Thursday, October 10, 2013
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Monday, September 30, 2013
English II Love, Sacrifice, and Redemption October 7 to October 31
English II Love, Sacrifice,
and Redemption
October 7 to October 31
Learning
Target
I
will conduct intensive research.
I will
organize materials using online resource.
I
will complete writing process for research paper.
I
will use precise language, avoiding clichés and casual language.
I
will write appropriate transitions to organize paragraphs.
I
will analyze how literary devices affect meaning.
I
will explore the nuances of “love” as a topic within a text.
Materials
Cyrano
de Bergerac Edmond
Rostand
Act One and Two of King Lear by William Shakespeare
Daily Activities and
Homework Assignments
Days
|
Class Activities
|
Homework
|
10/7
|
Clip of Act one of Cyrano, Presentation on
author, and read Act I as a class
|
Complete Act I study guide questions
|
10/8
|
Complete Act I and seminar on What does society
value?
|
|
10/9
|
Cyrano Webquest
|
|
10/10
|
Act I quiz and read Act II together
|
Complete Act II study guide questions
|
10/11
|
Lit Circle on Act 1 and 2 and watch Act 2
|
|
10/15
|
Act II Quiz, Venn Diagram on American and French
Society, start Act III
|
Complete Act III study guide questions
|
10/16
|
Complete Act III
|
|
10/17
|
Symbolism Poster
|
|
10/21
|
Read Act IV
|
Complete Act IV study guide questions
|
10/22
|
Love Letter Activity
|
|
10/23
|
Read Act V
|
Complete Act V study guide questions
|
10/25
|
Cyrano Test
|
|
10/26-27
|
Viewing of Roxanne
Seminar on physical and spiritual.
|
|
10/28
|
Computer lab to start research on beauty
Create a
750 word research paper on the definition of beauty and be sure to use at
least three different cultures as evidence.
|
Essay due Oct. 31
|
10/29
|
Lesson on the writing process and paraphrasing
sources
|
|
10/30
|
Close reading on excerpts from King Lear
|
|
10/31
|
Grammar Review and peer editing of research
project
|
|
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Friday, September 20, 2013
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Thursday, September 12, 2013
English II Human Rights and Responsibilities
September 16 to October 3
Genocide- the deliberate and systematic extermination of a national, racial, political,
or cultural group.
Purposes
To examine the causes and effects of genocide
To remember and honor the fallen
To examine how to end current genocide
Learning Target
I can write a coherent and logical essay
discussing either the causes or effects of genocide or create a poster on the
events and concepts studied.
I can support their thesis statements with
reading, observations, quotes, and personal experiences.
I
can examine conflict (internal, external, man vs. self, man vs. man, man vs.
society, man vs. nature) within the ext.
I
can analyze dialogue and description as it relates to author’s tone and
purpose.
I
can analyze character’s motivations and author’s choices.
I
can identify
an extended metaphor or recurring symbol from the first several chapters. I can
consider how this recurrence is related to the theme.
I
can analyze how historical events influence literature.
I
can analyze how literary devices help convey theme.
I
can write appropriate transitions to organize paragraphs.
I
can use precise language, avoiding clichés and casual language.
I
can analyze the motives, qualities, and contradictions of a character in a
major work.
I
can select, come to group consensus, and evaluate “moving” passages. As a group
analyze what techniques are used to make them so.
Materials
Presidential Speech on Syria
Hotel Rwanda-film
Night by Elie Wiesel- novel
“The Shawl”
Selected Poems
Interviews, audio, and websites from a variety of
Holocaust museums
Daily Activities and
Homework Assignments
Days
|
Class Activities
|
Homework
|
9/16
|
The President’s Speech on Syria
|
|
9/17
|
Presentation on the Holocaust
Complete pages 3-22 in pairs and complete
section 1 chart in pairs
Clip and bio on Elie Wiesel and visuals from
Auschwitz
|
Complete pre-reading questions
|
9/18
|
Read pages 23-46 in class
|
Complete Reading questions for sections 1-3
|
9/19
|
Read Pages 27-45
|
Complete Reading questions for section 4
|
9/20
|
Read list of Judaic and Night Vocab then create
word wall
Complete guided notes on vocabulary
|
Read pages 47-65 for HW
|
9/23
|
Complete the Novel Road Map to Success for
Sections 1-4 of Night, and complete viewing of Wiesel interviews
|
Pages 66-84 for HW
|
9/24
|
Poster Collage on The Destructive Power of
Hatred
|
Lit Circle HW for sections 1-5 of Night
|
9/25
|
Lit circles sections 1-5 of Night and read
section 6 as a group
|
Complete Road map for success for sections 5 and
6 of Night
|
9/26
|
Box Car Activity and Complete Sections 7 and 8
of Night in class
|
Complete Road map for success for sections 7 and
8 of Night
|
9/27
|
Night Test
|
|
9/30
|
Genocide Webquest
|
|
10/1
|
Watch Hotel Rwanda and complete the major works
data sheet
Sheet must be written in complete sentences and
use details from the film to explain your statements. Please remember that
the film documents actual events that took place in Africa in the 90’s.
The Rwandan Genocide was the
1994 mass murder of an estimated 800000 people in the small East African
nation of Rwanda.
|
|
10/2
|
Maus: A Survivor's Tale, by
Art Spiegelman
|
|
10/3
|
“The Shawl” and Selected Poems
|
|
AP Language Unit Two: War, Peace, and Politics
AP Language Unit Two: War, Peace, and Politics
September 16th
to October 10th
Learning
Targets
I can analyze and interpret samples of good
writing, identifying and explaining an author’s use of rhetorical strategies
and techniques;
I can apply effective strategies and techniques in
their own writing;
I
can create and sustain arguments based on readings, research and/or
Materials
The Things They Carried (Tim O’Brien)
“The War
Prayer” (Mark Twain)
“Introductory Notes to The Crucible” (Arthur
Miller)
Excerpts from The Prince(Niccolo Machiavelli)
”Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid” (Virginia
Woolf)
“National
Prejudices” (Oliver Goldsmith)
“Military-Industrial Complex Speech/1961 Address
to Congress” (Dwight D. Eisenhower)
“Politics and the English Language” and “Shooting
an Elephant” (George Orwell)
“Every Dictator’s Nightmare” (Wole Soyinka)
“The Gettysburg Address” (Abraham Lincoln)
Dates
|
Class
lessons and Activities
|
9/16
|
Reading quiz on “The Things they Carried”
Turn in CRP
Start research for guided seminar due 9/17
All reading
and annotations for the unit will done outside of class
|
9/17
|
Guide Seminar on “The Things they Carried”
Seminar reflection due 9/18
Assign rhetorical definitions assignment two.
Provide an example of each device from an assigned reading. Due 9/24
|
9/18
|
Rhetorical Analysis on O’Brian
|
9/19
|
“The Things they Carried” timed test and
rhetorical families due
|
9/20
|
AP multiples practice
Grading AP exams
Assign formal essay one on The Things they Carried
|
9/23
|
Planning an argument and the Toulmin method of
argument
|
9/24
|
Voice lessons: Analyzing tone and diction.
Creating an annotation notebook for AP exam review purposes. Annotations on the text below are due on
the day the text will be presented in class.
Rhetorical device examples due
|
9/25
|
“The War Prayer” (Mark Twain)
|
9/26
|
“Introductory Notes to The Crucible” (Arthur
Miller)
|
9/27
|
Excerpts from The Prince(Niccolo Machiavelli)
|
9/30
|
”Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid” (Virginia
Woolf)
|
10/1
|
“National Prejudices” (Oliver Goldsmith)
|
10/2
|
“Military-Industrial Complex Speech/1961 Address
to Congress” (Dwight D. Eisenhower)
|
10/3
|
Politics and the English Language” and “Shooting
an Elephant” (George Orwell)
|
10/4
|
“Every Dictator’s Nightmare” (Wole Soyinka)
|
10/7
|
“Every Dictator’s Nightmare” (Wole Soyinka)
|
10/8
|
Build a Wall of Rhetoric
|
10/9
|
Peer review of formal essay one
|
10/10
|
Formal essay one due
Unit test: AP multiples and essay
|
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