Saturday, January 31, 2015

February 2, 2015 - February 6, 2015 Agenda for Contemporary Composition

Monday, February 2nd: 

1st Period:
8:00 - 8:15 Review the following pages for your The Bluest Eye time line:
Page 158 - 163
Read The Bluest Eye; pages 164 -
For homework tonight, do the time line (page number, brief summary and a quotation which sums up the events) for the pages we read today in class.
"Chasing the Motif": look for any motifs which you encounter today in your reading.  Follow the format of the graphic organizer to write the motif, the context of the motif, the quotation and the analysis of the motif.

2nd Period:
Today you should be finished with your "Chasing the Motif" graphic organizer.  A model can be found on last week's agenda for this class.
We will go over the format of the essay today, which will include:
The theme
The motifs
How the motifs reveal the theme

The structure of the essay:
The Introduction
The Body Paragraphs
The Conclusion

The essay topic is:
How does the motif  reveal the theme of The Great Gatsby
The choice of themes can be:
The Pursuit of the American Dream will end in despair.
The Weak will be Destroyed by the Careless


The essay will be due on Friday, February 6th.

Tuesday, February 3rd: 

 1st Period:
8:00 - 8:15

8:00 – 8:20
Review pages 164 – 176 in The Bluest Eye
Write a brief synopsis (Summary) of the events, and a quotation which sums up the events in the scene.

Vocabulary: 
Write a definition for each of the following words and which part of speech each word is. Then write a sentence using each of these words. 
Antipathies
Misanthrope
Disdain
Fastidious
Dallied
Residue
Contemplate
Diffident
Sloven
Anglophilia

Figurative Language:
Metaphor:
Page 172: “…wrapped each in a shroud  stitched with anger, yearning, pride, vengeance….”
Explanation: the people who come to Soaphead Church are covered, buried in their anger, their needs, their pride and their desire for revenge.

Read The Bluest Eye
Pages 176 – 183
During your reading of The Bluest Eye, watch for appearances of your chosen motif. Be sure to use your graphic organizer to write the motif, the context (what is the scene, what is happening in the scene, who is in the scene, why is this scene important?), an important quotation regarding the motif, and your analysis of the motif.  This will be the basis of your body paragraphs in your essay. 

For homework tonight, do the time line (page number, brief summary and a quotation which sums up the events) for the pages we read today in class.  This will be due tomorrow

Continue reading The Bluest Eye

2nd Period:
Continue working on the essay for The Great Gatsby

Wednesday, February 4th: 

1st Period:
8:00 - 8:15

Review pages 176 – 183, the letter Soaphead Church wrote to God.
Please answer the following questions:
1.     What is Soaphead Church’s argument with God?
2.     What is his justification for his actions?
3.     Do you agree with Soaphead ‘s arguments and his justification?
Why or why not? Please answer in complete sentences.
4.     What figurative language (metaphors, simile, imagery, personification) does Soaphead use in his letters?
Be specific. Write the quotation. Do these metaphors convey the full idea or feelings Soaphead means to convey?

Read The Bluest Eye; pages 187 – 204
Discussion: the third eye; anecdotal evidence to support the power of belief: shaman places a death curse on someone, the person will die. Schizophrenia.

For tomorrow: Finish reading The Bluest Eye
Rubric for the Time-line for The Bluest Eye

Do the final time line for The Bluest Eye, which should include the page numbers, a brief summary and a quotation which sums up the events of the pages.
As part of your grade, you will create a poster with your time line. The poster should have the following:
The poster should be poster sized, which you will be furnished.
The individual events which you have been recording.
Photos, drawing, or illustrations that are pertinent to the events of the story
Quotations from the book that are relevant to the themes of The Bluest Eye

After we finish The Bluest Eye, you cannot turn in late time lines. You may still do the time line poster, but I will not  correct the individual time lines you were to have turned in at the time they were due. 


This will be due on Friday

2nd Period:

 
Mr. Fox taught the class today.
Went over theme: definition; types of themes
Possible themes of The Great Gatsby
Divide into five groups of six and respond to each of the six posters with questions relating to a theme and the characters in The Great Gatsby.  Your group’s response must deal with a different character than the other groups so if a group before  you has answered the theme question on the poster using a character, then you must choose a different character to discuss the theme.
Walk around: the posters are taped to the wall and the groups walk around and read what other groups have written.


For tomorrow:

Today you will break into groups of seven people.
Each person will choose one of the following characters in The Great Gatsby:
Nick Carraway, Jay Gatsby, Daisy Buchanan, Tom Buchanan, Myrtle Wilson, George Wilson
Each person will create five questions and five answers for her or his character.
Each person will turn in the five questions and five answers for her/his character at the end of the period.

Thursday, February 5th: 

First Period:
Work on the poster for The Bluest Eye 

2nd Period:
Hot Seat

Friday, February 6th: 



1st Period:
Work on the “Time-Line” poster for The Bluest Eye
Rubric for ˆThe Bluest Eye:
1.     Must relate directly to The Bluest Eye
2.     Must be organized  chronologically (sequence of events)
3.     Must be neat!!!!!
4.     Must be colorful!
5.     Must have illustrations: either hand-drawn, or cut outs
6.     Must have grammatically correct sentences
7.     Must use correct spelling
8.     The events must be accurate and of importance
9.     The illustrations must relate to the events in The Bluest Eye
10. The time-time should have a brief description of the most important events
11. The time-line should have a brief quotation for each of the most important events
This assignment is worth 200 points and must meet all the above requirements to receive a passing grade. This assignment is due on Monday – NO EXCEPTION!

On Monday, February 9th, the following questions will act as a final test. You will answer these in class and they will be due at the end of the period.

Final Questions for The Bluest Eye:


1.    How does Morrison use bird imagery to describe Pecola? Cite specific sentences Morrison uses to decribe Pecola.
2.    What was the reaction of the people of Lorain to Pecola after her breakdown? Be specific. Cite specific sentences as evidence to support your answers.
3.    A scapegoat is someone that other people blame for the mistakes  a community makes. It comes from the Old Testament where the Israelites would send a goat, symbolically burdened with the people’s collective sins from the previous year, from the village into the desert – symbolically removing the villages’ sins. How is Pecola the scapegoat for Lorain, Ohio? Write in grammatically correct answers. Thoroughly answer the question and use evidence from the book to support your answers.
4.    How did the people of Lorain use the defects, the flaws, the deficiencies of Pecola to make them feel better about themselves?
5.    According to Morrison, what kind of people did the community of Lorain become as a result of their abuse of Pecola?
6.    Marigolds represent grief and cruelty. Why does Morrison use the seeds of marigolds in this story?
7.    What does Morrison mean when she writes, “Love is no better than the lover.”
8.    Read the next the last paragraph on page 206, starting with, “Oh, some of us loved her.” What does Morrison mean when she writes, “The loved one is shorn, neutralized, frozen in the glare of the lover’s inward eye.”

Period 2

Get into  groups to create five questions and five answers for the hot seat.

Each person should concentrate on a particular character and create five questions and five answers for that particular character. The questions must be complex and delve into theme, character and important issues such as socio-economic status of the characters. The group may help the individual on her/his character:

Group #1:
Chris Ake – Daisy, Lupo Benatti – Gatsby, Joseph K. – Nick, Ty Young – Tom

Group #2:

Group #3:

Group #4:
Stephanie Kraft – Tom, Tigran Minasyan – Gatsby, Christian Polanco – Daisy, Ivette Priego – Nick, Maria Torres – Myrtle

Group #5:
Maryrose  Campos – Gatsby, Maci Greene – Daisy, Pamela Lara – Myrtle, Rebeca Olguin – Nick, Ray Reyes – Tom