famous tricksters. Arrange the class into
three groups: (A, B, C). Give each student a copy of the relevant reading passage for their group.
Ask the students to read their paragraph, then summarise it with the members of their group.
Reading Activity
This is a typical ‘jigsaw reading’ activity. This is an information gap approach that emphasises
cooperative learning. Typically, students are given part of a text to read and become an expert on.
They then teach this information to the other members of their group. This strategy helps students to
improve their summarising skills and encourages group work and real-life communication.
6. Explain to the class that they will now share what they have learned with their classmates.
Rearrange the students into groups of three, with one student from each of the original groups
(ABC, ABC, ABC).
7. Ask students to complete the final two columns of the table from Exercise B with the information
they have learned from their new groups. Once students have completed their tables, take
feedback as a class on what students have learned about the three tricksters.
8. Tell students they will now work in pairs to research further information on the topic of tricksters.
Explain that students should give a short presentation to their classmates (2 – 3 minutes only).
Write the following two options on the board: A. Find out about another trickster character from
another country’s myths and legends or B. Learn and retell a story of Loki, Anansi or Coyote.
Below you will find some suggested websites that the students can use for this task. If you do not
have access to computers in the classroom, this activity could be done as homework.
Website Suggestions
• https://www.britannica.com/topic/Ananse
• https://www.britannica.com/topic/Loki
• https://mythology.net/mythical-creatures/trickster/
• https://www.britannica.com/topic/Coyote-mythology
9. Allow students time to present their findings to the class. This can be done during the following
lesson if necessary.
B) Coyote
Coyote is a key figure in the Native American mythology of the Navajo tribe.
He is a shadowy character who is sometimes funny but sometimes fearsome.
Coyote is depicted with many negative traits. He is greedy, vain, and can be
foolish, but he is also shown to be cunning and sometimes powerful. An example
of this is the story of Coyote and the Giant, where he convinces the giant that if he
broke his leg and then healed it, the Giant would be able to run as fast as Coyote.
Like many of the other tricksters in mythology, he fights against authority and
often brings chaos to those around him. In Navajo culture, the coyote is an omen of unfortunate
events. There is a saying that if a coyote crosses your path, you should turn around and go back
without completing your journey.
C) Anansi
Anansi is one of the most important characters of West African and Caribbean folklore.
Although he often acts and appears as a man, Anansi is actually a spider. Depictions of
Anansi sometimes show him looking like an ordinary spider, however sometimes he
is a spider with a human face, or like a human with spider elements, such as eight legs.
Anansi can control the weather, for example bringing the rain to stop fires. In some
beliefs, he is responsible for creating the sun, the stars and the moon. Anansi has a wife, Aso, and seven
children, all of whom appear in his stories along with other characters such as Goat, Monkey and Rat.
Anansi is often celebrated as a symbol of slave resistance as, like other tricksters, he uses his cunning
and trickery to take advantage of his oppressors. Slaves would tell stories of how Anansi helped them to
plan resistance against their masters. Stories of Anansi became so important that, in some cultures, all
folklore stories are known as “spider-tales”, even if Anansi doesn’t appear in the story.
Exercise B
Mythology
Further 1. 1. 1.
Information
2. 2. 2.