- Assign roles to students, and read the play aloud as a class. Stop after each scene and ask students to summarize what happened.
- After reading, discuss the following close-reading and critical-thinking questions.
Close-Reading Questions (15 minutes)
- What do you learn about the Emperor in the first scene? (character) You learn that his appearance is very important to him. He is a vain person.
- In Scene 3, what does the Royal Aide think about the tailors’ claim that their cloth is invisible to fools? What does the Emperor think? (compare and contrast) The Royal Aide thinks that the tailors’ claim cannot be real and that the idea is nonsense. The Emperor thinks their claim is real and is interested in the cloth.
- At the end of Scene 4, why does the Emperor say “Get out!” to the Royal Aide? (character’s motivation) The Royal Aide suggests that the Emperor is being tricked by the tailors. He suggests that if the Emperor buys the clothes, he “will be remembered as a fool.” The Emperor is insulted and wants the Royal Aide gone.
- Why does the Emperor nearly faint in Scene 5 after the tailors present the clothes to him? (inference) The Emperor cannot see the clothes, which makes him think he must be a fool. He has been told that only a fool cannot see the clothes. The shock of realizing that he might be a fool causes him to feel faint.
- After the child points out that the Emperor has no clothes, why does everyone start laughing? (inference) The child’s observation makes everyone realize that no one else can see the clothes either. They become more confident when they realize they are not alone and that the Emperor has been tricked into parading in his underwear. They laugh because they’re both amused and relieved.
Critical-Thinking Questions (10 minutes)
1. Split students into three groups, and have each group answer one of the questions next to the illustrations. (characters’ motivations)
- The Emperor: Everyone is worried that if they admit they can’t see the clothes, people will think they’re fools. Nobody wants to risk being the one person to speak up.
- The Tailors: The tailors get away with their trick because they know that the Emperor is vain. He will be willing to spend a lot of money on the expensive clothes and will be too embarrassed to admit that he is a fool when he can’t see them. No one else will speak up either.
- The Child: The child speaks up because very young children haven’t yet learned to worry about being seen as foolish. They’re often more straightforward and honest than adults.
2. In this play, almost everyone is afraid to speak up. When might it be important to speak up, even if no one else does? Why might speaking up be difficult? (theme) Answers will vary. Students might say it’s important to speak up if someone is in danger or being treated unfairly. It might be difficult because you face the possibility that others will take offense or think less of you.