+ Paper Preparation Get out a sheet of paper. Today we are paper boxing. That means you need to fold your paper like a hamburger twice. Title your paper.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Todays Agenda Washington DC WWI Video Quiz Bell Ringer – 14 May 2012 Get out a sheet of paper, head it with your first and last name, todays date, and.
Advertisements

Bell Ringer – 19 August You may sit at any desk youd like. There are no assigned seats today. 2.Get out a sheet of paper or take one from the front.
Pick up a “Judicial Branch in a Flash” reading page from the front table by the door. Take two minutes to skim over the sheet, focusing on the pictures.
May – Bell Ringer FIRST, turn in any homework to the bin in the front of the room. SECOND, get a workbook from the cart. Take it to your seat.
1. Put your technology away! You are about to be engaged. 2. Pick up a white board and marker. Take them back to your seat with you. 3. Using your marker,
Today we are paper boxing. Wait, did you forget how to do it? Fold your paper like a hamburger and then like a hamburger again. Paper Preparation.
Segregation NO COLOREDS ALLOWED. Definition: seg·re·ga·tion n. 1. The rule or practice of separating people of different races, classes, or ethnic groups.
Classroom Procedures Mrs. Mueller Room 130. By the end of the period, scholars will be able to complete thirteen questions by working independently and.
Homeroom Sit in alphabetical order by last name (i.e. if you are #1 on the roster you sit in desk #1 etc…) If you aren’t on the roster…raise your hand.
Pick up a Review Sheet...unless you have one with you.
Bell Ringer 1.You may sit at any desk you’d like. There are no assigned seats today. 2.Get out a sheet of paper or take one from the front table. 3.Fold.
Objective: Students will use spelling patterns/rules and print/electronic resources to determine correct spellings. You will need a piece of manila paper.
22 August 2013 Bell Ringer 22 August 2013 一 Bell Ringer Today we start with paper boxing. Please title your paper “Citizenship: Just the Facts”. Put your.
THE MODERN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT Taking a walk With Civil Rights Leaders and established laws for African Americans and Women.
I hope you completed your home prep last night. Start by paper boxing, but after you unfold the paper, fold the bottom of the page to the center fold so.
Career Exploration Armstrong Middle School. Career Exploration Session 1 PLEASE ENTER SILENTLY AND LOG IN TO A COMPUTER.
 What form of protest do you think is most effective violent or non-violent? Why?
Apartheid in South Africa. Please do not talk at this timeDec3 HW: Finish Imperialism in Africa Review Last day to turn in make up work, or re-do assignments.
How we do things in our classroom…
Social Studies and Theater Grade 2 By: Radhai Hariharan.
Bell Ringer 1. You may sit at any desk you’d like. There are no assigned seats today. 2. Get two sheets of paper and a pencil from the pick up table. 3.
Rule One: Raise your hand to speak. Rationale: If student’s just talked whenever they wanted to the classroom would have no order and it would become.
Social Studies DO NOW 1.Take a piece of paper. 2.Choose a seat. 3.Respond to the following in paragraph form. Be specific! HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT SOCIAL.
1.Choose your seat (If you choose wisely I may not have to move you) 2. When I raise my hand or you hear my voice – please stop talking. 3.I will take.
Total Participation Workshop: Engaging All Students All the Time AUDII 2015 Ann Tollefson and Lili Bueno.
Civil Rights and Discrimination Fair or Unfair. Discrimination The unjust or prejudicial treatment of different people or things, especially on the grounds.
Agendas and journals for…. Writing Assignment: 10 June 2013  If you could go on an adventure, what would you do? Where would you go? What would you bring.
23 SEPT 2015 BELL ACTIVITY: JOURNAL…. Why do you think there are labor laws in the United States? Discuss the positives and the negatives. Labor laws dictate.
Welcome to 7th Grade American History with Mrs. Rostas
March 13, Unit VIII Introduction: Civil Rights Movement Notes (part 1) The Movement Begins 3. Video Clip: Brown vs. Board of Education.
1. Finding your seat - grab your name tent from the basket 2. Match the number written on your name tent to the seat number in our class 3. Take out your.
Welcome to Mr. Hammond’s class! Please sit in your assigned desk, and start on your BELLWORK immediately. 1) Make sure you are in your assigned seat. If.
LIFESKILLS IN ACTION Presented by Dean Tannewitz Certified Master HET Consultant.
Rule One:  Be prepared for class  The faster everyone is ready the faster can start to learn.
Today we are paper boxing. Put your full name, today’s date, and the period that you have civics in the upper-right hand corner. I am timing you to see.
December 5. Warm-up 1 st and 2 nd block  READ and research  Read your book  Write the title, author, and topic  Write 20 more facts (new ones) about.
Today’s Agenda WWI Video Quiz Between WWI and WWII Bell Ringer – 16 May 2012 Get out a sheet of paper, head it with your first and last name, today’s date,
Welcome you take me to your heart\take me to your heart.ppt.
Agenda September-2015Day 5 1. Type 1: In 46 seconds list as many of the 8 parts of speech as you can. 2. Definitions for each part of speech as.
 If a thief breaks into a house, what kinds of things are they going to take?  What kind of things will they not take?  How quickly do they want to.
1.2 How Can We Work Together? Pg. 7 Creating a Quilt Using Symmetry and Investigations.
Monday, February 27 Grab a new Frank from the stool Intro to the Apartheid Vocabulary Brain Pop Apartheid Laws Learning Target: I can describe the South.
Classroom Expectations When Entering the Classroom Quietly enter and find your seat. Get your pencil and books open and ready to begin.
Warm up 1.Get out a piece of paper. 2.Fold it into thirds. 3.In the first section, write the date at the top 4.Copy and answer the following questions:
BELL RINGER 7 MAY 2012 GET OUT YOUR NOTES OR A TEXTBOOK.
Today’s class requires a lot of quick thinking and quick writing. Where you sit determines your group. Do not move any desks. There will also be weird.
Bell Ringer 1. Hold onto the home learning, we’ll collect it after the bell ringer. 2. (10 minutes to complete) Get your computer & go to:
Education and Civil Rights School Desegregation In Boston.
Pick up a “Directions for Democracy” packet from the front table by the door. See if you can complete the “Breaking It Down” section from memory as you.
The United States Constitution Turn to page 474 in your History Alive Textbooks.
Agenda/Announcements 1.Finish watching the movie 2.Human Memory Textbook Questions Who cannot watch the movie: Karina Lily Candy Friday! Will your class.
6.03. Do Now – Translate! The position of a box of cookies on a table is represented by the points (-2, 4) (-3, -1) (0, -2) and (1, 3). If the box is.
Celebrations in the USA. Martin Luther King Day..
CHAMPS & Classroom Procedures
May – Bell Ringer FIRST, turn in any homework to the bin in the front of the room. SECOND, get out a sheet of paper, head it, and title it “Golden.
English IV August 6, 2014.
Final Presentation EDU 214 by: Erica Maddux
“Room 2-203, Civics, and (your name)”
Materials: Catalyst sheet, scantron
Bell Work: Ball Drop Lab (Continue on the paper you started yesterday
Advisory Activities.
Classroom Procedures Mr. Baker’s Classroom.
Do Now Pick out a colored pencil/crayon from the boxes at the front of the room. Rip out pages (activity 16.2) in your Spring Board Book, staple.
2012 September 13 一 Bell Ringer
Welcome to Math!.
mass: gram:: time : __________ up : down :: push: ________
Paper Preparation Today we are paper boxing.
Today’s Standard SS.7.C.1.3 Describe how English policies and responses to colonial concerns led to the writing of the Declaration of Independence. 一.
What do you need? Let’s examine language without pronouns.
1st Q, wk #1 Aug , 2018.
Presentation transcript:

+ Paper Preparation Get out a sheet of paper. Today we are paper boxing. That means you need to fold your paper like a hamburger twice. Title your paper “What If”. Show me you are ready by holding the front corners of your desk.

+ 二 What If? Writing I am going to ask some deep thinking questions. Your job will be to respond to them. You will have a limited time. Consider this rubric to evaluate yourself as you write: Full Credit: Four complete answers. A: Three complete answers. B: Two complete answers and one incomplete answer. C: One complete answer. D: Three or four incomplete answers. F: Only fragments of one or two answers.

+ Choose from the following: plug them into this sentence template: If ________, my life would be different because ________. Write each sentence in a different box. I could only marry someone with the same color skin? I could only ride on a certain part of the school bus? only children of the same race could go to school together? the neighborhood I want to live in only lets a certain race live there? I have to take a harder test than someone of a different race? a restaurant won’t let me in because my race can’t eat there.

+ Turn your “What If?” paper into the bin at the front table. First, separate the desks into quads. Second, stand next to the cabinets while I pass out today’s papers. Each paper will have the group members’ names on it. Find your group and see which box your name is in. You will be responsible for leaders, events, laws & the courts, or groups.

+ Sorting Civil Rights Only the person whose name is in the box may write things down. Together, write all the people, places and things from the center box into the boxes you think they belong in. You have five minutes to complete this. It does not need to be perfect; we will share answers later.

+ 三 Reading and Quickthinks Come pick up a reading worksheet. Take turns reading one paragraph at a time. Sections: Isn’t That Discrimination? We Shall Overcome The People Who Changed Things Change Starts with Forcing People to Pay Attention Change in the White House Change in the Laws Change in the Courts Did Anyone Oppose the Civil Rights Movement? At the end of each section, everyone must share a quickthink. Write one of those quickthinks and continue reading. When you are finished, come see me.

+ 四 What’s The Message? Marches, protests, sit-ins and boycotts all have one thing in common: signs! Match the problem/solution cards with the correct protest sign. When your group is finished, call me over.

+ 五 Re-Sorting Civil Rights Let’s share our answers and make changes as necessary.

+ 六 Vocabulary and Name That Protest Use your reading paper and your group as resources to complete the worksheet I am passing out now.