THE COLOR OF WATER BY JAMES MCBRIDE NOTES, GUIDED READING ACTIVITIES & RESOURCES.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
WRITING TEST TIPS. You may use the dictionary and the thesaurus on all parts of your reading and writing tests. USE THEM! You have a style manual in the.
Advertisements

You’re the author – what were your intentions?  A dot point outline of unrelated, random thoughts loosely connected to your writing  A plan for your.
Literature Circle Roles Descriptions.
Literary Analysis Review
Tone and Mood. What is the difference: TONE is the emotion or attitude towards the subject which the author feels and tries to express through his/her.
Critical Thinking Course Introduction and Lesson 1
Everything you need to know in order to set up your Reader’s Notebook
DYSTOPIAN LITERATURE UNIT
Get out your Spring Board books and GRAB A HIGHLIGHTER!
Instructions for using this template. Remember this is Jeopardy, so where I have written “Answer” this is the prompt the students will see, and where.
Chapter One – Thinking as a Writer
Essay Writing Elements of the Essay.
Test Taking Tips How to help yourself with multiple choice and short answer questions for reading selections A. Caldwell.
Introduction to Short Story Elements & Plot Structure
Inside Out and Back Again
The Rhetorical Diagram “Jolliffe” Model
PSSA Reading Test.
The California Writing Exam Grades 4 and 7
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.
Science Fiction Flowers for Algernon Drill 1 11/7 Homework: Final paper due 11/12 Objective: Students will with some guidance and support from.
Literary Elements! Fiction Stories that come from a writer’s imagination are called fiction. Stories that come from a writer’s imagination are called.
CAPT Response to Literature Strategies How to Succeed at Answering the Four Questions (in about 40 minutes)
A WALK TO THE JETTY From “Annie John” BY Jamaica Kincaid
AN INTRODUCTION TO LITERARY ANALYSIS AP Style 1. Literary Analysis starts with close reading  When we read closely, we observe facts and details about.
Short Story Notes Elements of Fiction
FICTION It is what you read when you don’t have to that determines what you will be when you can’t help it. ~Oscar Wilde.
Warm-Up* Who do you think is your greatest competition? A sibling? A friend? Yourself? Why is that? What factors create that competiveness? *Warm-Ups can.
ALLUSION A passing reference to historical or fictional characters, places, or events, or to other works that the writer assumes the reader will recognize.
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 &
Lesson 4: SpringBoard Lesson Goals: *Look through and understand textbook layout/design *Acquire/use academic words in context.
Yesterday, you were asked these three questions… Prompt #1 In many works of literature, a physical journey—the literal movement from one place to another—
Before we continue with our F451 discussion, get out your SOAPSTone notes and the last SOAPSTone chart that you completed…
Thinking About Literature. What is literature? A work that rewards the time, concentration, and creativity put inot reading, re-reading, exploring, analyzing,
Short Stories. Titles The titles of short stories are always surrounded by quotation marks and are usually preceded by a comma. For instance, we might.
Dialectical Journals: What are they and how do I write my own?
An introduction to literary analysis
Annotating A Text The how and why of “Reading with a Pen”
Question Start question with how or why. End with a question mark.
Close Reading “I don’t understand it, and I don’t like what I don’t understand.” - E. B. White, Charlotte’s Web.
+. + Close Reading & Annotation Or: Here’s what you’re going to do with the text so you can answer the questions later.
The Color of Water By James Mcbride
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:
Composition LITERARY ANALYSIS ESSAY.  A literary analysis broadens understanding and appreciation of a piece of literature.  Think as you read: What.
Essay Prompt WHAT is a major theme developed in your novel, and HOW is that theme developed throughout the piece of writing? (in discussing the HOW, you.
Basic Literary Terms Every Freshman Should Know Commonly seen on standardize d tests in Texas.
Beginning Synthesis Figurative Language, Outlining.
Nonfiction Key Concepts
OUTCOMES TSWBAT acquire and use academic and course- specific vocabulary. TSWBAT cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of text.
THE COLOR OF WATER BY JAMES MCBRIDE NOTES, GUIDED READING ACTIVITIES & RESOURCES.
Say, what? Why writers say what they do and how literary devices contribute to writing and meaning.
Elements of a Short Story. Setting SETTING -- The time and location in which a story takes place is called the setting. For some stories the setting is.
SOAPSTONE & STRATEGIES Annotation Notes. SOAPS Speaker Occasion Audience Purpose Subject.
THE COLOR OF WATER BY JAMES MCBRIDE NOTES, GUIDED READING ACTIVITIES & RESOURCES.
WELCOME TO ENGLISH 10 MS. RUSSO AMERICAN LITERATURE : AN OVERVIEW OF ENGLISH 10.
Reading Log #1 - Predictions
THE COLOR OF WATER CREATING POINT-OF-VIEW CRITICAL READING JOURNALS.
Warm up 1 Take a syllabus from the front table marked with your hour by it. Read through. Write 3 sentences on what you learned from the syllabus.
Reading Strategies We Use Every Day. 1. Creating Mental Images Good readers:  Visualize and create pictures in their mind  Organize details in a “mental.
ACT Reading & ELA Preparation Color:________. Red Orange Green Blue.
Warm-Up What do you think of when you think of the elements of fiction? In your notes section of your 3-subject notebook, make a list of as many terms.
Writing Essays. What is an essay? An essay is usually a short piece of writing written about a certain topic.
The Color of Water By James Mcbride
Reading Literature Top 5 Big Ideas Your Child Will Learn
The Elements of Fiction
Literary Analysis Review
SIFT A Literary Analysis Method
The Kite Runner Close Reading
Archetype (noun) Archetypal examples
Reading Section.
Presentation transcript:

THE COLOR OF WATER BY JAMES MCBRIDE NOTES, GUIDED READING ACTIVITIES & RESOURCES

THE COLOR OF WATER: NOTES UNDERSTANDING THE AUTHOR’S DELIBERATE CHOICES IN HOW HE HAS PRESENTED HIS AUTOBIOGRAPHY HE TELLS HIS LIFE STORY IN JUXTAPOSITION (SIDE-BY- SIDE COMPARISON) TO HIS MOTHER’S

MEMOIR A COLLECTION OF SHORT, PERSONAL “VIGNETTES” HIGHLIGHTING IMPORTANT EXPERIENCES TO ILLUSTRATE A CRITICAL PERIOD IN THE AUTHOR’S LIFE; PROVIDES HIGHLIGHTS OR SNAPSHOTS CHARACTERIZED BY USE OF LITERARY DEVICES SUCH AS METAPHORS, HYPERBOLE

AUTOBIOGRAPHY A HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR’S LIFE AS TOLD BY HIM OR HER; TENDS TO BE PRACTICAL DELIVERY OF VERIFIABLE FACTS CHARACTERIZED BY LANGUAGE THAT IS MORE FORMAL AND LESS “ARTISTIC”

NARRATIVE A SINGLE SCENE FROM THE AUTHOR’S LIFE WHICH CLEARLY ILLUSTRATES HIS OR HER CHARACTER; CHARACTERIZED BY RICH, IMAGERY-LADEN, DESCRIPTIVE WRITING

PRE-READING MINI CRJ READ THE PROLOGUE; USE EVIDENCE FROM THE TEXT TO WRITE A CRJ ON ONE (1) OF THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS RAISED BY THE INTRODUCTION: READ THE PROLOGUE; USE EVIDENCE FROM THE TEXT TO WRITE A CRJ ON ONE (1) OF THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS RAISED BY THE INTRODUCTION: WHAT PREDICTIONS CAN YOU MAKE ABOUT THE CONTENT OF THIS TEXT? WHAT INFERENCES CAN YOU DRAW ABOUT THE AUTHOR’S PURPOSE FOR WRITING? HOW WOULD YOU EVALUATE MCBRIDE’S RELATIONSHIP WITH HIS MOTHER? USE CLEAR EVIDENCE FROM THE TEXT OF THIS SHORT INTRODUCTION TO SUPPORT YOUR CLAIM

READING A NARRATIVE: “THE CHASE” READ ANNIE DILLARD’S “THE CHASE” TWICE: THE FIRST TIME, YOU SHOULD JUST READ THE TEXT– CONSIDER THE AUTHOR’S PURPOSE FOR CHOOSING THIS SPECIFIC INCIDENT TO ILLUSTRATE HER CHILDHOOD. WHAT IS SHE TELLING YOU ABOUT HER SELF (THEN AS WELL AS NOW) WITH THIS NARRATIVE THE SECOND TIME YOU READ THE TEXT, YOU’LL BE LOOKING FOR THE PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES. IDENTIFY THEM BY UNDERLINING, CIRCLING, OR HIGHLIGHTING THEM. CONSIDER WHAT IS LEFT WHEN YOU’VE ELIMINATED THE PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES ALSO, CONSIDER THE AUTHOR’S PURPOSE FOR INCLUDING SO MANY PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES IN HER NARRATIVE

TO BE, OR NOT TO BE… -THAT IS THE INFINITIVE VERB PHRASE! WHAT OUT FOR INFINITIVE VERBS– “TO BE” IS AN INFINITIVE TO + A VERB (IN THIS CASE, THE WORD “BE” REFERS TO A CONDITION OR STATE OF BEING) = AN INFINITIVE VERB PHRASE AND IS THEREFORE NOT A PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE.

The Infinitive Verb Phrase: Infinitive verb phrases ARE NEITHER VERBS NOR ARE THEY PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES. They act as nouns, adjectives, & adverbs. TO + Action Verb = Infinitive Verb Phrase (and not a verb or preposition) Prepositional phrases contain a preposition + a direct object (noun) How will you know you’re dealing with an infinitive and not a verb? Remember to look for the “to” before the action. How do you know it’s an infinitive and not a prepositional phrase? If there’s a verb immediately following, then it’s not a direct object

“THE CHASE”: COLLABORATIVE LEARNING APPOINT ROLES (SCRIBE, REPORTER, FACILITATOR) ALL MEMBERS ARE RESPONSIBLE: SHARE THE PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES YOU IDENTIFIED IN THE TEXT COME UP WITH A FINAL TALLY FOR YOUR GROUP IN A SINGLE DOCUMENT, YOUR GROUP WILL ANSWER THE QUESTIONS AT THE END UNDER THE HEADING “JOURNAL WRITING” & “QUESTIONS ON MEANING” (ADDRESSES THE AUTHOR’S PURPOSE)

AMY TAN’S NARRATIVE, “FISH CHEEKS” PART I: (ON YOUR OWN, WHEN YOU’VE FINISHED THE QUIZ) 1.IDENTIFY THE PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES IN THE TEXT. (HIGHLIGHT, UNDERLINE, OR CIRCLE). 2.TALLY UP YOUR RESULTS HINT: THERE ARE OVER 50 IN THE ESSAY WATCH FOR INFINITIVE VERB PHRASES: “TO” + VERB = INFINITIVE VERB PHRASE AND NOT A PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE

NARRATIVE STYLE: CONNECTING WITH THE TEXT ON YOUR OWN, THINK OF AN OCCASION WHEN, FOR WHATEVER REASON, YOU WERE ACUTELY AWARE OF BEING DIFFERENT, OR NOT NECESSARILY FITTING IN: BRIEFLY DESCRIBE THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE SITUATION HOW DID YOU REACT? DID YOU TRY TO HIDE YOUR DIFFERENCE IN ORDER TO FIT IN, OR DID YOU REVEL IN YOUR UNIQUENESS?

THINK-PAIR-SHARE: NARRATIVE STYLE PART II (WITH A PARTNER) 1.THINK ABOUT PARAGRAPH 3- WHY DOES TAN LINGER OVER THE DESCRIPTIONS OF THE FOOD? 2.WHAT IS TAN’S PURPOSE IN WRITING THIS ESSAY? DOES SHE JUST WANT TO ENTERTAIN READERS, OR MIGHT SHE HAVE A “WEIGHTIER” GOAL? BE PREPARED TO DEFEND YOUR RESPONSE

CHARACTERIZATION: CHARACTERS ARE PRIMARILY DESCRIBED BY HIS OR HER SPEECH, ACTIONS, THOUGHTS AND TO A LESSER EXTENT, THEIR EFFECT ON OTHERS PERSONAL PRACTICE: THINK CAREFULLY BEFORE DELIBERATELY SELECTING THREE (3) OF THE BEST DESCRIPTIVE ADJECTIVES TO CHARACTERIZE: YOU EACH OF YOUR COLLEAGUES IN YOUR COLLABORATIVE LEARNING GROUPS YOU SHOULD HAVE SIX-NINE ADJECTIVES TOTAL– THREE FOR EACH OF YOU

PRACTICE: DISCUSS AND DELIBERATELY SELECT 2-3 ADJECTIVES TO BEST CHARACTERIZE OUR NARRATORS GUARDED STRONG COLD-HEARTED EMOTIONALLY-TOUGH COURAGEOUS SECRETIVE OVER-PROTECTIVE BRAVE INDEPENDENT ISOLATED RELIGIOUS COMPETITIVE MYSTERIOUS ADMIRABLE STRICT

PRACTICE: DISCUSS AND DELIBERATELY SELECT 2-3 ADJECTIVES TO BEST CHARACTERIZE OUR NARRATORS: RUTH SKILLFUL SECRETIVE DISCREET HARDWORKING OPEN-MINDED DEPRESSED CLOSED TRANSPARENT STUBBORN DETERMINED WISE INDEPENDENT MESSY SERIOUS DEDICATED DEFENSIVE IN-LOVE STRICT CARING STRONG TOUGH MYSTERIOUS

JAMES CONFUSED REBEL CURIOUS WISE SMART DYNAMIC AFFECTIONATE NAÏVE SELF-PERSERVING TOUGH INSECURE TALENTED SENSITIVE PROUD CREATIVE DECRIPTIVE INDEPENDNT CARING DIFFERENT DEPRESSED PASSIVE WONDERING LOST WANDERING DETERMINED COMPLICATED

JAMES COMPETITIVE CURIOUS COMPASSIONATE ATTENTIVE INTELLIGENT CONFUSED OPEN-MINDED CONFLICTED DETERMINED CONSCIENTIOUS

CONSCIENTIOUSLY SELECT 2-3 ADJECTIVE DESCRIBING CHARACTERS FROM THE COLOR OF WATER TATEH MAMEH ANDREW “DENNIS” MCBRIDE RICHIE HELEN FRANCIS “JACK” DEE DEE DENNIS JR. BIG RICHARD HUNTER JORDAN

CONSCIENTIOUSLY SELECT 2-3 ADJECTIVE DESCRIBING CHARACTERS FROM THE COLOR OF WATER TATEH (ZACH) MAMEH (CARLOS) ANDREW “DENNIS” MCBRIDE (SAJA) RICHIE (SNOBER) HELEN (KERAH) FRANCIS “JACK” DEE DEE (MIGUEL) DENNIS JR. BIG RICHARD HUNTER JORDAN (JORDAN)

CHARACTERIZATIONS CONSCIENTIOUSLY SELECT 2-3 ADJECTIVE DESCRIBING THE CHARACTER YOUR GROUP HAS FROM THE COLOR OF WATER WITH YOUR GROUP, IDENTIFY EVIDENCE FROM THE TEXT TO ACT YOUR DEFINITIVE SUPPORT EACH DESCRIPTIVE ADJECTIVE. CITE THE PAGE # & A FAITHFUL TRANSCRIPTION OF THE TEXT YOUR GROUP WILL PRESENT YOUR ANALYSIS (CONSIDERING INFERENCES, SOCIAL RELEVANCE, CONSEQUENCES FOR PERIPHERAL CHARACTERS) TO THE CLASS

RUTH AND HER CHILDREN

LITERARY DEVICES DICTION DELIBERATE WORD CHOICE OF AN AUTHOR RELIES ON AUDIENCE’S INFERENCE TOWARD CONNOTATION VS. DENOTATIVE MEANING OF WORDS SYNTAX THE DELIBERATE ARRANGEMENT OF WORDS IN A SENTENCE OR GROUP OF SENTENCES TO SET AN INTENTIONAL MOOD OR TONE OR TO PLACE EMPHASIZE SPECIFIC IDEAS TONE THE FEELING OR MOOD CREATED BY THE AUTHOR’S CHOICE OF DICTION, SYNTAX, PUNCTUATION, LITERARY DEVICES AND WHAT INFORMATION IS CONVEYED IN A PIECE OF WRITING

EXAMPLES DICTION EXAMPLES: HOUSE VS. HOME, THOUGHTFUL VS. DREAMER, MANIPULATIVE VS. PERSUASIVE SYNTAX EXAMPLE: “MY MOTHER WAS VERY SECRETIVE ABOUT HER PAST BECAUSE IT WAS SO PAINFUL FOR HER.” VS. “BECAUSE IT WAS SO PAINFUL FOR HER, MY MOTHER WAS VERY SECRETIVE ABOUT HER PAST ” TONE EXAMPLE: CONSIDER GREETING CARDS HOW IS THE TONE OF A BIRTHDAY CARD DIFFERENT A CONDOLENCE CARD? OR CONSIDER THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A CONGRATULATORY CARD VS. A BIRTHDAY CARD. MOTHER’S DAY CARDS VS. HALLOWEEN CARDS WHAT ABOUT THE ROLE OF PUNCTUATION? HOMEWORK HOMEWORK HOMEWORK… HOMEWORK… HOMEWORK? HOMEWORK? HOMEWORK! HOMEWORK! HOMEWORK?! HOMEWORK?!

MORE LITERARY DEVICES IMAGERY DESCRIPTIVE LANGUAGE DELIBERATELY SELECTED BY AN AUTHOR TO ILLUSTRATE AN IMAGE IN THE MIND OF THE READER FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE SIMILES AND METAPHORS MAKE COMPARISONS BETWEEN IDEAS. SYMBOLISM EMPHASIZES & ELABORATES ON A SPECIFIC IDEA, OFTEN REAPPEARING THROUGHOUT THE TEXT

1 ST PERIOD PRACTICE: THINK-PAIR-SHARE (4 MINS) ON YOUR OWN, READ THE FINAL LINE ON PAGE 91 ALL THE WAY UNTIL THE END OF THE FIRST PARAGRAPH ON PAGE 96. (5 MINS) WITH AN ELBOW PARTNER, IDENTIFY SPECIFIC LITERARY DEVICES (INCLUDING IMAGERY AND FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE) IN THIS SELECTION AND DETERMINE THE TONE OF THIS PASSAGE (7 MINS) BE PREPARED TO DEFEND YOUR SELECTIONS AND REASONS TO THE CLASS

4 TH PERIOD ANNOTATION PRACTICE (4 MINS) ON YOUR OWN, BEGIN READING FROM THE FIRST FULL PARAGRAPH ON PAGE 90 ALL THE WAY UNTIL BOTTOM OF PAGE 95. AS YOU READ, CONSIDER LITERARY ELEMENTS SUCH AS TONE & FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE (SIMILES, METAPHORS, PERSONIFICATION, SYMBOLISM)

ANNOTATION GALLERY WALK (3-4 MINS PER PAGE OF TEXT = 12 MINUTES TOTAL) WITH THE MEMBERS OF YOUR GROUP, ANNOTATE EACH OF THE PAGES MOUNTED TO POSTERS BY IDENTIFY SPECIFIC LITERARY DEVICES (INCLUDING IMAGERY AND FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE) IN THIS SELECTION AS WELL AS TONE, DICTION, AND SYNTAX ROTATE UNTIL ALL SIX PAGES HAVE BEEN ANNOTATED (7 MINS) SHARE OUT FINDINGS WITH THE WHOLE CLASS

COOPERATIVE LEARNING GROUPS WITH YOUR ASSIGNED GROUPS, DETERMINE EXPLORE THE TEXT TO FIND EXAMPLES OF LITERARY DEVICES WE DISCUSSED IN CLASS. ASSIGN ROLES: FACILITATOR: KEEPS THE GROUP FOCUSED, MOTIVATED AND ON-TASK, EFFECTIVELY AND EFFICIENTLY MANAGES TIME RECORDER/REPORTER: DOCUMENTS COMMON RESPONSE FOR THE GROUP RESEARCHER: USES THE TEXT AND ALL OTHER AVAILABLE RESOURCES TO CONDUCT NECESSARY RESEARCH TO HELP DEVELOP THE MOST THOUGHTFUL RESPONSE TO EACH PROMPT FOR THE GROUP

USE-OF-LANGUAGE: NARRATOR EXPLORE THE LANGUAGE (CONSIDER DICTION & SYNTAX) USED AS EACH OF THE TWO NARRATORS TELLS HIS OR HER STORY WHAT ARE SOME NOTABLE DIFFERENCES CAN YOU DETECT IN WAY RUTH AND JAMES EACH TELLS HIS OR HER STORY? CONSIDER THE ROLE OF A NARRATOR: HOW DOES POINT OF VIEW IMPACT THE TONE OF THE PIECE AND AUDIENCE’S PERCEPTION OF EVENTS?

POINT-OF-VIEW WHAT ROLE DOES POINT-OF-VIEW PLAY IN INTERPRETING THE TEXT? CONSIDER THE PERSPECTIVE OF EACH OF THE NARRATORS– HOW WOULD THE STORY BE DIFFERENT IF TOLD FROM RICHIE OR HELEN’S POINT OF VIEW? WHY DIDN’T JAMES CHOOSE TO INCLUDE HIS SIBLINGS’ PERSPECTIVE IN THIS STORY?

FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE: FIND (3) THREE EXAMPLES IN THE TEXT ILLUSTRATING MCBRIDE’S USE OF SIMILES, METAPHORS, IMAGERY, HYPERBOLE, AND/OR PERSONIFICATION. PLEASE NOTE, EACH EXAMPLE YOU FIND SHOULD ILLUSTRATE A DIFFERENT ELEMENT OF FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE FOR EACH EXAMPLE YOU’VE SELECTED, DESCRIBE THE EFFECT IT HAS ON THE READER

THEMES: AN OBVIOUS THEME FOR THIS TEXT IS THE SEARCH FOR IDENTITY, AS JAMES AND RUTH BOTH SHARE HIS AND HER OWN STRUGGLE WITH ESTABLISHING A SENSE OF SELF-WORTH AND VALUE. WHAT ARE SOME OF THE MAJOR THEMES, OR REOCCURRING IDEAS IN THE TEXT?

TONE: WHAT IS THE TONE OF THE PIECE? BE PREPARED TO DEFEND YOUR EXPLANATION WITH SIGNIFICANT EXAMPLES FROM THE TEXT.

SYMBOLISM IDENTIFY AND EXPLAIN 2-3 MAJOR SYMBOLS IN THE TEXT. CONSIDER MCBRIDE’S PURPOSE FOR SELECTING THESE ELEMENTS IN HIS MEMOIR– WHAT EFFECT DO THEY HAVE ON THE AUDIENCE?

COOPERATIVE LEARNING GROUPINGS: KERAH, CARLOS, JORDAN= NARRATIVE TONE (COMPARE AND CONTRAST DICTION & SYNTAX OF NARRATORS) SALMA, AJAY, JESMENIA= WHY DOES HE USE BOTH HIS & HIS MOTHER’S POINT-OF-VIEW? DAVID, JAHNAVI, DANIEL= THEMES (CITE 2-3, DEFEND YOUR REASONING) SNOBER, ZACH, LUPE, SAJA= SYMBOLS (IDENTIFY 3 MAJOR ONES) MALIHA, SARINA, LESLIE= TONE (MOOD OR FEELING THROUGHOUT THE TEXT) RONALD, MIGUEL, ANA= DIALOGUE (EXPLAIN THE ROLE OF DIALOGUE IN THIS MEMOIR, ILLUSTRATE WITH 2-3 EXEMPLARS ) JOHN, ASHLEY, CHRISTOPER= IDENTIFY CLEAR EXAMPLES & FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE AND EXPLAIN FUNCTION

PRESENTATION GUIDELINES BRIEFLY REVIEW THE LITERARY CONCEPT YOUR GROUP IS PRESENTING (SYNTAX, TONE, DICTION, FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE, THEME, NARRATIVE TONE, SYMBOLISM, ETC.) SHARE YOUR EXAMPLES FROM THE TEXT (BE SURE TO CITE THE PAGE #) AND EXPLAIN HOW THOSE EXAMPLES CLEARLY ILLUSTRATE THE LITERARY DEVICE YOU’RE PRESENTING CLASS WILL ANNOTATE TEXT TAKE NOTES AND/OR ANNOTATE THE TEXT USING STICKY NOTES

HOW DO YOU SEE YOURSELF? CONSIDER WHAT DESCRIPTORS YOU WOULD USE TO DESCRIBE YOURSELF TRY TO THINK OF “LOADED” ADJECTIVES LIKE: GREGARIOUS, INTROSPECTIVE, OR EVEN, BRAZEN). NOW EXPLAIN WHY THOSE ARE APT DESCRIPTORS BY PROVIDING AN EXAMPLE OR TWO OF YOUR EMULATION OF THEM

CONFLICT TAKE A MOMENT TO RECALL A PARTICULAR MOMENT OF CONFLICT JOT DOWN WHO WAS INVOLVED, WHAT WAS THE ISSUE-AT-HAND, & HOW DID YOU “SEE” THE SITUATION– WHAT OUTCOME WERE YOU HOPING FOR? ADDITIONALLY CONSIDER THE OUTCOME, AND EVEN WHEN DID THIS CONFLICT TAKE PLACE

CHANGE YOUR PERSPECTIVE NOW PONDER THIS SAME CONFLICT THROUGH ANOTHER CHARACTER’S EYES. CONSIDER HOW HE OR SHE “SAW” THE CONFLICT? WHAT WAS HIS OR HER PERSPECTIVE? WHAT EVIDENCE DID HE OR SHE HAVE TO SUPPORT A CLAIM? WHAT OUTCOME DID HE OR SHE WANT TO HAVE HAPPEN IN THE CONFLICT? HOW DID THEY SEE YOU IN THIS CONFLICT?

THINK-PAIR-SHARE REVISIT PAGE STARTING WITH THE LAST PARAGRAPH, OPENING WITH THE LINE, “WE NEVER CONSULTED MOMMY WITH THESE PROBLEMS,” ALL THE WAY TO PAGE 71 UNTIL THE SENTENCE ENDING,... “THAT WAS OKAY WITH MOMMY” NEAR THE END OF THE FIRST PARAGRAPH HOW DOES JAMES FEEL ABOUT HIS BROTHER, DENNIS? IN OTHER WORDS, WHAT’S THE TONE OF THIS PASSAGE HOW DO YOU KNOW? FIND SPECIFIC WORDS AND PHRASES THAT EXPRESS HIS FEELINGS SHARE YOUR IDEAS WITH A NEIGHBOR BEFORE SHARING WITH THE CLASS

A NEW PERSPECTIVE WHILE YOU WATCH THE INTERVIEW WITH DR. DENNIS MCBRIDE, CONSIDER WHAT HE SAYS ABOUT THE ROLE OF PERSPECTIVE… PAIR-SHARE (3 MINS)

WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR YOU? THE NEXT FOUR (4) CRJS YOU’LL WRITE WILL SHOWCASE YOUR ABILITY TO ADDRESS THE ROLE OF PERSPECTIVE IN THE TEXT. KEEPING IN MIND WHAT YOU GLEANED FROM HEARING DR. MCBRIDE SHARE, CONSIDER WHICH PASSAGES FROM THE TEXT MIGHT BE TOLD DIFFERENTLY FROM ANOTHER CHARACTER… CAREFULLY SELECT FOUR PASSAGES, EITHER PHOTOCOPY OR TRANSCRIBE BY HAND THE PASSAGE, ANNOTATE IT FOR THE AUTHOR’S USE OF TONE, DICTION, IMAGERY, & SYNTAX (AND ANY OTHER LITERARY DEVICE YOU FIND IN THE TEXT)

WHAT WILL YOUR POV CRJS LOOK LIKE? RE-WRITE THE PASSAGE FROM ANOTHER CHARACTER’S PERSPECTIVE, MAKING SURE TO ACCURATELY DEPICT THE EXACT SITUATION YOU SELECTED, BUT TOLD FROM ANOTHER CHARACTER’S POINT OF VIEW HOW WILL YOU KNOW THE CHARACTER’S FEELINGS? YOU’LL HAVE TO MAKE A REASONABLE PREDICTION BASED ON YOUR UNDERSTANDING OF THE CHARACTER AS JAMES PORTRAYS HIM OR HER IN THE COLOR OF WATER USE THOSE INFERENCES FROM HIS TONE TO DEVELOP EACH OF YOUR FOUR CRITICAL READING JOURNALS BE CREATIVE, BUT BE ACCURATE AND FAIR

GETTING STARTED: READ AND ANNOTATE THE PASSAGE YOU CHOOSE WITH THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS IN MIND: WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT THE CHARACTER? WHAT ARE HIS/HER DOMINANT TRAITS? WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT THE CHARACTER’S STRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES? WHAT IS MISSING (OR HAS BEEN EMBELLISHED) FROM THIS ONE- DIMENSIONAL VIEW OF THE STORY? WHAT PART OF THE NARRATIVE WILL REVEALED FOR THE AUDIENCE IF SEEN THROUGH DIFFERENT EYES?

YOUR GOAL: PURPOSEFUL IMITATION: YOUR FINISHED CRITICAL READING JOURNALS SHOULD NOT LOOK LIKE A FORMULAIC SEEA RESPONSE, BUT RATHER A THOUGHTFUL REFLECTION ON JAMES MCBRIDE’S WRITING STYLE. YOU MUST STRIVE TO IMITATE THE STYLE PRESENTED IN THE TEXT AS YOU ADD DEPTH AND PERSPECTIVE TO HIS MEMOIR INSTANCES TOLD FROM ANOTHER CHARACTER'S PERSPECTIVE. THEREFORE, BECAUSE THE FORMAT IS DIFFERENT, THEN THE GRADING RUBRIC WILL BE DIFFERENT AS WELL AND FOLLOW THE PARRC NARRATIVE RUBRIC FOR THESE CRJS ONLY.

“LONELY BOY” BUT I LOVE YOU. I DON’T UNDERSTAND WHY YOU WOULD LEAVE. CAN’T YOU SEE HOW MUCH I ADORE YOU? HOW MUCH I NEED YOU? I PROMISE I’LL BE BETTER, GOOD, EVEN. JUST COME BACK. GIVE ME ANOTHER CHANCE….. I DIDN’T MEAN IT, I COULDN’T HELP MYSELF… I WAS FEELING LONELY AND ABANDONED, AND IT WAS A TEMPTATION I COULDN’T RESIST…. I’M SO ASHAMED… I’M SORRY. IT’LL NEVER HAPPEN AGAIN, JUST DON’T LEAVE ME ALONE….

#LOW-TOPS ARE IN THIS YEAR… I MEAN, C’MON! THEY’RE MADE OF LEATHER, FOR GOODNESS SAKE. LEATHER. COW HIDE. I’M A DOG, I LOVE COWHIDES. I’M JUST SAYIN’ MAYBE WE SHOULD RETHINK WHO’S REALLY AT FAULT HERE.

“INSATIABLE” YOU KNOW HOW YOU WERE SURPRISED ABOUT HOW SKINNY I SEEMED WHEN YOU FIRST LAID EYES ON ME LAST WEEKEND? DON’T DENY IT, I KNOW YOU TRIED TO HIDE YOUR REACTION, BUT I COULD TELL YOU WERE CONCERNED. I COULD SENSE YOU WATCHING HOW MUCH I ATE AT DINNER… WELL, I WAS HUNGRY! I DON’T WANT YOU TO WORRY ABOUT ME THOUGH, I CAN TAKE OF MYSELF. SEE? AREN’T YOU PROUD?

SEE? I’VE GOT THIS UNDER CONTROL YOU DON’T HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT FEEDING ME ENOUGH, I’LL JUST HELP MYSELF TO WHATEVER SEEMS GOOD IN THE FRIDGE WHENEVER I’M FEELING HUNGRY. BY THE WAY, YOU’RE OUTTA EGGS.

EXTRA CREDIT ASSIGNMENT IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO EARN EXTRA CREDIT OVER THE WINTER BREAK, YOU CAN DO SO BY WRITING AN ADDITIONAL P.O.V. CRJ BASED ON THE PERSPECTIVE ANOTHER CHARACTER IN A MOVIE, BOOK, SONG, ETC.

RACHEL BECOMES RUTH RE-READ THE FIRST FEW PARAGRAPHS OF CHAPTER 1, CONSIDER RUTH’S PERSPECTIVE– WHY IS SHE SO GUARDED? WHY WOULDN’T SHE SHARE HER PAST WITH HER OWN CHILDREN? DISCUSS ALL THE POSSIBILITIES FOR HER SECRECY…