Chanda's Secrets
Chanda's Secrets
Chanda's Secrets
Teachers Booklet
Introduction
Synopsis
Chanda Kabelo is an astonishingly perceptive 16-year-old girl living in the small fictional
city of Bonang in sub-Saharan Africa. Chanda is like any other teenager in many
respects, worrying about her exams and her relationship with her rebellious friend,
Esther. However, tragedy has struck her family in the past in the form of a mining
accident. This is followed by the death of her young stepsister, Sara, and the departure
of her stepfather, Jonah. Strong support from her mother and a schoolteacher keep
Chanda going, but the news that Jonah had AIDS and suspicions that her mother has it
too make for a searing and powerful narrative set against the pandemic sweeping the
continent.
Features to explore
during reading
Chapters 16
Chandas World
Resources
Resource Sheet
1
Resource Sheet
2
Resource Sheet
3 (support for
lower attainers)
Learning targets
Activities
Learning focuses
To be able to:
extract information
to support their point
of view.
Groups then decide what they expect to happen in the rest of the
novel and jot down predictions before sharing ideas with the rest of
the class.
Assessment focuses
and Framework
objectives
Reading AF2: 9S&L10
Reading AF5: 9S4
Tell pupils that their task is to create a group poster, which will be
displayed on the classroom wall, and will help with understanding
Chandas world. The poster will focus on the people and places
important to Chanda, using information from Chapters 16.
Section
Features to explore
during reading
Chapters 713
Mamas Secrets
Resources
Resource Sheet
4
Resource Sheet
5 (Assessment)
Learning targets
Activities
Learning focuses
To be able to:
write convincingly in
role, selecting apt
detail.
Activity 1: Empathy
Establish that the novel is written in the first person, from Chandas
point of view. What effect does this have? How would it be different
if written from Mamas point of view?
Share these and model some initial sentences, in the present tense.
Assessment focuses
and Framework
objectives
Reading AF2: 9S3
Reading AF3: 8R13
Reading AF6: 9R1, 9R6,
9R8
Activity 2: Assessment
Pupils complete the full, longer account from Mamas point of view
based on the notes made. Refer to the assessment criteria both
before and after completion.
Extension
Section
Features to explore
during reading
Chapters 14
18
Rumours and
Superstitions
Resources
Resource Sheet
6
Resource Sheet
7
Learning targets
Activities
Learning focuses
To be able to:
Assessment focuses
and Framework
objectives
Reading AF6: 9R6,
9S&L10
Reading AF2: 9R4
Reading AF3: 9S4
Reading AF4: 9Wr17
Track through Chapter 18, highlighting key phrases which show how
the writer gradually reveals information and provides insight. Use
Resource Sheet 7 to draw initial conclusions.
Section
Features to explore
during reading
Chapters 19
23
The Truth Starts
to Emerge
Resources
Resource Sheet
8
Learning targets
Activities
Learning focuses
To be able to:
recognise layers of
meaning.
Chanda starts to piece together the clues about Esther, Jonah and
Mama that readers may have already noticed. Distribute the cards of
events from Resource Sheet 8 and ask pupils to work in pairs to
sequence them, thus providing a sense of how the writer reveals the
information.
Assessment focuses
and Framework
objectives
Reading AF2: 9R1
Reading AF3: 9R18
Reading AF5: 9W7
Section
Features to explore
during reading
Comparison of
Chandas
Secrets and
Dead Mens
Path
Resources
Dead Mens Path
(Appendix 1)
Resource Sheet
9 (OHT)
Resource Sheet
10
Learning targets
Activities
Learning focuses
To be able to:
compare
presentation of ideas
in related texts.
Assessment focuses
and Framework
objectives
Reading AF3: 9R8
Reading AF4: 9R7
Reading AF5: 9R9
Reading AF6: 9R6
Section
Features to explore
during reading
Chapters 24
26
Mamas Time to
Leave
Resources
Resource Sheet
11
Resource Sheet
12
Learning targets
Activities
Learning focuses
To be able to:
extract information
from the text to
support their point of
view
Assessment focuses
and Framework
objectives
AF3: 9R1, 9R4
What do pupils think each statement tells us about her and her
changing role?
Section
Features to explore
during reading
Chapters 27
31
Facing the Facts
Resources
Resource Sheet
13
Resource Sheet
14
Learning targets
Activities
Learning focuses
To be able to:
appreciate and
analyse the writers
technique
empathise with
characters.
Assessment focuses
and Framework
objectives
Reading AF2: 9R1, 9S4,
9Wr17
Reading AF3: 9R18
Reading AF5: 9W7
Extension
Section
Features to explore
during reading
Chapters 32
36
Chandas
Journey
Resources
Resource Sheet
15
Learning targets
Activities
Learning focuses
To be able to:
discuss the
organisation of the
text
Point out, if not already apparent, that the chapters in this novel do
not have titles. Ask pupils as a whole class what titles add to novels.
Do they change the way we read the text? Should they have any
conventions? For example, not too long? not give away what
happens?
Assessment focuses
and Framework
objectives
Reading AF2: 9R17
Reading AF3: 9S&L5,
9R18
Reading AF4: 9S&L9,
9S&L2
Ask pupils to create relevant titles for each chapter. This can be done
as an individual task initially, then sharing ideas in groups of three or
four. Final decisions can be written on Resource Sheet 15 with a
spokesperson for each group presenting titles and justifying choices.
Section
Features to explore
during reading
Chapters 37
end
No More Secrets
Resources
Resource Sheet
16 (one for each
group with
prompt cards cut
out; one or more
kept intact for
interviewer(s) to
refer to)
Resource Sheet
17 (Assessment)
Learning targets
Activities
Learning focuses
To be able to:
empathise with
characters
In groups, ask pupils to brainstorm all the secrets in the novel and
then discuss the effectiveness or otherwise of the title. Why was the
novel specifically called Chandas secrets? (elicit ideas about central
narrative voice etc). Can pupils come up with an alternative (better?)
title for the novel?
Assessment focuses
and Framework
objectives
Reading AF2: 9R6
Reading AF3: 9S4
Reading AF6: 9S&L3,
9S&L12
Individuals prepare for their roles by thinking what they will say
when spoken to. The group then run the role-play/radio
presentation.
different can you add any other, original information that might be of
interest?
Mr Dube
(Soly)
(page
26)
Mama
Papa
(pages
15 & 16)
The shebeen
(page 29)
Jonah
(Sara)
(page
27)
The
school
(page
18)
Mary
(page 30)
Mr Selalame
(page 19)
Tiro
(pages 15 & 21)
The mine
(page 19)
Granny Kabelo
(page 21)
Lily
(pages 16 & 21)
The aunties
(page 15)
Make notes in the boxes in Mamas words about her thoughts and
about what has happened. Use the present tense: I go to the
school/I feel so sad etc.
The funeral
Higher attaining pupils will show evidence of deduction and inference through:
Level 3
Level 4
Level 5
Level 7
Esthers note
Jonahs return
Marys treatment of
Jonah
Mamas changed
behaviour
Mamas collapse
Chandas Secrets
When the
story takes
place
Main
characters
Chandas Secrets
When the
story takes
place
Main
characters
Significance
of the
schoolteacher
Importance
of shrines
and rituals
Superstition
v.
educational
progress
Use of
language
Authorial
point of view
She is in control.
Score
Find all the references to dreams and nightmares in this part of the
novel. How are they effective in suggesting Esthers feelings?
What language?
The use of the first person how is the use of Chandas voice
effective for the reader?
The use of the present tense how is this effective for the reader?
What difference would it make if it was written in the past tense?
The use of questions - what does this suggest about Esthers state
of mind?
The use of short sentences - how does this suggest the way Esther
is feeling?
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Esther
Mrs Tafa
Mr Bateman
Nurse Viser
Level 3
AF2 understand,
describe, select or
retrieve information,
events or ideas from
texts and use quotation
and reference to text.
Level 4
Responses based on
personal speculation rather
than reading of the text
Level 5
Straightforward comment
based on a single point of
reference
Comments develop
explanation of inferred
meanings drawing on
evidence from across the
excerpt e.g. shows more
awareness of Mr Batemans
profiting from the many
deaths.
Comments generally
supported by relevant textual
reference or quotation, even
when points made are not
always accurate
Level 6
Comments show
appreciation of the wider
implications or significance of
information, events or ideas
e.g. shows and
understanding of how some
members of the society
exploit poverty stricken,
frightened families.
Subtleties of viewpoint
explored through developed
explanation with close
reference to the text
Level 7
Appendix 1
Dead Mens Path by Chinua Achebe
Michael Obis hopes were fulfilled much earlier than he had expected. He was
appointed headmaster of Ndume Central School in January 1949. It had always
been an unprogressive school, so the Mission authorities decided to send a young
and energetic man to run it. Obi accepted this responsibility with enthusiasm. He
had many wonderful ideas and this was an opportunity to put them into practice.
He had had sound secondary school education, which designated him a pivotal
teacher in the official records and set him apart from the other headmasters in
the mission field. He was outspoken in his condemnation of the narrow views of
these older and often less-educated ones.
We shall make a good job of it, shant we? he asked his young wife when they
first heard the joyful news of his promotion.
We shall do our best, she replied. We shall have such beautiful gardens and
everything will be just modern and delightful In their two years of married life
she had become completely infected by his passion for modern methods and his
denigration of these old and superannuated people in the teaching field who
would be better employed as traders in the Onitsha market. She began to see
herself already as the admired wife of the young headmaster, the queen of the
school.
The wives of the other teachers would envy her position. She would set the
fashion in everything Then, suddenly, it occurred to her that there might not be
other wives. Wavering between hope and fear, she asked her husband, looking
anxiously at him.
All our colleagues are young and unmarried, he said with enthusiasm which for
once she did not share. Which is a good thing, he continued.
Why?
Why? They will give all their time and energy to the school.
Nancy was downcast. For a few minutes she became sceptical about the new
school; but it was only for a few minutes. Her little personal misfortune could not
blind her to her husbands happy prospects. She looked at him as he sat folded
up in a chair. He was stoop-shouldered and looked frail. But he sometimes
surprised people with sudden bursts of physical energy. In his present posture,
however, all his bodily strength seemed to have retired behind his deep-set eyes,
giving them an extraordinary power of penetration. He was only twenty-six, but
looked thirty or more. On the whole, he was not unhandsome.
A penny for your thoughts, Mike, said Nancy after a while, imitating the
womans magazine she read.
I was thinking what a grand opportunity weve got at last to show these people
how a school should be run. Ndume School was backward in every sense of the
Chandas Secrets Appendix 1
Pearson Education 2006
word. Mr Obi put his whole life into the work, and his wife hers too. He had two
aims. A high standard of teaching was insisted upon, and the school compound
was to be turned into a place of beauty. Nancys dream-gardens came to life with
the coming of the rains, and blossomed. Beautiful hibiscus and allamande hedges
in brilliant red and yellow marked out the carefully tended school compound from
the rank neighbourhood bushes.
One evening as Obi was admiring his work he was scandalized to see an old
woman from the village hobble right across the compound, through a marigold
flower-bed and the hedges. On going up there he found faint signs of an almost
disused path from the village across the school compound to the bush on the
other side.
It amazes me, said Obi to one of his teachers who had been three years in the
school, that you people allowed the villagers to make use of this footpath. It is
simply incredible. He shook his head.
The path, said the teacher apologetically, appears to be very important to
them. Although it is hardly used, it connects the village shrine with their place of
burial.
And what has that got to do with the school? asked the headmaster.
Well, I dont know, replied the other with a shrug of the shoulders. But I
remember there was a big row some time ago when we attempted to close it.
That was some time ago. But it will not be used now, said Obi as he walked
away. What will the Government Education Officer think of this when he comes
to inspect the school next week? The villagers might, for all I know, decide to use
the schoolroom for a pagan ritual during the inspection.
Heavy sticks were planted closely across the path at the two places where it
entered and left the school premises. These were further strengthened with
barbed wire.
*****
Three days later the village priest of Ani called on the headmaster. He was an old
man and walked with a slight stoop. He carried a stout walking-stick which he
usually tapped on the floor, by way of emphasis, each time he made a new point
in his argument.
I have heard, he said after the usual exchange of cordialities, that our ancestral
footpath has recently been closed
Yes, replied Mr Obi. We cannot allow people to make a highway of our school
compound.
Look here, my son, said the priest bringing down his walking-stick, this path
was here before you were born and before your father was born. The whole life
of this village depends on it. Our dead relatives depart by it and our ancestors