English Hon 9a, Day 32 * Thurs/Fri Find your notebook and your folder . . . . then . . . open either book and read!!!!
Winter Garden aGlow volunteers needed for upcoming dates. Thursday Dec Winter Garden aGlow volunteers needed for upcoming dates! Thursday Dec. 1 - Prancer’s Elves, General Support & Relievers Friday Dec. 2 - Admissions, Greeters, Refreshments Saturday Dec. 3 – Prancer’s Elves, Greeters Sunday Dec. 4 - Prancer’s Elves, Ticket Takers Monday Dec. 5 – Admissions, General Support & Relievers, Greeters, Prancer’s Elves, Ticket Takers Wednesday Dec. 7 – Admissions, Greeters, Refreshments, Ticket Takers Thursday Dec. 8 – Admissions, Greeters, Refreshments, Exit Gate Attendants Friday Dec. 9 – Admissions, Exit Gate Attendants, General Support & Relievers, Greeters, Prancer’s Elves, Refreshments, Santa’s Elves, Ticket Takers Saturday Dec. 10 – Admissions, Exit Gate Attendant, Greeters, Refreshments, Sign up today! http://idahobotanicalgarden.org/get-involved/volunteer/
Upcoming Due Dates Jan 9, 10 computer lab B = 28 TKAM ch. 10-11 by next class A Vocab #9 due & quiz TKAM ch. 12-13 by next class B typed current event exploration # 4 due 12 p.m. w/ Works Cited entries = 4 TKAM ch. 14-15 by next class A = 5 TKAM ch. 16 by next class typed current event exploration # 5 due 12 p.m. w/ Works Cited entries = 5 Vocab #10 due & quiz TKAM ch. 17-18 by next class TKAM ch. 19-20 by next class B = 12 TKAM ch. 21-22 by next class typed current event exploration # 6 due 12 p.m. w/ Works Cited entries = 6 Vocab #11 due & quiz TKAM ch. 23-24 by next class Christmas Holiday Jan 9, 10 computer lab
2nd quarter CECE “current event CHALLENGE & exploration” NEW Q2 CECE header CECE #5 Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Paragraph. Works Cited Last name, First name. “Title of article.” Title of Publication. Day Month Year, pages. “current event CHALLENGE & exploration” NEW Q2 CECE instructions = green sheet 2 entries for #2, 3 for #3, etc.
Review of CECEs Format blank sheet of paper into hotdog fold This becomes the header on the packet. Student name per
About the CECE reviews . . . Mean people stink (sorry, not sorry – it’s true) The CECE peer review process is supposed to help show you the good, the bad, and the ugly of your peers’ writing . . . . . .it is not meant to give you, or anyone else, the opportunity to belittle or befuddle people. You can be critical of a person’s writing without attacking their character, their value as a person, or their wonderful creative capacity.
You will be completing _???_ reviews. Each paper gets read TWICE in your group. Be honest. Be nice. Find a way to do both. Student name per Look specifically at the context = first 2-3 sentences. SIGN YOUR NAME, PER #
Introduce title and author and publication Titles of articles = “ ” Publications = italicized or underlined AVOID hit and run Introduce idea of what you have learned
You will be completing _???_ reviews. Each paper gets read TWICE in your group. Be honest. Be nice. Find a way to do both. Student name per Look specifically at the context = first 2-3 sentences. SIGN YOUR NAME, PER # Everything else INCLUDING Works Cited = 4 entries
#4 = 4 entries Last name # Works Cited "Athlete's Foot - Topic Overview." WebMD, 25 Sept. 2014, www.webmd.com/skin-problems-and-treatments/tc/athletes-foot-topic-overview. Accessed 6 July 2015. Author. Title of article. Title of publication, Publisher, Publication Date, Location (pages, paragraphs and/or URL, DOI or permalink). Date of Access (if applicable). Lundman, Susan. "How to Make Vegetarian Chili." eHow, www.ehow.com/how_10727_ make-vegetarian-chili.html. Accessed 6 July 2015.
Organize CECEs Get folders Find Q2 yellow tracking form Fill in . . . (2 sides)
In yer Notebook Flip to the back of the notebook . . .
GO TO NEXT CLEAN PAGE, AND FOLD IT IN HALF VERTICALLY: NUMBER 1 – 10, SKIPPING LINES DOWN THE PAGE 1 2 3 Etc. 10.
Vocabulary 10 = quiz Wed/Thurs FRONT BACK WORD 1. 2. 3. Etc. 10. DEFINITION EXAMPLE 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. USE IN A SENTENCE 6. 7. 8. ETC.
Vocabulary 10 = quiz Wed/Thurs LITERARY TERMS = all of these are examples of FALLACIOUS REASONINGS Appeal To Emotion Appeal to Flattery 3. Ad Hominem Attack 4. Appeal To Tradition 5. Slippery Slope OTHER WORDS – ch 12-16 altercation contemptuously formidable edification 10. acrimonious Ex: If you agree with me that Ms. T. is the nicest teacher ever, it shows that you are intelligent and good looking and a snappy dresser.
In yer Notebook 38) TKAM in Context 39) We love OPs, IOs, and DOs. Table of Contents: 31) How to Identify Which Type of Sentence 32) Museum Walk = 4 square plus 1 33) Reflection on Race 34) Objects from the quiz . . . 35) What’s a Bildungsroman? 36) TKAM Characters & Setting 37. Agree or disagree? 38) TKAM in Context 39) We love OPs, IOs, and DOs. 40) Vocabulary Share 41) Book Covers 42) Maycomb Paragraph à la JS 43) Symbols 44) Notebook Share = half page 45) Symbols (again) 46) Trials = What Role Does Society Play?
To Kill a Mockingbird
46) Trials = What Role Does Society Play? Designate at least 1 page in notebook for this. Make 6 columns. Trial name Prediction: Innocent or Guilty? Evidence from text to support prediction? Actual Outcome: Innocent or guilty? Was the verdict FAIR? Explain How did society influence or shape the outcome?
46) Trials = What Role Does Society Play? Designate at least 1 page in notebook for this. Make 6 columns. At front of room, there are pages with trial synopses on them. There are a total of *5* famous trials. Take one trial at a time. Someone from group reads the synopsis. Discuss as a group. Fill in first 3 columns of chart. If you have “wait time,” keep yourself busy . . . READ!!!! Tuinstra Freebie: synopsis = singular
Order doesn’t matter – just make sure you do all 5!! Trial name Prediction: Innocent or Guilty? (how it should be!) Evidence from text to support prediction? Actual Outcome: Innocent or guilty? Was the verdict FAIR? Explain How did society influence or shape the outcome? A. B. C. D. E. Order doesn’t matter – just make sure you do all 5!! Just first 3 columns! When you get done . . . READ . . .VOCAB . . . Meaning of life . . .
Classic Trials (A) The People of the State of California vs Classic Trials (A) The People of the State of California vs. Defendant A = 1996 By the time closing arguments began in the Simpson case, the trial had already broken the record as the longest jury trial in California history. The jury spent only three hours deliberating the case that had produced 150 witnesses over 133 days and had cost $15 million to try. "We the jury in the above entitled action find the defendant, Orenthal James Simpson, not guilty of the crime of murder." . . .but there was a follow up civil case . . .
Classic Trials (B) Lizzie Borden vs. State of Massachusetts = 1892 Based on the lack of evidence and a few excluded testimonies, Lizzie Borden was acquitted for the murder of her father and stepmother.
Classic Trials (C) Sleepy Lagoon Murder Case The People vs Classic Trials (C) Sleepy Lagoon Murder Case The People vs. Zamora = 1942 The Los Angeles Police Department (L.A.P.D.) rounded up more than 600 youth -- mostly Mexican Americans known as "zoot-suiters" for the ballooned pants and long coats they wore Within months of the convictions, Los Angeles erupted in the Zoot Suit Riot. For the better part of a week, sailors and other servicemen dragged kids off streetcars, from restaurants, and out of movie theaters. The boys were beaten and often stripped of their zoot suits. Thousands of white civilians cheered them on and helped the sailors. As the riot progressed, Mexican American boys moved to defend their neighborhoods, setting traps for sailors and assaulting them in their cars. The L.A.P.D. let the riot continue for the better part of a week. After the riot ended, the Los Angeles City Council banned the wearing of zoot suits on Los Angeles streets. The 38th Street boys were convicted in Los Angeles' tabloid journals -- and the jury agreed. Hank Leyvas was sentenced to life in San Quentin. Within a year of the riots Hank Leyvas and the boys were released from prison. Their convictions in the Sleepy Lagoon case were overturned on appeal. The court ruled that there had been serious errors in the trial: a biased judge, the denial of counsel, and a lack of evidence. Authorities declined to retry the case. Whoever killed José Díaz got away with murder.
Classic Trials (D): The Trial of Galileo = 1633 Galileo was found "vehemently suspect of heresy," namely of having held the opinions that the Sun lies motionless at the center of the universe, that the Earth is not at its centre and moves, and that one may hold and defend an opinion as probable after it has been declared contrary to Holy Scripture. He was sentenced to formal imprisonment at the pleasure of the Inquisition. On the following day this was commuted to house arrest, which he remained under for the rest of his life. His offending Dialogue was banned; and in an action not announced at the trial, publication of any of his works was forbidden, including any he might write in the future.
Classic Trials (E) State of Florida vs. Defendant E = 2013 George Zimmerman was found not guilty of second-degree murder. He was also acquitted of manslaughter, a lesser charge. In finding him not guilty of murder or manslaughter, the jury agreed that Mr. Zimmerman could have been justified in shooting Mr. Martin because he feared great bodily harm or death. The six female jurors entered the quiet, tense courtroom, several looking exhausted, their faces drawn and grim. After the verdict was read, each assented, one by one, and quietly, their agreement with the verdict. Even President Obama weighed in, expressing sympathy for Mr. Martin’s family and urging a thorough investigation. “If I had a son,” Mr. Obama said, “he’d look like Trayvon.”
HOMEWORK Next class (and always): BYOB & TKAM Wed/Thurs = Vocab 10 Wed: Q2 CECE #5 due by 12 p.m. TKAM: finish Ch 14-15 by Mon/Tues