Today: Analyzing and Constructing Perfect Paragraphs

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Today: Analyzing and Constructing Perfect Paragraphs 9/15/16 BR: How does a person’s identity affect their participation in our democracy? -Election Judge Registration! Today: Analyzing and Constructing Perfect Paragraphs

Important moments in my Life Event #1 Description Who/What made it possible How did it shape your identity Event #2 Event #3 Extension – Due Friday!

In This Class.. Student voices count You will be discussing controversial issues with people of different opinions You will be collaborating with classmates on a variety of projects You will be engaging the community You will be engaged in civic life

On your notebook (left side) What makes a successful classroom? What does it look like Sound like? How are people acting? What are people doing? What is happening? What is the teacher doing? What are you doing? Take a few minutes to write Compare with a partner and discuss Join with another pair, discuss, revise, add to you list Record your list on butcher paper and post it

What next? As a Class, lets make a list of the most common characteristics (5-10)

Is our class a community? Discuss why we think it is or is not.

Consider.. Communities are not built of friends, or of groups with similar styles and tastes, or even of people who like and understand each other. They are built of people who feel they are part of something that is bigger than themselves: a shared goal or enterprise, like righting a wrong, or building a road, or raising children, or living honorably, or worshipping a god. To build community requires only the ability to see value in others, to look at them and see a potential partner in one’s enterprise. —From A City Year, by Suzanne Goldsmith

Community Use the provide guide and rewrite the quote What does this quotation mean? Chunking the quotation into smaller sections and rewriting each chunk in your own words may help you answer that question . The following steps can help you: Read the passage aloud . Read it several times . Circle words that are unfamiliar . Use context clues to help you define those words . If that doesn’t work, look up the words . Write synonyms for these new words in the text . Use the provide guide and rewrite the quote

Can You Answer? To be a community, must members like each other? Do you agree that communities always have a shared goal or enterprise? Are those who do not contribute to the shared goal/enterprise still considered members of the community? Does being a member of a community come with responsibilities? Based on your new understanding of community, do you think our classroom is a community? Why or why not? If not, what would it take to make the classroom a community? How does being a member of a community shape your identity? Think about the communities that you belong to (perhaps some were represented in the objects you brought in during the last lesson) and how they influence you. Do you think communities can function effectively without being organized in some way? Why or why not?