Monday, November 24, 2014

December!

We will begin reading Things Fall Apart together in class Tuesday and Wednesday, so bring your books!
Remember to scroll down to previous posts to make sure you don't miss anything.

Period 1: 
Solid, well-crafted, typed drafts are due on Thursday December 4 for peer-editing. Finish reading chapter 1 and complete your Chapter 1 dialogue journal--at least three quotes with succinct, intelligent responses. Remember your Nigerian artifact for the board!
Period 2: 
Solid, full-length, well-developed typed drafts are due at the beginning of class on Thursday December 4th for peer-editing. Complete your dialogue journal page for Chapter 1 of Things Fall Apart.

Period 5: Read chapters 1 and 2 of Things Fall Apart
  • Fill in one dialogue journal page for each chapter (2 pages total due on Friday). Each page of your dialogue journals should include 3 quotes  (gathered from each chapter), so, for chapter one, you will select three quotes either about Okonkwo as a character; Igbo cultural practices, values or beliefs; proverbs or folktales; roles of women; or conflict with the missionaries. Do the same on the second page for chapter 2.
  • Place the quotes on the left side of the table. Place your responses on the right side of the table. Use the CARPE note-making strategy to vary your responses
  • Follow the directions on the example sheet. 
  • Your summary goes at the bottom of the page.
  • Final drafts were due on Wednesday December 3. Make sure your peer-editing sheet is completely filled out by two different editors!



  • Period 6: Read chapters 1 and 2 of Things Fall Apart
  • Fill in one dialogue journal page for each chapter (2 pages total due on Friday). Each page of your dialogue journals should include 3 quotes  (gathered from each chapter), so, for chapter one, you will select three quotes either about Okonkwo as a character; Igbo cultural practices, values or beliefs; proverbs or folktales; roles of women; or conflict with the missionaries. Do the same on the second page for chapter 2.
  • Follow the directions on the example sheet. 
  • Place the quotes on the left side of the table. Place your responses on the right side of the table. Use the CARPE note-making strategy to vary your responses. 
  • Follow the directions on the example sheet. 
  • Your summary goes at the bottom of the page.
  • Final drafts for "The Role of Literature/Role of Storytelling" were due at the beginning of the class on December 3. 


*All STUDENTS: IF you forgot to turn in your Nigerian fact, image, or statistic, please turn it in--bulletin board ready (that means beautiful--typed, great font, etc.) ASAP.

Here are the instructions for your synthesis essay "The Role of the Writer/Role of Storytelling" from the power point as promised:

If you follow the prompt and the instructions on the sheet I gave you, you should have a very strong essay. 

Introductory Paragraph
Hook:
Begin with a quote:
Chimamanda Adichie said…” or
Begin with a question:
“What would culture be without stories?” or
Begin with an anecdote:
“Once upon a time…” my dad began, as I snuggled deeper into my x-men sheets.” or
Begin with a statistic:

“Every year, Amazon sells _______ number of books. And they say reading is dead…”
Background

Set up your idea. This is the background or context
 For Example: Stories shape the lives of humans starting from a very young age, whether those stories are fables, tall tales told at the dinner table, church gossip on Sundays, or fantasies read before bed. Stories have a profound impact on the way our cultural identity is shaped, on our sense or right and wrong, as well as on our ability to understand other people.
Thesis:
For Example: Stories in my life have been a shield from tension at home, offering me other lives to slip into, other realities to explore. Stories have offered me new worlds and perhaps, most importantly, stories have taught me that I am not alone.

Body Paragraph #1

Open with a topic sentence, for example: I suppose I might not have become a reader if I had not needed to escape the heated conversations between my parents during my second grade year. I'd seek out princesses in peril, trolls set on terrible vengeance, and kids who could time travel. At first I just wanted to escape, but later I found myself entering strange new reading territory, journeying into lives wildly different from mine but more realistic. 
Follow with quote and enough background to develop your idea, for example: Turkish writer Elif Shafak said, Stories can punch holes in your mental walls” and that was certainly true for me. Growing up in a tiny, conservative town, I had never known anyone who was hungry, anyone who looked different from me, anyone who was anything but a patriotic, God-fearing American. The first time I read about a child living in entirely different circumstances was in the seventh grade when…
Close with analysis: Shafak’s idea that stories can offer release and relief from the staggeringly narrow confinements of our inherited experiences is proven by my secret awakening, sparking in me a curiosity to travel and see the world beyond the little valley I called home. My mental walls had been punched, and ideas started pouring in.

Body Paragraph #2 
Choose your next idea.

Develop it in a similar manner using quotes to support your thinking. Use your author packet to help give you ideas.
Body Paragraph #3

Same idea. Choose a different author or a new point to develop.
If this is hard for you, you may want to return to your thesis for guidance.
My thesis said that stories offered me escape. Shafak is probably the best author to quote for that because she loved to travel into the lives of others by virtue of her active imagination.
•In my thesis, I also said stories helped me realize I was not alone. I could call on Uwem Akpan and Chimamanda Adichie finding a quote about how universal the human experience is, like when Akpan said “My dear American brothers and sisters, this is not just an African problem. Children all over the world suffer.” This might help me say I realized suffering was universal, or it helped me realize how small my problems were compared to the struggles of others, or how much power I have to change my life, just like children in the stories were brave enough to change their lives. The result was that I felt less alone.
-Do you see how I am making connections here? I am connecting the thoughts of these authors with my life and explaining my realizations as well as the effect those realizations had on me. 
Conclusion:

Conclusions do more than restate the thesis. They eloquently build on ideas presented in previous paragraphs driving home the importance of what you have said.
Think of your essay as moving in a circle. The last part should not be an echo, but it should bring you to a peaceful or profound sense of ending.
Do not introduce new ideas.
Do leave the reader thinking, moved, or satisfied.

Friday, November 21, 2014

Over the Weekend 11/22-23

Period 1-2: Bring in a fact, image, historic anecdote, or piece of data about Nigeria. We will be building a class bulletin board so whatever you bring should have visual appeal. PLEASE don't just scribble something down in your notebook and then hand in a torn piece of paper. That will not help us!

Period 5-6: Come with a rough draft of your Role of Storytelling Personal Essay, or, at the very least, a VERY developed outline. Outline should include the following parts:

1. Hook:
    a. background
        b. thesis (roadmap to your paper/your contract with the reader)
2. Body Paragraph #1
    a. topic sentence
        b. evidence/plan to incorporate quote by which author
            c. analysis--here you will explain, expand or elaborate on your connection to that author.
3. Body Paragraph #2
    a. topic sentence
        b. evidence/plan to incorporate a quote by which author (can be same or different than the author               above.
            c. analysis--connect your idea or experience to this author by analyzing their idea or opinion                       with your own.
4. Body Paragraph #4
    a. topic sentence
        b. evidence/quote.
            c. analysis/connection. (Remember you can agree OR disagree with an author arguing for your                   own opinion.

5. Conclusion: Restate your thesis
     a. bring the reader back to your original idea by addressing the background or big picture.
         b. offer final thoughts /this is a gift you will leave with your reader and should be something you                want them to think about.

Monday, November 17, 2014

Homework for Tuesday/Wednesday

There is no new homework. If you are all caught up, relax and pat yourself on the back. If you are not all caught up, scroll down and see what you need to do to make up missing work!

Monday, November 10, 2014

Questions for Akpan's "Say You're One of Them"

Instructions for stories from Say You’re One of Them, by Uwem Akpan.

Due Thursday November 13 periods 1 and 2/Friday November 14 period 5. Period 6 due on Monday November 17. Period 6, scroll down for "Sugar" questions.

You have 2 choices, Basic Criteria or Challenge Criteria. Challenge Criteria does the same thing as Basic Criteria, but it includes and additional story and 1 more question. Please read the instructions carefully.
Basic Criteria*

1. Finish reading, “An Ex-mas Feast”. PLEASE DO NOT MAKE MARGIN NOTES. 

2. Read the interview with Uwem Akpan at the back of the packet.

3. Answer question 1, 2,  7, and 8. Make sure to answer clearly restating the question and to support your opinion with evidence from the text using quotes around anything you cite.

Challenge Criteria*

1. Finish reading “An Ex-mas Feast”

2. Read “What Language is That?”

3. Read the interview with Uwem Akpan

4. Respond to questions at the back: 1, 2, 4, 7 and 8. Make sure to formulate responses clearly, restating the questions and supporting your opinion with evidence from the text using quotes around anything you cite.

*Basic Criteria meets proficiency for grade-level requirements. Basic criteria is C level work. This level work is complete, accurate, and shows an understanding of the material.
*Challenge Criteria is A/B level work.  Here I am looking for depth of thought, analysis, and exploration of the topic. I expect the work to challenge you. This level work shows ownership of the topic.

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Questions For "Sugar" by Elif Shafak

“Sugar” Questions for Elif Shafak’s Chapter from The Bastard of Istanbul


1.     Annotate the chapter using the CARPE note making strategy as your guidelines.
2.     In your notebook title the page “Sugar”.
3.     List elements of setting.
4.     Find two examples of direct characterization. Write down the quote and discuss the effectiveness of each description.
5.     Find two examples of indirect characterization. Write down each quote and discuss what the indirect characterization shows about the person.

Due Thursday 11/6 (periods 1, 2) Friday 11/7 (periods 5, 6)

Scroll down for "That Thing Around Your Neck" Questions 

CHALLENGE ASSIGNMENTS
Challenge assignments are available to all students.

A and B seeking students are expected to "extend" their learning at least 3 times per semester in addition to striving for the Exceeds marks on all rubrics.

Challenge assignments represent work that connects to our central curriculum by lending breadth and depth to our subjects.

Challenge Assignments must be turned in during the unit to which they apply. For the current unit, "Culture and Storytelling," students the following challenge assignments are being offered.


  • Free Rice [10,000 Grains]--take a photo or make a printout of your score.
  • Read the Ms. magazine interview with Chimamanda Adichie. Annotate it and write a written response. I expect clear, professional responses to each challenge assignment in order to receive credit. 
  • Challenge Criteria*  for an Ex-mas Feast--this represents the "beyond proficiency requirement and is the equivalent of 25% of your grade.

    1. Finish reading “An Ex-mas Feast”

    2. Read “What Language is That?”

    3. Read the interview with Uwem Akpan

    4. Respond to questions at the back: 1, 2, 4, 7 and 8. Make sure to formulate responses clearly, restating the questions and supporting your opinion with evidence from the text using quotes around anything you cite.

    *Basic Criteria meets proficiency for grade-level requirements. Basic criteria is C level work. This level work is complete, accurate, and shows an understanding of the material.
    *Challenge Criteria is A/B level work.  Here I am looking for depth of thought, analysis, and exploration of the topic. I expect the work to challenge you. This level work shows ownership of the topic.

Challenge assignments will not be entered as traditional grades but will be kept in a separate file on my desktop for final evaluation.

I encourage you to take on these challenges!


Monday, November 3, 2014

All Periods!

Scroll down for "That Thing Around Your Neck" questions. Due Tues. (periods 1-2) and Wednesday (periods 5-6) at the beginning of class.