In your journals… [or on a sheet of notebook paper]

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Annotating Literature
Advertisements

ACT: The Reading Test.
Do Now: Read and Think… For groups to work successfully, Group Norms must be established. – Norms stands for the word normal. In other words, what needs.
Of Mice and Men By John Steinbeck.
How to answer a constructed response question. Step 1: Understand the prompt What are you writing about? MOST (but not all) prompts have 3 parts. 1.Background:
English III/IV March Direct/Indirect Objects & Subject complements quiz! It is that time……time for our quiz. You CAN use your notes on the quiz,
Socratic Seminars – The Basics
02/22- Agenda- Reading Responses, Vocab Quiz, Grammar Work
AP Essay Reflection Usually this occurs the day you get the essays back, and is accompanied by group discussion and analysis, examples, highlighting,
Learning around the World Unit 1
Seeing through a cultural lens
Identifying Question Stems
Ask students to write on an index card individually
C-Day September 28, 2017 D-Day September 29, 2017
Introduction to Detroit: An American Autopsy
Learning Targets I can recognize and use the vocabulary introduced in the text. I can identify the parts of a text: chapter, paragraph. I can select a.
Good Morning Everyone!! Our Warm Up today is finishing the exam we began on Monday. You will have exactly 30 mins in class today before we need to move.
Figurative Language, Outlining
Fictional Text What makes a good story?.
Lesson 1 – Introduction to ethics
Today’s Agenda and essential questions
TAKING CORNELL STYLE NOTES
Test Taking Strategies
AP Language and Composition
Science Inquiry August 12,2016.
TAP and Writing Prompts
Start – Up - Discussion 9/19/17
Title of notes: Text Annotation page 7 right side (RS)
English 50 Ms. Lynde.
10 minutes of independent reading
Earth Science Ms. Rogers
Daily Obj: I can determine the theme of a text by analyzing characters and conflict of a fictional story. Good morning! Write down the homework: Turn in.
Today’s Agenda, Eq’S, AND Word Wall
Title of notes: Text Annotation page 7 right side (RS)
Imagine your family is trying to decide whether or not to get a pet
Study Skills for School Success! Session 3
Week 5 Film/TV Writing.
Bell work: September 9, 2015 Caught’ya Day 10 and day 11 (remember to label commas with the rules) DO both days!
Today you will need: Tuesday October 18, 2016 Pencil
Thinking About How You Read
Critical Thinking This one is pure logic. Every good thinker can figure this one out. You’ll have three minutes to finish. No cheating or talking.
Introduction to Academic Language
Annotating Texts Mr. Laurich.
Study Skills for School Success! Session 3
Second half of unit 1: Synthesis
Tackling Timed Writings
Raise your hand if… you have ever read an entire paragraph, passage, or page only to realize that you have absolutely no clue what you just read.
Session 15: Writing across texts
What is Rhetoric? Lesson 1.
Listening Lesson Spring 2018
Ask students to write on an index card individually
MCAS 2.0 Dates of the Test ELA – April 24th and 25th Math – May 8th and 9th Science – May 22nd and 23rd.
Reading prompts.
Testing Terms EOG Practice.
English 3 Unit: Fahrenheit 451
Unit 1: Days
To know and say who someone is or what something is
8/28/17 What is a question that you have? If you have no questions, Tell me an interesting fact about you. When you are finished use the list to independently.
Module 2 Unit 2 Lesson 3.
Monday Warm-Up Please copy the following definitions into your notebook, and then do the following: Underline key words. Rewrite the definition in your.
Tuesday, 8 September 2015 BRING YOUR AR BOOK!!!!!!!!
Learning Objectives and Agendas
“Spread of Fake News Prompts Literacy Efforts in Schools”
Learning Target I can identify the purpose and key details in a writing prompt. To be able to interpret a prompt accurately during a timed writing test.
Taking active reading notes
Literacy at LHS Listening Lesson
Daily Obj: I can determine the theme of a text by analyzing characters and conflict of a fictional story. Good morning! Write down the homework: Turn in.
Part A: Stand-Alone Text
Final week before parcc!
Annotation.
Presentation transcript:

In your journals… [or on a sheet of notebook paper] PROMPT 1 PROMPT 2 OR CHOICE Respond (in whatever way you would like) to the following quote: “However vast the darkness, we must supply our own light.”   ―Stanley Kubrick Create a character that has an unusual phobia (fear). Write a scene that causes that character to face his fear. Is (s)he able to overcome his fear? Finish a story from another day Write about whatever you want.

(pen, pencil, highlighter, etc.) 30 sec: SET UP 1. EP 2. STANFORD READING 3. Annotation tools (pen, pencil, highlighter, etc.)

AGENDA

ANNOUNCEMENTS

HOMEWORK Half-Sheet of Paper

ANSWERS FOR THE DO-NOW

QUICK REVIEW

SCENARIO & QUICKWRITE 1 Imagine that you agree to participate in an experiment. When you arrive you are informed of its outline: You will be in a room with a scientist He will instruct you to ask another participant (in another room where you can’t see them, but you can hear them) to memorize a series of words If they recite these words back to you incorrectly, you are to administer an electric shock. This is intended to prevent them from answering incorrectly in the future You must increase the voltage each time they are incorrect.

Stanley Milgrim Experiment http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yr5cjyokVUs Quick-write prompt: What would you do? Would you continue to administer the shocks? Explain.

QUESTION LAST CLASS “If our existence cannot be defined by SCIENCE or MORALITY what can we use to figure out our purpose in life?”

TODAY’S QUESTION What happens when MORALITY (my idea of right and wrong) and ETHICS (a group’s idea of right and wrong) come into conflict?

“Why are we doing this?” – Mary Jane STANDARD Determine central ideas or themes of a text and analyze their development; summarize the key supporting details and ideas. OBJECTIVE After close-reading Stanford, I will be able to: strategically identify a theme/characteristic of existentialism create a thorough definition of the characteristic create a visual /description that correctly applies the characteristic

Before you re-read your prompt keep the following thought in mind: You have been given a task, just like you might in college, or on a job, or on a volunteer project, etc You want to be thorough, but you don’t want to waste time… How do you decide on what is important? How you decide what will help you succeed, but won’t overwhelm you? Remember, this prompt is based on being able to read and apply complicated text into a written form. WHILE YOU ARE READING, HOW DO YOU KNOW IF SOMETHING IS GOING TO BE USEFUL?

PROMPT Question to ask yourself: After researching essays and articles on existentialism, write an essay that defines existentialism and argues whether or not Franz Kafka’s work, The Metamorphosis is an example of this movement. Support your discussion with evidence from your research. For this specific prompt, WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR IN THE READING? What is a definition? Something that describes a term So if you’re trying to figure out whether or not The Metamorphosis is an example of existential text, you first need to figure out WHAT? How to describe the term So… what are you looking for in the reading? Anything that is going to help YOU define what existentialism is

The Difference Between the VOCAB and the TERMS VOCABULARY TERMS These words have been given to you ahead of time so that you can ACCESS the text They are words that need context in order for you to partially understand what you’re reading These terms are guiding you towards characteristics you could discuss in your essay I need you to create your own meaning for these so that when you are explaining them in your essay you can assert that they are your own original ideas and not a definition from a dictionary

VOCAB: Phenomenology [EP pg 9] How we interpret experiences through the first-person perspective (ex: my perspective).

VOCAB: Transcendental [EP pg 9] The belief that society and its institutions corrupt the purity of the individual.

VOCAB: Normative [EP pg 9] Based on what is considered to be the usual or correct way of doing something

VOCAB: Intentionality [EP pg 9] A philosophy that attempts to explain how human beings and animals engage the world and come to understand it well enough to meet their need. We determine things and find comfort in the idea that objects have LABELS. The unknown is scary… let’s label it! Grass is green Sky is blue Water is clear

VOCAB: Autonomy [EP pg 9] The power or right of a country, group, person, etc, to govern itself.

READING – “Emergence of Existence” Stanford: PG 3 EP: PG 9 AGENDA Read 1.0 together Dead Poet’s Society Partner Reading Stanford, 1.1 Questions 4 & 5 Quick-write 2 Exit Ticket

“Dead Poets Society” Clip https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2EdWgsTUhmI Why does Mr. Keating stand on his desk? Why does he want the students to stand on his desk as well?

EVERY TIME YOU READ FOR THIS UNIT… WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING? POP QUIZ EVERY TIME YOU READ FOR THIS UNIT… WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING?

READING NORMS

Quick-Write 2 [EP pg 10] How do you think an existentialist would respond to the Milgrim Experiment? Defend your answer by referencing an idea presented in the text

Discussion

Exit Ticket