Agenda 4-23-2015 Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Fahrenheit 451.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Agenda and Homework  On pgs , write today’s date.  Copy the agenda:  Finish Cornell Notes on SOAPSTone  Handout SOAPSTone Chart – attach to pg.
Advertisements

Writing.
“The Hearth and the Salamander” Questions
Do now  Get out your F 451 book  Get out your notebook and turn to the next blank 2 pages.  Title the B side: Characterization and Levels of Questioning.
Discussion Topics Activity An Interview with Ray Bradbury
Fahrenheit 451 Warm-Up #1 Ray Bradbury opens the novel with a quote by Juan Ramon Jimenez: “If they give you ruled paper, write the other way.” Why did.
Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Romeo & Juliet SHAKESPEARE.
Entry Task How did changing the point of view affect the information presented in the story? – What was the most significant change? Explain with detail.
Response Essays. Prose Passage Generally one page excerpt from a work to read and analyze. Determine your ability to read and interpret a sustained piece.
Test Taking Tips How to help yourself with multiple choice and short answer questions for reading selections A. Caldwell.
Turn in your self-reflection sheet
Reader’s Notebook Objectives:
Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Romeo & Juliet SHAKESPEARE
Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Romeo & Juliet SHAKESPEARE.
Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Romeo & Juliet SHAKESPEARE.
Agenda Juniors - American Short Stories Freshmen - Fahrenheit 451.
AP Prompt #2: Prose Prompt. The FREE RESPONSE prompt (almost) ALWAYS asks… …what it contributes the meaning of the work as a whole …how it illuminates.
Agenda Freshmen - Annotating Chrysanthemum & Summarizing & Word Web & Activity Juniors - Crucible Act I & Computer Lab.
Science Fiction Flowers for Algernon Drill 1 11/7 Homework: Final paper due 11/12 Objective: Students will with some guidance and support from.
Agenda Juniors - American Short Stories Freshmen - Fahrenheit 451.
Agenda Juniors - Great Gatsby Freshmen - SHAKESPEARE.
Writing a Literary Analysis Paper Senior English March 6, 2013.
Do Now 9/16/14 Please take out your spiral notebook Write today’s date and title Module 1 “Academic Vocabulary”
Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Romeo & Juliet SHAKESPEARE.
Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Romeo & Juliet SHAKESPEARE.
Puritan Journal Topics 3 September What do you know about the Puritans? Make a list of at least five things that you think you know about the Puritans.
Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Fahrenheit 451.
Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Romeo & Juliet SHAKESPEARE.
Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Romeo & Juliet SHAKESPEARE.
English I McPhee. English I 9/4/2014 Complete Bellringer Get HW out: “TMDG” Comprehension Q’s Prepare for quiz.
Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Fahrenheit 451.
Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Romeo & Juliet SHAKESPEARE.
10/7/14 Do Now: Take one of each of the handouts from the front and read the directions on the top of the page. Homework: - Finish reading chapters 9 &
Agenda Juniors - American Short Stories Freshmen - Fahrenheit 451.
Before we continue with our F451 discussion, get out your SOAPSTone notes and the last SOAPSTone chart that you completed…
Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Romeo & Juliet SHAKESPEARE.
ERIKA LUSKY JULIE RAINS Collaborative Dialogue in the Classroom
Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Romeo & Juliet SHAKESPEARE.
How to mark a book To annotate means to add useful notes to a text. As you read, engage the text by asking questions, commenting on meaning, marking events.
Agenda Juniors - Great Gatsby Freshmen - SHAKESPEARE.
DO NOW – 9/17/15 Write a 2-3 sentence response on Cornell Notes: 1) What are the Common Core State Standards, and why are they important to you as a student?
Agenda Juniors - American Short Stories Freshmen - Fahrenheit 451.
Agenda Juniors - American Short Stories Freshmen - Fahrenheit 451.
11/2/15 Do Now: - Take a copy of the model dialectical journals from the front. Homework: - Read Chapter 20 in “Catcher” - Dialectical Journal (Chapters.
10/6/15 Do Now: - Take out your homework. - Take out your Catcher books and Post-It notes. Homework: - Read Chapter 5 in Catcher in the Rye Content Objective:
Bellwork 1.Each teacher turned in (his or her, their) grades to the principal. 2. The choir presented (its, their) final performance. 3. Either the employees.
English 10 Name: Brill/Cipriano Date: Period: Major Events Directions: Complete the following chart based on the major events you have come across while.
OUTCOMES TSWBAT acquire and use academic and course- specific vocabulary. TSWBAT cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of text.
©2014 IPDAE. All rights reserved. All content in this presentation is the proprietary property of The Institute for the Professional Development of Adult.
Journal/Entry Slip: Answer all of the following questions: 1. What would you do if you were Montag and found out the society in which you lived.
Write these important dates down in your agenda: Bring those box tops! Friday (10/02/15) – “N.T.S.” Folder Check w/ Rubric Chess Club 8:00-8:45 Friday.
5/27/15 Do Now: -Take out any resources that you have for your “Hamlet” literary analysis essay. -Sit with your lit. circle groups Homework: -“Hamlet”
January 20, 2016 Characterization and 3.4 Double Entry journal.
Learning Target: 1. Students will revise and edit their analytical essay for A Separate Peace. Language Objective: Students will use a revising and editing.
ARGUMENTATION From Patterns, pages ARGUMENTATION Read the entire section on argumentation; notes are suggested p. 529 – 546 at the very least.
Let America Be America Again. Today’s Goals Practice re-reading a text Use a dictionary to find the correct meaning of a word Connect with a text Homework:
Understanding Close Reading Agenda Approaching the Text INTRODUCTION TO THE UNIT.
Today’s Targets Introduction to Non-Fiction Important terms and definitions Non-Fiction a.I can identify the characteristics and understand the purpose.
SMARTER BALANCED Student Overview
Agenda, Homework, Warm-up
workbook NOVEL ANALYSIS
Reading Response Journals
English I Lesson Plans Second Nine Weeks Fahrenheit 451 Guidebook Unit
Reading an Interview Narrative
English I CP • Wednesday 11/13
Marigolds by Eugenia Collier
SMARTER BALANCED Student Overview
Comparison of Texts.
WoW #5 The ships hung in the sky in much the same way that bricks don’t. -Douglas Adams, Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
English 1 CP 10/26/11 Agenda: 1) Free Write Homework: None
Presentation transcript:

Agenda Juniors - Catcher in the Rye Freshmen - Fahrenheit 451

● What is truth? How do our truths compare to society’s? ● What rules must people follow? How our perceptions of ourselves differ from others’? ● What is an individual’s relationship to society? ● How does our environment (people and places) affect us? ● How are observations of our surroundings an important way to understand our place in the world? ● How does experience affect one’s observations? Catcher in the Rye Essential Questions

Step 1: Please grab your notebook, a copy of The Catcher in the Rye Step 2: Start a fresh page, date it and title it Journal "A Perfect Day for Bananafish" by JD Salinger – published in 1948 in The New Yorker The character Seymour suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder from WW2. Q – How does his wife talk about him? Q – What does her mother think? Q – Explain the interaction between Seymour and the little girl. How is it strange? QUIZ TOMORROW CHAPTERS Good Morning

You be the Shrink  You will be analyzing Holden, as if they were the “one psychoanalyst guy” who is working with Holden.

Recall a person you saw today on your way to school. Describe this person and invent a story about them: Who is he/she? Where is that person going? Invent a distinct characteristic or hobby you think this person would have based on what you observed about him/her this morning. Relay Writing

Entry 10: Begin your “Personal Observations/Reflection” portion of the journal project by answering the following questions in your journal tonight.  Mr. Antolini says, "The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one." Explain what this means. Then analyze whether or not you think it's true. Discuss why. Catcher in the Rye Journal-10

Step 1: Please grab your notebook, and Fahrenheit 451 book Step 2: Start a fresh page, date it and title it VOCAB Please define these words and then write down the sentence where they come from in the book. Venomous (p.1) Marionette (p.9) Pulverized (p.11) Good Morning/Afternoon

(1) identify the main claims made throughout the essay and the order in which they appear; (2) identify specific phrases, sentences, or paragraphs that develop the claim of each section; and (3) identify the connections made between the claims of each section Superman and Me

NOW: reread the text and highlight words and phrases that reveal Alexie’s attitude toward life on the reservation, treatment of American Indians, and reading and writing. Use a different color highlighter for each subject (e.g., green for reservation life, yellow for treatment of American Indians, pink for reading and writing) Superman and Me

1.How does Alexie learn to read? What is the significance of the text he used to learn to read and his process? 2.What is the importance of the title and the image of “Superman”? 3.How do the language Alexie uses throughout the text, the examples he provides, and the way he structures the text convey a central idea? END Q’s Superman and Me

Part 1: The Hearth and the Salamander – Each person at your tables take two of these. 1.What is the significance of Montag seeing his reflection in Clarisse’s eyes? 2.What two observations does Clarisse make about Montag’s conversational mannerisms? 3.What things do the McClellans do which cause them to be classified as peculiar? 4.What final question does Clarisse ask Montag on the night of their first encounter? Why is the question important to the plot? 5.Find two further similes Montag uses to describe Clarisse. Do the similes serve any purpose other than to characterize Clarisse? 6.Describe the bedroom which Montag enters. Whom does the setting characterize? 7.At this point of realization, what happens to the smile on Montag’s face, and what is his answer to Clarisse’s question? 8.What event occurs that night which provides Montag with an impression of the state of society? What is that impression? Fahrenheit 451 Possible Quiz Q’s

OBJECTIVE: Evaluate a speaker’s point of view, reasoning, and use of evidence and rhetoric. Present information, findings, and supporting evidence such that listeners can follow the line of reasoning and the organization, development, and style are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience. So look across the table at your interview partner for today - ●Say HI! ●Then you will take turns with the questions and go slowly. ●One person will read the question and give their answer and then the other will comment and either add or suggest a different answer. ●Then you will switch. The Veldt - Interview