Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Week 11-18 Handout


English 9B Weeks 11-18 Graded Assignments (Subject to revision)
Students must keep work in a portfolio to demonstrate college and career readiness!


Close Reading of Romeo and Juliet Acts III-V
Read passages and answer questions on literary elements, theme, dramatic techniques, and POV in class discussions or in Reader’s Writer’s Notebook as directed.  (PBL -30%)
Holt Literature and Language Arts p 845-910

Elements of Literature (EL)
 (The book you have at home)
 Pp.  790-855
500
Complete ACT II Reading Check Questions 1-8
For all Making Meaning Activities:
·       Answer in Complete sentences.
·        Use the question to answer the question.
·        Use appropriate signal phrases (Act #, Scene #, and line #).
EL Pp. 788
100
Complete Act III Making Meanings Questions 1-7
P.816
100
Complete Roman Numeral Format Outline of Paper: Prompt: Compare and Contrast the Nurse and Mercutio



Proofread Paper Compare and Contrast the Nurse and Mercutio
Submitted to turnitin.com

Peer Review Paper
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Revise Paper Based on Teacher Comments
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Complete Making Meanings Act IV Questions 1-5
Do paraphrasing and Context clues 1-4
p. 834
p. 835
100
Complete Making Meanings Act V Questions 1-7
p. 835
100
·       The Raven by “The Raven” by Edgar Allen Poe (1845)

http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/178713
http://teachersfirst.com/lessons/raven/


Analyze the Poem
Identify symbols, imagery, form, meter


100


Answer Gist Questions
Handout
100
·       The Gift of the Magi” by O. Henry (1906)
p. 202
Irony and Ambiguity
100
Making Meanings
Questions 1-9
P. 209
100
·       The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (1939)

Read Chapters 1–5.  Think about how the Oklahoma landscape shapes the lives of the people who live in it. How does their own landscape shape the students’ lives? When did their parents move here, and why?

100
·       The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (1939)

Read Chapters 6–9 for discussion during the next lesson. Also, have them read “Major Characters in the Novel” from the Reader’s Guide. Who is telling the story, and what is the value of having alternating voices in the narration?

100
·       In Reader’s Writers Notebook
Choose one character who has appeared so far: Tom, Casy, Ma, Pa,
Uncle John, Grampa, or Granma. Have students rewrite the novel’s beginning from this character’s perspective. Have them think about how a story can be told from multiple perspectives. What might Steinbeck be trying to tell us by writing about a whole family and a whole community?

100
·       The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (1939)
·       Focus: Narrative and Point of View


Read Chapters 10–13. Ask students to trace the motivations and development of the same character they chose for the writing exercise. Is the family itself a character in the novel? Have them keep track of each character’s way of talking. What particularities do they notice in the phrases, word choices, and education of their chosen character?

100
·       The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (1939)
·       FOCUS: Characterization using STEAL
·       Says
·       Thinks
·       Effects on Others
·       Actions
·       Looks

Read Chapters 14–17. Ask them to find examples in the text where Steinbeck makes them see the landscape in a new way by comparing it to something else. For instance, challenge them to find moments where inanimate objects are compared to animate ones.

100
·       The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (1939)
·       Focus: Figurative Language
o      Imagery
o      Similes
o      Metaphors


Read Chapters 18–19. Ask them to think about what California represents to the Joads. Challenge them to bring to class three quotes from the text that will help examine the Joads’ views of California.

100
·       The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (1939)
·       Focus: Symbols
persons, places, or things in a narrative that have significance beyond a literal understanding.

Read Chapters 20–21. Students should return to their original Joad character from the homework in previous lessons. How has their character changed? If their character has died, ask them to consider the ways that the death has affected other members of the Joad family.

100
·       The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (1939)
·       Focus: Character Development
A close study of character development maps, in each character, the evolution of motivation, personality, and belief. The tension between a character’s strengths and weaknesses

Read Chapters 22–24. Ask them to begin thinking about how Steinbeck has organized the events that make up the plot, and whether the story so far points to a likely resolution. Students should come to class with what they think are the two most important turning points so far in the novel.

100
·       The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (1939)
·       Focus:  The Plot Unfolds

Read Chapters 25–26. Will the novel end on a tragic or comic note? Can they predict any particular tragedy or triumph for a main character?

100
·       The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (1939)
·       Focus:  Themes
o      The Individual Against the Corporation
o      The American Dream
o      Redemption
Have students finish reading the novel. Ask them to begin their essays, using the Essay Topics. Outlines are due at the next class.

100
·       Reflection on Movie vs. Book
1 page
100
Final Exam Paper 800 Words

At the end of Chapter 20, Ma tells Tom,“We’re the people—we go on.... A different time’s comin’.” Is Ma right? For the migrant workers of America, did a different time ever come? Is the Joad experience still a part of the American landscape? How can a reader tell?
Rubric includes finding 3 sources about immigration and migrant workers in 2015.
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100
Peer Review of Paper


Revision Based on Teacher’s Comments
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Honors

·       1600 Word Critical Analysis Paper due April 24th