Wednesday, 22 August 2012

Thursday/Friday

Thursday - take Literary Terms quiz

Friday - Finish reading "The Most Dangerous Game" and do the following:



            Imagine that you are Sanger Rainsford and have escaped from Ship-Trap Island.  You have been accused of murder—the murder of General Zaroff and his servant, Ivan.  Using facts (evidence) from the text (this means you should summarize and quote from the text) you must write a defense speech that will prove your innocence.  The speech must be at least ten sentences long.  Remember, you are trying to prove your innocence so be as detailed as possible and use evidence (actual facts and occurrences from the story, the text) to clear your name.  You may even call forth eyewitnesses if you so choose.

Monday, 16 April 2012

To Kill A Mockingbird


Reading Journal:

For every chapter (beginning with chapter 5) you will need to do the following:

List one thing that you found interesting in the chapter whether it be an event, a literary device (allusion, symbol, etc), a twist in plot, anything really. After you list your interesting thing - discuss why it interests you or what it might mean in relation to the larger story.

Also you need to give a brief list of events in the chapter (these can be bullet points), characters and connect to a theme.

You can either keep this reading journal on your blog or in a notebook. I will collect this at the end of the book and they will be worth 5 points per chapter.

These journals should also be good study guides.

Monday, 2 April 2012

Monday, 5 March 2012

Romeo and Juliet Essay for Thursday

In one page, double space, answer the following question:

Who's to blame for the deaths of Romeo and Juliet?


Please give only one answer - example: Mercutio, the Nurse, the Friar, the Prince, the parents, etc.

You will need to include the following:

1) Hook (5 points): an attention getting device that grabs a hold of the reader and links to the thesis.
2) A Thesis Statement (5 points).
3) Your body must include reasons why you think so and so is to blame with proof (examples) from the text. You should use some quotations and explanation of quotations in your body. You should have three examples. (15 points)
4) A conclusion. (5 points). This should summarize what you have just said in your essay and it should leave the reader with something else to think about. (Ex: If all love led to suicide than...)
5) You must start with prewriting and you must turn in your pre-writing with your essay. (10 points).
6) Title (5 points).

Total: 45 points.

DUE: Monday 3/12

Monday, 27 February 2012

Homework for Trips

Work on practice test and scavenger hunt sheet.

Tuesday, 21 February 2012

Tuesday Feb. 21st

Today: Group Acting Projects. Begin Act 5.

HW: Journal

No one knows why the feud between the Montagues and the Capulets started, or at least we are not told. You are going to write a short 2-3 paragraph background story about how the feud started. It could have happened 30, 40, 50 years ago. Just don't get too crazy. It has to be realistic for the story and the times (No nuclear weapons or time machines allowed).

Monday, 13 February 2012

Act IV Projects

You should be working on translating your scene of Act IV into contemporary english.

Also, review your vocabulary words.

Tuesday, 7 February 2012

Tuesday February 7th

New Vocabulary

1) Beshrew:
2) Peruse:
3) Caitiff:
4) Penury:
5) Haughty:
6) Sepulcher:
7) Remnants:
8) Apothecary
9) Amorous:
10) Ambiguities:
11) Scourge:
12) Inauspicious

Writing Assignment: Journal Entry

Your assignment is to write a “Dear Abbey” letter from Romeo or Juliet to Dear Abby.

Decide whether you want to write a letter from Romeo or Juliet’s perspective. You have just met the “love” of your short (maybe pathetic) life, and have discovered s/he is a member of a family your parents hate. You realize that they will never allow you to see this person. Think about how this makes you feel. As a prewriting exercise spend a few minutes writing down your feelings. Maybe you feel trapped. Maybe you feel like screaming. Try and put your emotions into a metaphor or two.
Now, compose a letter to DEAR ABBY (of the Verona Times) explaining your situation—make sure you give Abby a little background information. You might want to discuss what you were doing at the party or discuss the history of the feud with the two families. Then ask Abby for advice. Sign your letter with an appropriate pen name for Romeo or Juliet. Someone (a classmate) will be answering your letter. Do not write your name on the paper and write in a place in your journal where it can be ripped out without losing any important notes or information.

Monday, 6 February 2012

February 6th 2012

Tonight:

Work on Sonnets. We will read and perform these in class tomorrow.

Friday, 27 January 2012

Wedding Vows

Homework for this weekend is to write the wedding vows for Romeo and Juliet. You can be creative or borrow from traditional vows. If you need help look at the following site: MYWEDDINGVOWS

This is a journal grade.

Monday, 16 January 2012

School Work for the next two weeks.

1) Take notes on metaphors
2) Queen of Mab drawing
3) Watch Movie Version of Romeo and Juliet
4) Take vocabulary quiz on Friday
5) Read ACT II.
6) With group write and rehearse a readers' theatre of ACT II.

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

Wednesday 1/11/12

Objectives: Outline characters and whose side of the feud the characters are on. Be able to list elements of tragedy, tragic hero and define dramatic foil.

Today we will finish Act 1. Review tragedy and tragic hero. Take notes on soliloquy and monologue.

Homework: Write headline summaries for Act 1 Scenes 4 and 5. Make a list of all characters and place them into families - example:

Montague

Lord Montague
Lady Montague

Capulet:

Lord Capulet
Lady Capulet

Prince:

Paris

Monday, 9 January 2012

Monday - January 8th

Objective: List the five elements of a Shakespearian tragedy and the five elements of a tragic hero.

Today we are going to take notes on the elements of tragedy and the elements of a tragic hero. We are going to review the elements of a sonnet and finish reading ACT I of Romeo and Juliet.

Homework: Journal-Blog Number 2.


JOURNAL # 2

EXTRA EXTRA STREET FIGHTING IN VERONA

Take the beginning of a newspaper account that follows and finish it by interviewing at least three citizens of Verona about the street fight that Gregory and Sampson start. Remember that the Prince says that the civil brawl between the Capulets and the Montagues has disturbed the peace three times and the shouts of the citizens, “Down with the Capulets, Down with the Montagues,” shows that the citizens themselves have had enough of this feud. Think about how the fighting might disturb vendors or shopkeepers. Think about the gossip that a feud might spread be creative.

THE VERONA TIMES

Verona—

The uneasy peace on the streets of Verona was shattered again today. The fire of hate between the Montagues and the Capulets flared when two of Capulet’s men, Sampson and Gregory, challenged two of Montague’s men, Abraham and Balthasar, to a fight. People on the scene reported that insults were exchanged and the fighting ensued. More details became available as the authorities sifted through the information received from the bystanders. See below

Friday, 6 January 2012

Romeo and Juliet: January 6th 2012

Objectives: Understanding the elements of a sonnet; being able to list three things the prologue of Romeo and Juliet does.

Today we are going to look closely at the Prologue of Romeo and Juliet. We are also going to reread Act 1 Scenes 1-3. This is the exposition of Romeo and Juliet. The Inciting Event happens in Scene 4.

Homework: You have a worksheet assignment for the Prologue and a short play to read.

On Monday we will be looking at elements of tragedy and tragic hero and applying these to Romeo and Juliet.

Good Luck!

Thursday, 5 January 2012

Romeo and Juliet Vocabulary

Rosemary
Sallow
Waverer
Perverse
Cunning
Procure
Lamentable
Kinsmen
Unwieldy
Variable

Romeo and Juliet


Consider the following social offenses. Rank each in order of seriousness with 1 being the most serious.

Planning to trick someone
Lying to parents
Killing someone for revenge
Advising someone to marry for money
Two families having a feud
Killing someone by mistake while fighting
Cursing
Killing someone in self-defense
Suicide
Crashing a party
Marrying against parents' wishes
Giving the finger
Picking a fight


After you get done click here and read ROMEO AND JULIET in one minute!

Wednesday, 4 January 2012

Romeo and Juliet for 1/4


Below is an overview of the unit and what you need to learn by the end of it. This unit will take us to Spring Break (or near it) and will include an essay, a test, and a project. Note for most of the unit you will be broken into groups and will play a game based on the feuding of the families.

Assignment: 1/4 - Read the Prologue and Act 1 Scene 1 and 2 out loud in class. Choose characters and read it as a play. I want you to begin a list of characters and think about the qualities of the characters (how they act, what are they like, note some famous lines that they say). See if you can find a favorite character. Also look at the prologue - what does the prologue do? Note the the prologue is a sonnet (this a strict poetic form - we'll discuss tomorrow the form as you'l have to write a sonnet later). After you've read Act 1 scenes 1 and 2. I want you to write a 1-line HEADLINE of the scene (think about a headline in a newspaper - something that summaries what the scene is about and catches the readers attention). If you can't do it in one line try and do it in two.

HOMEWORK: Write a blog entry - practicing prewriting and organizing (meaning you list ideas and then try to organize them into a structure) - with a thesis statement ( a controlling idea) and a hook about whether you believe in LOVE at FIRST SIGHT. Note - I want you to use examples from your life or your parents' lives or from books, movies, friends that you seen or heard about? Do you believe in it? Remember - Romeo and Juliet claim to fall in love at first glance. Explore the idea. You might be reading these out loud in class tomorrow.


Shakespeare: Tragedy, Comedy and Metaphor

“The poem, the song, the picture is only water drawn from the well of people
and it should be given back to them in a cup of beauty so that they may drink—
and in drinking, understand themselves.”
--Lorca


This unit will give students a chance to look at Shakespeare from a personal and cultural perspective. The class will break of the structure of the play Romeo and Juliet and discuss how metaphor and symbol, plot and theme work in conjunction with the development of characters and ideas. Ultimately, students will need to answer what “Romeo and Juliet” represents to our culture and what it personally means to them. Students will need to reflect on personal experience and apply it to the play.

OBJECTIVES: At the end of this unit students will be able to

Knowledge:

1) List the five elements of tragedy
2) List the five elements of a tragic hero
3) Define theme, plot, setting, foreshadow, oxymoron, soliloquy, personification, dramatic foil, metaphor, symbol, simile
4) Give the four elements of a sonnet and a brief description of traditional sonnet themes
5) Describe how sonnets are used in Romeo and Juliet
6) Define various vocabulary words from the play
7) List three things the prologue of the play does

Comprehension:

8) Identify a metaphor within a line of poetry
9) Identify the rhyme scheme of a English sonnet and break a sonnet into quatrains and couplets
10) Give a brief description of all the characters and their roles in the play
11) Given a line of dialogue identify the speaker
12) Outline the plot and break in up into exposition, inciting event, rising action, climax, falling action and catastrophe (or resolution)
13) Summarize each scene into a headline

Application

14) Demonstrate an understanding of a scene in a drawing
15) Demonstrate a relation of characters to contemporary times through a simulation called “TOO HOT FOR SHAKESPEARE: ROMEO AND JULIET LIVE ON THE JERRY SPRINGER SHOW”
16) Demonstrate an understanding of characters and acting techniques by writing out a script (including the lines, subtext, emotion or tone, and blocking) and acting out the scene from memory
17) Demonstrate an understanding of the play by writing journal entries and in-class writing assignments including a Dear Abbey Letter, interviews with citizens of Verona, Wedding Vows between Romeo and Juliet, personal responses, in-class presentations on characters.


Analysis

18) Write a persuasion paper on Romeo and Juliet.
19) In an essay compare and contrast a Shakespeare Comedy to a Shakespeare Tragedy.
20) In an essay discuss with evidence from the text who is responsible for the deaths of “the star-crossed” lovers


Synthesis

21) Write a sonnet


STUDENTS WILL BE ASSESSED IN THE FOLLOWING WAYS:

1) Class participation (this includes worksheets, homework)
2) Oral presentations and drawings
3) Individual writing (both critical and creative)
4) Character acting
5) Quizzes and Unit Final
6) Unit Project (if time permits)

ACTIVITIES TO BE INCLUDED (but not limited to)

1) short lectures
2) note guides for movies, reading and lectures
3) in-class reading/ some homework reading
4) in-class writing
5) role-plays/ simulations
6) dramatic acting of scenes and/or poems
7) drawings
8) listening to CDs related to Shakespeare
9) Projects