Friday, August 28, 2020

 Today we are going to create blogs (go to blogger.com), review UNIT 1, and take notes on Literary Elements.

Homework: Look up vocabulary words and post on your blogs or in quizlet.

Vocabulary Words - to look up and post on quizlet

Scruples
Nocturnal
Reciprocate
Indolent
Gaunt
Futile
Furtive
Bland
Palpable
Gossamer
Naive


Unit I

SHORT STORY 

            In this unit students will read short stories from various authors and look at literary devices employed in each story.  The short story is the most compact prose form and therefore the best to look at as an introduction to literature.  The devices the students discover in this unit will reappear throughout the semester when we discuss The Novel, DRAMA and POETRY.  The ultimate goal for students to acquire the basic understanding of the working of literary at a root and elementary level. Students will be required to read and take quizzes on each story and at the end of the unit take a unit test and present a Short Story Project orally to class.

Unit Learning goal: Students will demonstrate knowledge of the structure of fiction by breaking down the essential building blocks (literary elements) of short stories by plot, character development, figurative language (metaphor, symbolism, irony), point of view, connecting these blocks to the overall meaning (or theme) of the text, and final writing their own short story using these structures.  

Scale/Rubric relating to learning goal:
4 – The student can analyze the elements of a short story come up with a valid theme (or themes) of a text and relate this theme to other texts and/or movies and real world situations.  The student is able to write a short story using these elements to create a text with complex themes.
3 – The student can analyze elements of a short story and come up with a valid theme for a text.  The student is able to write a short story using these elements to create a text with a valid and justifiable theme.
2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student can analyze the elements of a short story and come up with a theme for a text.  With some direction/help from the teacher the student is able to write a short story using these elements to create a text with a theme.
1 – Even with help from the teacher the student is unable to analyze elements of a short story and come up with a theme for a text.  Even with help from the teacher the student in unable to write a short story using elements covered during this unit.

OBJECTIVES:
At the end of this unit students will be able to
1)    Define tone, blues, metaphor, irony, foreshadow, dialect, conflict, character, plot, mood, theme, symbol, imagery, protagonist, antagonist, static character, dynamic character, round character, flat character, allusion
2)    Given a story be able to list its theme, plot, conflict, irony, point of view
3)    Given a story be able to discuss which characters are round and which are flat
4)    Given a story be able to pick out the protagonist and the antagonist
5)    Given a story be able to pick out the static characters and the dynamic characters and briefly in a paragraph discuss why.
6)    Given a story pick out examples of foreshadow and allusion
7)    List the three elements of characterization
8)    List the three conditions for believable change in a character
9)    Given a series of images discuss what they mean in relation to a story or a character in a story
10) Given a story identify the characters with descriptions—physical and emotional descriptions as well as whether the character fits as either an antagonist, protagonist, dynamic or static character
11) Given a story be able to describe the symbols used in the story and what they mean in relation to the characters and theme.
12) Given a story discuss in a paragraph or two what the story’s plot reveals about the main character
13) Recognize whether a story is told from a 1st person, 2nd person or 3rd person limited, 3rd person omniscient point of view.
14) In a paragraph be able to summarize the events of a story.
15) In an essay of a page or more (at least two paragraphs of five sentences each) compare and contrast how two authors use imagery, metaphor, and dialect to develop their characters.
16) Define various vocabulary words from each short story (these words will be given on Monday or Tuesday of the week)
17) Demonstrate an understanding of a story by developing a project
18) Given a story identify the different events that fall into different parts of the plot.  Example: Be able to describe the exposition or climax of a story.
19) Write a script and act out a story or the sequel to a story keeping true to the characters and the plot
20) Incorporating devices of setting, character, plot, conflict, point of view, and believable characterization and change for the protagonist, write a short story of at least three pages.
20) Write various journal entries that correspond to the stories and various elements in those stories
 STORIES TO BE READ INCLUDE:
  1. “The Cask of Amontillado” by Poe
  2. “The Most Dangerous Game” by Richard Connell
  3. “A Christmas Memory” by Truman Capote
  4. “Where Have You Gone Charming Billy” by Tim O’Brien
  5. “Blues Ain’t No Mockin’ Bird” by Toni Cade Bambara
  6. “The Lady or the Tiger?” by Frank Stockton
  7. “The Split-Cherry Tree” by Jesse Stuart
  8. “The Gift of the Magi” by O’Henry
  9.  One story of the student's choice
ESSENTIAL CONCEPTS:
 What are the different types of conflicts found within stories; What is an unreliable narrator and what does an unreliable narrator do for a text; What is an allusion?  Why does an author use allusions?  How is a complex character created?  Why does an author use imagery?  What does dialect do for a story?  What is irony and what is the effect of irony when it is used in a story?  Can you find irony in the real world?  What happens when part of the plot is left out of a story?  What is figurative language and how does an author effectively use it in a story?

Friday, May 8, 2020

Chapters 29-31


Friday's clas

Today we need to talk about chapter 27 and 28, and then I'll give you a quick overview of the rest of the novel.  It ends very quickly.  Then we'll talk about so study questions.



Questions:

1) Who is Link Deas and how does he reinforce the theme the meaning of duty?
2) Why does Bob Ewell follow Helen Robinson?
3) Discuss the school carnival?  What is it like?  What types of activities are there?
4) Why does Mrs. Merriweather think Scout ruined the play?
5) Why does the chapter start with a "New Moon"?
6) Who attacks Scout and Jem?  What happens to Jem?
7) Who is in the corner of Jem's room?  How does Scout describe him?
8) What does Heck Tate report at the end of chapter 28?

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Chapter 26

Today we need to discuss chapters 24-26.  Look at some study questions and talk about the final.

5/6 - Zoom Class at 10am - chapter 27
5/7 - chapter 28
5/8 - Zoom Class at 10 am - chapter 28
5/11 - chapters 29 
5/12 - chapters 30 -31
5/13 - Zoom Class 10 am - review and final

Chapter 26



Study Questions:

1) In chapter 24, who are the Mrunas and why does the missionary society want to save them?
2) What is hypocritical about Mrs. Merriweather in chapter 24?
3) How is the chapter satire?
4) What themes does chapter 24 reinforce?
5) How many times is Tom Robinson shot?
6) Discuss the bug metaphor in chapter 25?
7) How does chapter 25 contrast chapter 24?
8) In chapter chapter 26, what is the talk about Hitler?
9) How does this Scout's teacher hypocritical?
10) What is wrong with Jem at the end of the chapter?
11) What is Scout's fantasy about Boo Radley?

Objectives (smaller chunks of overall goal) and suggested time periods
Students will be able to
1)  Explain how the following themes work in the novel: The meaning of duty; How prejudice works in society; The meaning of courage
2)  Discuss the meaning of the following symbol: mockingbirds, the knot-hole, the mad dog
3)  Be able to discuss character development
4)  Discuss how the author’s life and times influences the novel.
5)  Outline the plot and discuss why the author may how chosen to structure the novel how she did.
6)  Discuss how Scout grows during the novel and why the novel can be considered a Bildungsroman.
7)  Keep a detailed list of characters 
8)  Explain – why you never really understand a person until you walk around in their skin
9)  In a group write testimonies and recreate the courtroom scene from the novel
10) Keep a list of the various types of prejudices that occur in the novel
11) Discuss how setting is important to this novel.
12) Discuss how the Civil War references/allusions work in the overall meaning of the novel.
Essential Questions:
Does the American law guarantee justice for all?
How does personal experience contribute to prejudice?
How do our preconceptions influence our sense of justice?
Can a hero have both good and bad qualities?

 Plot Structure

Inciting Event - when Scout fights Cecil Jacob because Cecil has called Atticus a nigger lover.
Climax - when Tom Robinson is convicted of murder (through some will argue that it is when Boo Radley kills Bob Ewell).
Resolution - Heck Tate tells Atticus that Bob Ewell fell on his knife and Scout walks Boo Radley home. 

Friday, May 1, 2020

Friday

Today we are going to talk about chapters 22-23, discuss your quiz questions and play Kahoot.

5/1 Review  ZOOM CLASS at 10 am -chapter 24
5/4 - chapter 25
5/5 - chapter 26
5/6 - Zoom Class at 10am - chapter 27
5/7 - chapter 28
5/8 - Zoom Class at 10 am - chapter 28
5/11 - chapters 29 
5/12 - chapters 30 -31
5/13 - Zoom Class 10 am - review and final


Chapter 22

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

To Kill A Mockingbird chapters 11-21

Today, we need to discuss chapters 19 -  21, talk about the overview of the court case and chapters 12-21.  Finally, we need to fill out the QUIZ, I sent to everyone yesterday.

Chapter 21



Overview of chapter 12-21


4/29 – chapter 22 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/30 – chapter 23
5/1 Review  ZOOM CLASS at 10 am -chapter 24

5/4 - chapter 25
5/5 - chapter 26
5/6 - Zoom Class at 10am - chapter 27
5/7 - chapter 28
5/8 - Zoom Class at 10 am - chapter 28
5/11 - chapters 29 
5/12 - chapters 30 -31
5/13 - Zoom Class 10 am - review and final

Friday, April 24, 2020

Friday ZOOM

Chapter 17



Mayella


Mayella's Courtroom Scene




4/24 - chapter 19  ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/27- chapter 20
4/28- chapter 21 (QUIZ)

4/29 – chapter 22 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/30 – chapter 23
5/1 Review  ZOOM CLASS at 10 am -chapter 24

5/4 - chapter 25
5/5 - chapter 26
5/6 - Zoom Class at 10am - chapter 27
5/7 - chapter 28
5/8 - Zoom Class at 10 am - chapter 28
5/11 - chapters 29 
5/12 - chapters 30 -31
5/13 - Zoom Class 10 am - review and final

Chapter 17 and 18 questions:

1) Why does Atticus ask Heck Tate if he called the doctor - 3 times?
2) What is Heck Tate's testimony about Mayella's bruises and black eye?
3) Describe the Ewell place of residence.
4) What is symbolic about the geraniums?
5) How does Bob Ewell enliven the court?
6) What is Bob Ewell's testimony?
7) What does Atticus ask Bob Ewell if he sent for a doctor?
8) Why does Atticus have Bob Ewell write his name? 
9) What do you learn about Mayella Violet Ewell?
10) What is her testimony to Mr. Gilmer?
11) Why is she upset with Atticus calling her Miss Mayella and Mam?
12) Why does she not know what a "friend" is?
13) Why does she scream her final comments to the court and what are those comments?

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Zoom Class



CHAPTER 16


Chapter 16 Questions

1) What do we learn about Mr. Underwood?
2) Why does Miss Maudie call the trial a Roman Carnival?
3) Discuss Mr. Dulphous Raymond?  Who is he?  Whaat are the rumors about him?
4) List two ways the African-American community are treated as 2nd class citizens in this chapter.
5) Name two allusions.
6) List a few individuals or groups going to the trial?
7) Where do Scout and Jem sit during the trial?
8) At the beginning of the chapter why do Atticus and Aunt Alexandra fight?

https://www.proprofs.com/quiz-school/story.php?title=to-kill-mockingbird-part-1
4/22 - chapter 17 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/23 - chapter 18
4/24 - chapter 19  ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/27- chapter 20
4/28- chapter 21 (QUIZ)



4/29 – chapter 22 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/30 – chapter 23
5/1 Review  ZOOM CLASS at 10 am -chapter 24

5/4 - chapter 25
5/5 - chapter 26
5/6 - Zoom Class at 10am - chapter 27
5/7 - chapter 28
5/8 - Zoom Class at 10 am - chapter 28
5/11 - chapters 29 
5/12 - chapters 30 -31
5/13 - Zoom Class 10 am - review and final
5/14 - turn in final by 4 pm.   



Thursday, April 16, 2020

Friday 4/17


Today we need to discuss chapters 12-13.  For next week I need you to write chapter summaries of Chapter 14 and 15.

Chapter 12:
1. Jem is now 12. There is a widening gap of understanding between Scout and Jem. Find two or three examples which illustrate the emotional distance between them.
2. How do you explain Lula’s antagonism toward Jem and Scout?
3. Scout finds the church service to be similar to her own except for few differences. Explain what these differences are.
4. Why does Cal speak one way around colored people and another way around white people? Is she being honest or hypocritical in what she does? Explain.

Chapter 13:
 1. Scout and Aunt Alexandra communicate very poorly with each other. Is the fault more with one than the other, or are they equally at fault? EXPLAIN.
2. Discuss Cousin Joshua Finch as: a. Atticus describes him b. Aunt Alexandra describes him Explain these differences of opinion.
3. Upon her arrival, what values does Aunt Alexandra try instill Scout and Jem?

4/15 - chapters 12 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/16 - chapters 13 
4/17 - chapter 14 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/20 - chapter 15
4/21 - chapter 16
4/22 - chapter 17 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/23 - chapter 18
4/24 - chapter 19  ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/27- chapter 20
4/28- chapter 21 (QUIZ)


4/29 – chapter 22 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/30 – chapter 23
5/1 Review  ZOOM CLASS at 10 am -chapter 24

5/4 - chapter 25
5/5 - chapter 26
5/6 - Zoom Class at 10am - chapter 27
5/7 - chapter 28
5/8 - Zoom Class at 10 am - chapter 28
5/11 - chapters 29 
5/12 - chapters 30 -31
5/13 - Zoom Class 10 am - review and final
5/14 - turn in final by 4 pm.   




Monday, April 13, 2020

Part I - Recap

Today we need to review PART I of the book and then take a group quiz.  On this quiz I expect everyone to add something to each question.  You can use your books.  This quiz will be useful for you on the final.  

4/15 - chapters 12 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/16 - chapters 13 
4/17 - chapter 14 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/20 - chapter 15
4/21 - chapter 16
4/22 - chapter 17 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/23 - chapter 18
4/24 - chapter 19  ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/27- chapter 20
4/28- chapter 21 (QUIZ)

4/29 – chapter 22 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/30 – chapter 23
5/1 Review  ZOOM CLASS at 10 am



In case you still need to the link to the audiobook here it is:
PART 1


PART 2


Chapter 11
Recap of Part I


Friday, April 10, 2020

Friday - To Kill A Mockingbird


4/10 - chapter 10   ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/13 - chapter 11
4/14 - QUIZ on PART I
4/15 - chapters 12 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am

Today after class I want you to write a blog summary of chapters 7 and 8.

Chapter 8
1.     What does Scout see when she says, “The world’s ending, Atticus! Please do something-!”?
2.     In what ways is Jem and Scout’s snowman unusual?
3.     What citizen of Maycomb does the snowman resemble?
4.     Why does Atticus wake up Scout and Jem in middle of the night?
5.     After the fire, Scout finds herself wrapped in a blanket. Where do you think the blanket came from?
6.     Describe Miss Maudie’s attitude the day following the fire. What does this tell you about Miss Maudie?

Chapter 9
1.     At the opening of chapter 9, what do we learn about Atticus’s current case?
2.     What advice does he give Scout about handling insults?
3.     What begins the fight between Scout and Francis
4.     According to Scout, Uncle Jack “…don’t understand children much.” Describe the conversation that follows.
5.     What is foreshadowed in Atticus’s conversation with Uncle Jack at the end of Chapter 9?


Sunday, April 5, 2020

To Kill A Mockingbird

Blog Assignment #1 - for Wednesday, you need to write a quick overview of chapters 4-5.  Please include what happened, what characters appeared, list one literary element and connect the chapters to a theme.

Here is next week's schedule:

4/6 - chapter 5
4/7 - chapter 6
4/8 - chapter 7 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/9 - chapter 8-9
4/10 - chapter 10   ZOOM CLASS at 10 am


TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD - Chapter 3

TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD - Chapter 4 



TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD - Chapter 5


TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD - Chapter 6


Thursday, April 2, 2020

To Kill A Mockingbird

Remembr that you should be reading chapter 3 today.

Here is a video on chapter 2

Chapter 2

Questions for Chapter 2:

What is ironic about Scout's first day in school?
Why won't Walter Cunningham take the quarter from Miss Caroline?
What happens at school during Scout's first day?
Why are most of the students "immuned" to imaginative literature? 


CLASS SCHEDULE:

4/3 - chapter 4 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/6 - chapter 5
4/7 - chapter 6
4/8 - chapter 7 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/9 - chapter 8-9
4/10 - chapter 10   ZOOM CLASS at 10 am

Monday, March 30, 2020

TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD READING SCHEDULE

AUDIOBOOK:

TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD reading schedule

4/1 - chapter 2 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/2 - chapter 3
4/3 - chapter 4 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/6 - chapter 5
4/7 - chapter 6
4/8 - chapter 7 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/9 - chapter 8-9
4/10 - chapter 10   ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/13 - chapter 11
4/14 - QUIZ on PART I
4/15 - chapters 12 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/16 - chapters 13 
4/17 - chapter 14 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/20 - chapter 15
4/21 - chapter 16
4/22 - chapter 17 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/23 - chapter 18
4/24 - chapter 19  ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/27- chapter 20
4/28- chapter 21 (QUIZ)
4/29 – chapter 22 ZOOM CLASS at 10 am
4/30 – chapter 23
5/1 Review  ZOOM CLASS at 10 am


Please watch the following videos:
 OVERVIEW OF TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD


CHAPTER 1 of TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD


Chapter 1


Chapter 1


I'm not sure what the final project will be yet, but you need to understand and be able to discuss the following:

Objectives (smaller chunks of overall goal) and suggested time periods
Students will be able to
1)  Explain how the following themes work in the novel: The meaning of duty; How prejudice works in society; The meaning of courage
2)  Discuss the meaning of the following symbol: mockingbirds, the knot-hole, the mad dog
3)  Keep a reading journal – which includes character development, allusions, symbols, questions about the meaning of justice or how prejudice works
4)  Discuss how the author’s life and times influences the novel.
5)  Outline the plot and discuss why the author may how chosen to structure the novel how she did.
6)  Discuss how Scout grows during the novel and why the novel can be considered a Bildungsroman.
7)  Keep a detailed list of characters recording important details about them as the student reads (starting with chapter 1)
8)  Explain – why you never really understand a person until you… (Point of View Exercise)
9)  In a group write testimonies and recreate the courtroom scene from the novel
10) Keep a list of the various types of prejudices that occur in the novel
11) Discuss how setting is important to this novel.
12) Discuss how the Civil War references/allusions work in the overall meaning of the novel.
Essential Questions:
Does the American law guarantee justice for all?
How does personal experience contribute to prejudice?
How do our preconceptions influence our sense of justice?
Can a hero have both good and bad qualities?

Monday, March 16, 2020

Expository Essays and TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD

So, this week we were going to present/perform your Expository Essays.  We are still going to do this after Spring Break, but what I would like you to do for practice is to film yourself using PHOTOBOOTH and to drag that film into your blog - just click on the film/take sign above and drag your video into blogger.

Also, this week I'd like you to read chapter 1 of To Kill A Mockingbird.  You can also watch the movie on Amazon for free if you have AMAZON PRIME or you can rent it for $3.99.

Study Questions:

Chapters 1-4 Questions

What is the background of the Finch family?  Where did they come from?  
List three allusions from Chapter 1.
Who is Dill?  What is Dill like?  
How does the book start with a foreshadow? 
What happens at school during Scout's first day?
Who is Calpurnia? What is her place in the Finch household?
What is Walter Cunningham like? What does his behaviour during lunch suggest about his home life?
What do you think of the way Atticus treats Walter?
Does Scout learn anything from Walter's visit? What do you think this is?
Atticus says that you never really understand a person “until you climb into his skin and walk around in it”. What does this mean? Is it an easy thing for Scout to learn? (In the last chapter of the novel, Scout repeats this, but she changes “skin” to “shoes” - this is probably not a mistake: Harper Lee suggests that Scout cannot clearly recall exactly what Atticus said and when, but the reader can check this!)
What do you learn in this chapter about the Ewells?

Go HERE   

Here are some resources:
Audio: Chapter 1.1: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1T8bUgKe5AmEJkqDl0Tre5V-SHvHfOWPY/view?usp=sharing
Chapter 1.2: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mAHwcSGaKXM3PPDc3koRcKaeAzNtcQpF/view?usp=sharing
Chapter 1.3: https://drive.google.com/file/d/19ND3yZBpYGn-hMoXHSQln35cQ9IWx385/view?usp=sharing

OVERVIEW OF CHAPTER 1:

Laurence Fishburne on To Kill A Mockingbird


Crash Course:




Interview with Harper Lee:



Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Presentations

Today, we are going to continue to write.  Some of you need to put your essays on notecards and start practing reading them out loud.

First, let's review the power triangle



Monday, March 9, 2020

Presentattions

Today, we are going to talk about how to introduce a quotation in an paragraph and presentations.


Remember to always 1) Introduce you quote; 2) Give your quote; 3) comment on the quote and link it back to your thesis.

Everything in your essay needs to back up your thesis.  If it doesn't, it doesn't belog.



Presentations:

1) Be loud enough to be heard at the back of the room
2) Make sure you are articulate and can pronounce every word.  If you can't practice
3) No uhms or Uhs
4) Put your essay on notecards - and make sure you can make eye contact and not just read
5) Use the Power TRIANGLE











Friday, March 6, 2020

Body Paragraphs

So let's review what you might want to put in an introductory paragraph, and a concluding paragraph. 

So a body paragraph needs the following:

1) Topic sentence
2) generalization(s)
3) specific details
4) a commentary on the detail, examples about why this is important.

So if you have a paragraph about C02 and climate change it might look like

CO2 emissions is one of the leading causing of climate change.  CO2 is a gas that is released by the burning of fossil fuels.  Currently there is 417 parts per million CO2 in the atmosphere.  This is more CO2 then there was 60 million years ago during the last great extinction period.

Of course you will want to cite your info.


Thursday, March 5, 2020

Thursday - Short Day - MLA

As you write/research your topic, I want you to create bibliography cards/sources.  These can be on your blog.  You will need to cite the source in proper MLA format:

See https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/research_and_citation/mla_style/mla_formatting_and_style_guide/mla_formatting_and_style_guide.html


1) Author
2) Title of article
3) Title of book or website
4) Volume number
5) Place of publication
6) Date of publication

7) Date accessed online