Tuesday, December 13, 2016

The Stranger Discussion Questions

Since we have finished reading The Stranger, here are some discussion questions and activities.

From yesterday:

How is Meursault affected by his mother’s death?
What is the purpose of Salamano and his dog?
How is Meursault an “outsider?”  What about his other associates?
Why does Meursault shoot the Arab?
How does the murder affect Meursault?
How does imprisonment affect Meursault?

From today:

Write down ten quotations from The Stranger that show Meursault's character.  They can be from any point in the novel, but they should reflect the development of the plot.  Comment on each one.

We will write about the novel on Thursday and Friday.

Monday, November 21, 2016

Compassion and Sacrifice Essential Questions

Our second marking period theme deals with compassion and sacrifice.  Here are the essential questions.  Remember, so far, we have read "A & P," by John Updike, and "The Yellow Wallpaper," by Charlotte Perkins Gilman.

1) How can perspective affect the reader's understanding of compassion and/or sacrifice?  
2) What motivates characters/individuals to be (or not to be) compassionate and/or to sacrifice?  
3) When characters/individuals decide to be (or not to be) compassionate and/or to sacrifice, what internal and/or external conflicts might they face?  
4) What are the outcomes of acts of compassion and/or sacrifice?  
5) How are characters/individuals ultimately affected by compassion and/or sacrifice?

Monday, November 14, 2016

Macbeth Word Trace: In Class Today

Choose a word: good, blood/bloody, time, say, fear, hand(s), great, see, sleep, man, thought, look, eyes, heart, night, death, live, nature, love, etc.
Use a concordance (http://www.opensourceshakespeare.org/concordance/)  to find every instance in which the word is used in Macbeth.  Reread those scenes.  
 Analyze the word in context.  How does the use of the word connect to the themes of the play?  What is being communicated?

Monday, October 24, 2016

Macbeth

Please remember to bring your book with you each day.

Also, Waiting for Godot scenes are due tomorrow.

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Deforming Waiting for Godot

This is what we did in class today:

Choose a passage from Waiting for Godot. Deform it in some way. You could switch out a particular part of speech, delete some words or lines, change the order of words, combine lines, etc. Rewrite it in its new form. What do you learn about the text by doing this?

Write a paragraph explaining what you did to the passage and what it showed you about the passage you deformed.

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Writing about Poetry

We read poems by Walt Whitman and Langston Hughes yesterday.  Today, we are writing about them.  Please see me for the assignment. 

Friday, September 30, 2016

Recent In-class Assignments

1. Find a poem that expresses “the human heart in conflict.” 2. Write down the book source, page number, title, and author. 3. How does the poem express “the human heart in conflict?” 4. What literary devices does the author use to express the theme? How? 5. Once you have found one poem and answered the questions above, find another poem—by a different poet— with a similar theme. Compare them. How do the poets use different techniques to express similar themes? • Find a pair of poems that expresses the human heart in conflict in a different sense than the poems you chose yesterday. For example, if your poems yesterday were about romantic love, your poems today could be about courage. • For each poem, identify the source, title, and author. Then, identify the theme(s) and literary elements. Analyze how the author uses literary techniques to express the theme. 1. Find a poem you have trouble understanding. It should be about 14 lines long (the traditional length of a sonnet). 2. Copy it into your notebook, but double-space it. 3. In the spaces between the lines, translate the poem, English to English. Substitute each noun, verb, adjective, or adverb with a word with another word with the same or similar meaning. Use a dictionary to define any words you do not know. 4. Now, look at your lines by themselves. What do they tell you about the poem? How do they help you understand? Look at the original poem again. Why did the poet choose the words he or she chose? 1. Find a partner and give him/her the information he/she needs to find the poem you studied yesterday. Do not give your partner your translated poem. 2. Once you have your new poem, do the same thing you did yesterday: perform an English to English translation/interpretation after you have copied the poem and skipped lines. 3. Write a short reflection on what you have learned about the poem by doing the translation. 4. When you have both finished, discuss the poems—the interpretations and the original— with your partner. What aspects of the interpretations do you have in common? What do you interpret differently? How and why? Find a poet whose work you enjoy reading. If you read more than one poem by a poet and do not enjoy them, move on to another poet. Find a poet you like. After reading his or her work, self-reflect. What do you like about the poet’s work? Why does it engage you? How did you find it? How can you find similar poets? Then, continue reading.

Thursday, September 29, 2016

Poetry

We are continuing our mini-unit on poetry, and we are also keeping the quarterly theme of the human heart in conflict in mind.  Please see me for any assignments you may have missed due to absence. 

Monday, September 19, 2016

Marking Period One Essential Questions

Essential Questions:  Please answer these questions using examples from the stories we read last week. ("The Utterly Perfect Murder," "The Jockey," "The End of Something," "The Boulevard of Broken Dreams," and "Only the Dead Know Brooklyn.")

1) What do we mean by this metaphor, the human heart?

2) Why does a human heart feel conflict?

3) What are the various conflicts the human heart feels?

4) How is the human heart affected by conflict?

5) How is resolution of conflict dealt with?

Please make sure you are finished reading your summer reading book.  We will write about the book on Wednesday.

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Letter of Introduction Assignment


Please write me a thoughtful, well-developed letter of introduction.  Here are some topics to consider; you are not limited to these topics, however.
o   Your hobbies and extracurricular interests
o   Your academic interests
o   How you like to spend your free time
o   Your history as a reader
o   Your history as a learner: how do you learn best?  What are your strengths?  Weaknesses?
o   Your goals for the school year
o   How your friends would describe you
o   Your family
o   Your favorite things: books, movies, songs, albums, pets…
o   What is important to you
o   A random fact or two