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The Mark of the Beast Differentiated Short Story Study Guide & Analysis | Rudyard Kipling

The Mark of the Beast Differentiated Short Story Study Guide & Analysis | Rudyard Kipling

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Classroom Use at a Glance

A no-prep differentiated study guide for The Mark of the Beast Differentiated Short Story Study Guide & Analysis. Includes reading support, comprehension and analysis activities, quiz materials, and teacher-ready classroom materials for mixed-ability ELA classes.

Resource Type Study Guide
Best For Grades 6 to 8, Grades 9 to 12
Subjects ELA, Literature
Classroom Uses Sub Plan, Small Groups, Close Reading, Discussion, Assessment, Review, Enrichment, Intervention, Homework view all
  • Sub Plan
  • Small Groups
  • Close Reading
  • Discussion
  • Assessment
  • Review
  • Enrichment
  • Intervention
  • Homework
Included Original Text, Leveled Text, Teacher Guide, Student Worksheet, Quiz, Google Forms Quiz, Answer Key, Vocabulary, Discussion Questions, Writing Prompt view all
  • Original Text
  • Leveled Text
  • Teacher Guide
  • Student Worksheet
  • Quiz
  • Google Forms Quiz
  • Answer Key
  • Vocabulary
  • Discussion Questions
  • Writing Prompt
Format PDF, DOCX, Google Docs, Google Forms, Printable, Editable view all
  • PDF
  • DOCX
  • Google Docs
  • Google Forms
  • Printable
  • Editable
Prep Level No Prep
Time Required 1 Week, Flexible
Differentiation Original Version, Leveled Version, Accessible Version, Mixed Reading Levels, Vocabulary Support, Struggling Readers, Advanced Readers view all
  • Original Version
  • Leveled Version
  • Accessible Version
  • Mixed Reading Levels
  • Vocabulary Support
  • Struggling Readers
  • Advanced Readers

Bring a classic supernatural and Gothic short story into your classroom without losing students to text complexity. This differentiated, standards-friendly unit for Rudyard Kipling’s The Mark of the Beast (1890) supports mixed reading levels while preserving the story’s tone, suspense, and big ideas.

PROBLEM: In real classrooms, the original text can be a stretch for many readers, and mixed reading levels can stall the whole-group conversation—forcing constant reteaching or oversimplifying the story.

SOLUTION: This differentiated short story study for The Mark of the Beast keeps your class together by providing the complete Original Text plus two aligned options—the Accessible Text (HILO) and the Leveled Text—so students can read the version that best supports comprehension today while still completing the same discussions and assessments. The aligned versions keep the same key events and turning points so students can tackle theme and conflict without being blocked by text complexity.

Perfect for: Grades 7–12 whole-class short story study, mixed reading levels, inclusive classrooms, intervention groups, multilingual learners, sub plans, and fast-prep lesson days. Some teachers also use it for older students when they want rigorous themes with a more accessible reading load.

Cross-version alignment: Every Discussion Question and every Multiple Choice Exit Quiz item is designed to be answerable from the Accessible Text (HILO), the Leveled Text, or the Original Text, while still mapping cleanly to the original story for extension reading and evidence practice.

Try before you buy: The preview images are from the FREE Study Guide for The Legend of Sleepy Hollow so you can see the format. Download the free resource here and give it a real test drive.

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Quick Guide for Teachers (Daily Schedule)

  • Reading: Students read the assigned text as small groups or independent reading (Accessible, Leveled, or Original) based on student levels.
  • Whole-class discussion: Bring everyone together for the Discussion Questions (works across all text versions).
  • Assessment: Assign the shared 10-question Multiple Choice Exit Quiz (printable or digital).
  • Finishers/homework: Use the Vocabulary Words, Short Answer Questions, and Challenge Questions for early finishers—or assign as homework if time runs out.
  • All components can be mixed and matched for flexible schedules and can be used in class or as homework.

This product includes a zip file consisting of:

NOTE: All files are editable and include (PDF, DOCX, PPTX, Google Docs/Slides/Forms)

Original Text: ~5,100 words | ~5.9 FKGL

  • Lexile Range (est.): 980L–1180L | CEFR (est.): B2
  • Great for on-grade and advanced readers, close reading, and original-language extension work.

Leveled Text: ~3,600 words | ~5.6 FKGL

  • Lexile Range (est.): 870L–1070L | CEFR (est.): B1–B2
  • Keeps the plot beats and tone while simplifying sentence structure and vocabulary.

Accessible Text (HILO): ~2,000 words | ~3.7 FKGL

  • Lexile Range (est.): 620L–820L | CEFR (est.): A2–B1
  • Shorter and written in very simple language to reduce cognitive load and support comprehension.
  • *All three versions tell the same story, allowing students to participate in shared discussions even when reading different texts.

Student Final Worksheet/Quizzes (PPTX, Google Slides/Forms)

  • 10 Vocabulary Words
  • 10 Short Answer Recall/Comprehension
  • 5 Challenge Questions (analysis, themes, craft)
  • 1 Multiple Choice Exit Quiz (10 Questions, cross-version aligned)

Teacher’s Guide & Answer Key

  • 1 set of Discussion Questions
  • 1 self-graded Exit Quiz (10Qs)
  • Answer keys for Vocabulary, Short Answer, and Challenge Questions

Summary

An English visitor mocks a shrine in colonial India and is cursed by a leper priest; as he turns savage and animal-like, medicine and “common sense” fail. Two friends restore him by forcing the priest to lift the curse—saving him, but exposing the limits and moral cost of British rational control.

Searchable Teacher Keywords

  • The Mark of the Beast study guide (Rudyard Kipling)
  • Colonial-era supernatural horror lesson
  • Conflict + theme: rationality vs the unknown
  • Character choices and consequences discussion
  • Differentiated reading (HILO + leveled + original)
  • Printable + self-grading exit quiz (Google Forms)

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you handle the cultural/colonial context responsibly?

Prompts focus on power, perspective, and consequences. You can frame the story as a lens into colonial attitudes and discuss bias, fear, and moral responsibility.

Is the “curse” treated as literal or symbolic?

Students can argue either. The questions guide them to cite evidence about what characters believe, what changes occur, and how fear shapes decisions.

What’s the biggest teaching payoff?

Theme and conflict: when ‘common sense’ fails, what do people do next? It’s also strong for analyzing tone and character transformation.

Common Core State Standards

  • RL.8.1 / RL.9-10.1 / RL.CCR.1 — Cite textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text.
  • RL.8.2 / RL.9-10.2 / RL.CCR.2 — Determine a theme or central idea of a text and analyze its development over the course of a text; provide an objective summary of the text.
  • RL.8.3 / RL.9-10.3 / RL.CCR.3 — Analyze how and why individuals, events, and ideas develop and interact over the course of a text.
  • RL.8.4 / RL.9-10.4 / RL.CCR.4 — Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in the text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the impact of word choice on meaning and tone.
  • RL.8.5 / RL.9-10.5 / RL.CCR.5 — Analyze how an author’s choices about structure and sequencing create effects such as mystery, tension, or surprise and contribute to meaning and style.
  • RL.8.6 / RL.9-10.6 / RL.CCR.6 — Analyze how point of view and perspective shape what the reader knows and how the text creates effects such as suspense or irony.
  • RL.8.10 / RL.9-10.10 / RL.CCR.10 — Read and comprehend literature at the appropriate grade-level text complexity band independently and proficiently.
  • W.8.1 / W.9-10.1 / W.CCR.1 — Write arguments to support claims with clear reasons and relevant evidence.
  • W.8.2 / W.9-10.2 / W.CCR.2 — Write informative/explanatory texts to examine a topic and convey ideas clearly through selection, organization, and analysis of relevant content.
  • W.8.9 / W.9-10.9 / W.CCR.9 — Draw evidence from literary texts to support analysis, reflection, and research.
  • SL.8.1 / SL.9-10.1 / SL.CCR.1 — Engage effectively in collaborative discussions, building on others’ ideas and expressing one’s own clearly.
  • L.8.4 / L.9-10.4 / L.CCR.4 — Determine or clarify the meaning of unknown and multiple-meaning words and phrases using context and a range of strategies.
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