Thursday, December 20, 2007

If you were absent...

Thursday, Dec 13
Map out the neighborhood in House on Mango Street. Include textual evidence. Present projects

Friday, Dec 14
Independent Reading Day
Turn in reading log

Monday, Dec 17
Discuss House on Mango Street themes and major ideas.

Tuesday, Dec 18

Neighborhood project due
Present projects and discuss House on Mango Street

Wednesday, Dec 19

Discuss House on Mango Street.
Discuss test.

Thursday, Dec 20
Challenge projects due.
Present projects.
Study for test.

Friday, Dec 21

House on Mango Street Final Test

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

If you were absent...

Tuesday, December 11
Finish discussion from yesterday.
Continued talking about book.


Wednesday, December 12
Challenge project proposal due.
Continued talking about the book.
Start the Mango Street map.

Monday, December 10, 2007

If you were absent...

Friday, November 30:
Independent reading--turn in a reading log

Monday, December 3
Lord of the Flies final test
You have until December 10th to make this up!

Tuesday, December 4
Start House on Mango Street: handouts include the unit calendar, journal assignment, challenge project options, and we checked the book out of the library

Wednesday, December 5
Early release day, which means a shortened hour.
Discussed the meaning of names--see vignette in HOMS "My Name."

Thursday, December 6
Definition of vignette added to literary devices notes
Find three examples from the text that shows precise and delicate writing.
Share in small groups and then discuss these quotes in large group discussion

Friday, December 7
Independent reading--turn in reading log

Monday, December 10
Think about the following topics relating to House on Mango Street
• Identify—finding one’s own self/voice, learning to accept one’s own self, valuing one’s self
• Choices—who makes our choices? What keeps us from making choices? How important is one’s identity to the making of good choices?
• Power—who has it? Who uses it? How do they use it? How is power abused?
• Loss and Grief—loss of culture, loss of identity, loss of language, loss of voice
• Surviving—Who survives and who doesn’t—and why?
• Culture—the importance and place of traditions, ceremonies, religion
• Gender conflict/masculine and feminine roles
• Awakenings
• Being an outsider
• Friendship—with opposite gender and with same gender
• Appearance
• Names
• Prejudice and stereotypes
• Risk-taking
• Parenting—nurturing, caring, physical or emotional neglect, abuse
• Values—love, honor, family, friends, money, materialism, education, work, country
• Role models/guides
• Shame—what it is and how it affects us
• Passion—love, hate, indifference
• Honesty
• Sexuality
• Energy
• Abuse—physical, emotional

Assignment for today:
Choose one vignette that you like the most because of its relevance to your own life. Write about this chapter in terms of that relevance bringing in any of the appropriate topics from the list above. Make connections to other books, characters, and incidents. Be prepared to talk about this vignette in class.

Next, share your journal with one partner. What did you learn from your partner? What do your journals have in common? How are they different?

Discuss in class--if we have time. Turn in your journals

Thursday, November 29, 2007

If you were absent Thursday, Nov 29

Lord of the Flies Challenge Projects were due today. We presented the projects and then returned to Golding's Nobel Lecture.

The Assignment: Write a reaction to the Lecture. Attach this reaction to the back of the notes you took on the speech and turn it in.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

If you were absent Wednesday, November 28

Today we turned in the Lord of the Flies paper. Then, we continued discussing Golding's Nobel Lecture. Homework for tonight: finish reading the article and finish the challenge project that is due tomorrow.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

If you were absent Tuesday, November 27

We started reading the lecture Golding gave when he won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1983.

You can find the article at NobelPrizeorg. Search for under William Golding and then click on his lecture.

Please read the article, highlight the most important points of the speech, and write both the questions and the comments that you have while reading in the margins.

When you finish the article, write a summary of Golding's main points and write a reaction to them.

If you were absent Monday, November 27

Peer Editing day!

If you missed this day, make sure you get your paper checked off with me, a peer editing form, and find two people to edit your paper outside of class.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

If you were absent Tuesday, November 20 or Wednesday November 21

We worked on drafting the Lord of the Flies paper. By the end of the hour Tuesday, you should have completed the thesis statement, the introduction (of which the thesis statement is a part), and half of the body paragraphs.

By the end of the hour on Wednesday, you should have completed the body paragraphs and the conclusion.

Remember, each step needs to be checked off.

The first draft of the paper is due MONDAY. We will be peer editing so it is very important to have your paper completed by Monday.

Have a great Thanksgiving!

If you were absent Monday, November 19

Independent reading day--make sure you turn in a reading log for this day!

Friday, November 16, 2007

If you were absent Friday, November 16

In class, we watched (or in first hour anyway--attempted to watch) a video on characterization in fiction.

We then worked on your paper for Lord of the Flies. Focus on two or three characters that have a CONFLICT in the book, explain what the conflict is and what it causes.

I am checking each step off as you write it. Today, you should have gotten your thesis statement checked off.

Have a great weekend!

If you were absent Thursday, November 15

In class, we discussed Chapters 8, 9, and 10 in the book. We covered Simon, Samneric, and what Piggy's glasses symbolize, among other things.

Please note that your journals for Lord of the Flies are due MONDAY! Also, remember that independent reading has been moved from Friday to next Monday--just for this week.

If you missed the notes on Freud...

• Background info: Sigmund Freud 1856-1939
• Developed techniques of psychoanalysis
• March 12, 1938: German troops marched into Austria and Nazis assumed power
• June 4, allowed through numerous international interventions, to emigrate to London with wife, youngest daughter, and two other people.
• Notes on conscious, preconscious, unconscious
• Conscious: what you are aware of at any particular moment: your present perceptions, memories, thoughts, feelings.
• Preconscious: works closely with conscious, "available memory", anything that can easily be made conscious, the memories you are not at the moment thinking about but can readily bring to mind.
• Unconscious: all things that are not easily available to awareness. Instincts, drives, and things that we can't bear to look at such as memories and emotions associated with trauma. Source of our motivations. We are often driven to deny or resist becoming conscious of these motives, and they are often available to us only in disguised form.
• Notes on id, ego, and superego
• Physical needs as base.
• Id: fully unconscious, full of wishes or instincts, motivational forces. Primary process: need to wish. Pleasure principle: demand to take care of needs immediately.
• Ego: Mostly conscious, problem solving id's desire = secondary process, reason, Reality Principle: take care of what I need when it is appropriate. Mediates Id and superego.
• Superego: Record obstacles and aides in world, rewards and punishments, mom and dad's rules, society and its norms, internal moral judge, pertly conscious, 7 years old (generally) when this is developed, some people it is never completed. Recorded in two parts: 1) Conscience: internalization of punishment and warnings, 2) ego ideal: rewards and positive models. Communication to ego: feelings like pride, shame, guilt, etc.
• Find evidence from the book of how Ralph, Piggy, and Jack represents the Ego, Superego, and Id, respectively.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

If you were absent Wednesday, November 14

Students wrote one question they had for chapter eight, nine, and ten.

We compiled the questions into baskets--one for each chapter--and then discussed each chapter.

Homework: Challenge project proposal due tomorrow!
Also, read chapter 11 and write your journal.

If you were absent Tuesday, November 13

Small groups met to review quotes from chapter. Each small group looked to see what idea or image was repeated in the quotes and then discussed the effect of the repetition and the connotation of the idea or image that was repeated.

Then, each small group presented the quotes, repeated ideas/images, and explained the connotation and effect of repetition.

The quotes have been posted in class.

Monday, November 12, 2007

If you were absent: Monday, November 12

Today we looked at the importance of setting in the book. The class divided into small groups and found all the textual evidence that describes the setting. Each small group focused on one chapter. Then, those quotes are gathered and written on paper to post in class. We will share these quotes tomorrow, talk about how the setting contributes to the meaning of the book, and talk about chapter 9, which is tonight's homework

If you were absent in hour one, you can find the setting information for chapter one or chapter nine.
If you were absent in hour three or hour five, you can find the setting information for chapter nine.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Lord of the Flies Paper Assignment

The Assignment:
Choose two to three characters from the novel Lord of the Flies. Explain the character relationships with each other. Explain the conflicts and why they develop. Use textual evidence to support your ideas.

Follow the steps below to write your paper. After completing each step, get it checked off with Ms. Peifer. You will turn this check in sheet in with your paper so do not lose it!

Step One: Write your thesis __________________________

Step Two: Include your thesis in an introductory paragraph that introduces all the main points of your paper. __________________________

Step Three: Write your paper. Make sure that each body paragraph starts with a topic sentence, states a claim, and then has evidence from the text to support your claim.
__________________________

Step Four: Write your conclusion. __________________________

Step Five: Edit your paper. Correct any spelling errors, punctuation problems, and any other errors. Make sure all first and second person references are taken out. __________________________

Step Six: Draft your final paper. __________________________

Step One: Write your thesis __________________________

Step Two: Include your thesis in an introductory paragraph that introduces all the main points of your paper. __________________________

Step Three: Write your paper. Make sure that each body paragraph starts with a topic sentence, states a claim, and then has evidence from the text to support your claim.
__________________________

Step Four: Write your conclusion. __________________________

Step Five: Edit your paper. Correct any spelling errors, punctuation problems, and any other errors. Make sure all first and second person references are taken out. __________________________

Step Six: Draft your final paper. __________________________

Reading Response Journals

Directions: You should write a reading response journal after each night's reading assignment. Remember to use textual evidence to support your claims. Each journal should be at least one page long.

1. Summary: summarize events you read about. This should be short: about one paragraph long.

2. Characterization:
The creation of imaginary persons so that they seem lifelike.
There are three fundamental methods of characterization: (1) the explicit presentation by the author of the character through direct exposition, either in an introductory block or more often piecemeal throughout the work, illustrated by action; (2) the presentation of the character in action, with little or no explicit comment by the author, in the expectation that the reader can deduce the attributes of the actor from the actions; and (3) the representation from within a character, without comment by the author, of the impact of actions and emotion on the character's inner self. (Holman 80)

• Explain how characterization is used in the novel you are reading.
• For the characters you meet:
• Explain what is said about them through description of the author
• Document what the character does.
• Document how the character thinks.
• Explain how these things influence your understanding of the character(s)?
• Use textual evidence.

3. Literary Devices: Symbolism/Imagery, Metaphors, Similes, Personification, etc. How does the author use literary devices? Cite evidence of these literary devices and explain how these devices are important.

4. Themes: How is personal identity shown through the novel? What other themes do you see in the novel? Cite evidence that supports these themes. This might be difficult for the first few paragraphs but do your best. It will get easier to see this as you progress through the book.

Lord of the Flies Challenge Projects

1. Write a 2-3-page paper exploring the concept of “pig” in several cultures. Compare/contrast those concepts with the use of “pig” in Lord of the Flies.

2. Create a replica of the island in Lord of the Flies based on details from the story. Write a one-page paper explaining the significance of the island and its physical features for the story.

3. Construct a replica of the Lord of the Flies. Write a one-page paper explaining its symbolic significance.

4. Create a topographical map of the island large enough to display in the classroom. Label sites of significance in order of their occurrence in Lord of the Flies. Provide a key, explaining the thematic significance of each site.

5. Compose a musical score, depicting one major event in Lord of the Flies. Perform for the class. Write a one-page paper explaining the event and the reason you chose each musical effect.

6. Create a drawing or painting of one of the characters in Lord of the Flies, expressing his personality. Write a one page paper explaining the artistic techniques used to communicate the character’s personality.

7. Choreograph a ritual dance that could have been used in Lord of the Flies. Perform for the class. Write a one-page paper explaining the relationship of the choreography to the story.

8. Develop masks for the major characters in Lord of the Flies. By changing masks, illustrate the changing of the characters. Demonstrate to the class. Write a one-page paper explaining the symbolic value for the masks in relation to the characters.

9. Investigate the use of ceremonial sounds such as the conch, the trumpet, bells, etc. to begin or end rituals. Demonstrate for the class. Write a one page paper explaining what you learned.

10. Demonstrate the symbolic relationship of clothing and civilization in Lord of the Flies for the class. Do the same for the current civilization. Write a one-page summary of the relationship of clothing and society.

11. Write a 2-3-page paper examining the concepts/images of mysticism in Lord of the Flies.

12. Write a 2-3-page paper analyzing Christina ethics/symbols in Lord of the Flies. Conclude by determining whether Golding believed in Christianity or not.

13. Prepare a recording of island sounds that may have occurred during the Lord of the Flies adventure. Write a one-page paper explaining your sound montage and play your tape for the class.

14. Prepare an island feast for the class, using foods or simulations of foods that were detailed in Lord of the Flies. Explain the significance of each food item in a one-page paper.

15. Choose one major character and psychoanalyze his personality. Use actual psychological terms and support your analysis with evidence from Lord of the Flies in a 2-3-page paper.

16. Videotape interviews with the major surviving characters appearing on a talk show to relate their adventure to the t.v. audience. Use events from the book. Write a one-page paper explaining the significance of the events you choose to share with the t.v. public.

17. Videotape a grand jury preliminary hearing determining whether there is enough evidence to investigate Piggy’s death as a murder. Use actual characters and details from the book, as well as your own characters for your grand jury and court personnel. Write a 2-3-page script for this videotape.

18. Write three conflicting newspaper accounts by three different reporters detailing the vents on the islands as told by to the media by the boys after being rescued.

19. Research William Golding’s life and in a 2-3-page paper, relate any details that could have influenced his writing of Lord of the Flies.

20. There are no female characters in Lord of the Flies. Write a 2-3-page paper, speculating upon how the story would have changed with the introduction of a female character. Also, try to determine why Golding did not include female characters and whether this is a compliment or an insult to women.

Lord of the Flies Reading Schedule

29
Lord of the Flies notes, journal assign, challenge project handout

30
Finish notes, check out books
Read Ch 1

HW: Finish Ch 1 and Journal

31
Early Release Day
HW: Ch 2 and journal

1
HW: Ch 3 and journal

2
Independent Reading—reading log due
HW: Ch 4 and journal

5
HW: Ch 5 and journal

6
HW: Ch 6 and journal

7
HW: Ch 7 and journal

8
HW: Ch 8 and journal

9
Professional Day—No School for Students

12
HW: Ch 9 and journal

13
HW: Ch 10 and journal

14
HW: Ch 11 and journal

15
Challenge project proposal due
HW: Ch 12 and journal

16
Independent Reading—reading log due


19
Journals due
Assign paper and start drafting paper

20
Draft paper

21
Draft paper

22
No School
Thanksgiving

23
No School

26
Draft paper

27
Peer edit

28
Paper due!

29
Challenge projects due—present

30
Independent Reading—reading log due

3
Lord of the Flies Final Test

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Reminders...

Remember--Your multi-genre chapbook for The Catcher in the Rye is DUE tomorrow!

Also, your final test for the book is Thursday so study, study, study!

Monday, October 8, 2007

Your thoughts on technology...

What is your generation talking about in regards to technology? What is new out there that I might not know about since I grew up in a different era? How do you think technology can be used to enhance your learning process? Please comment and tell me your thoughts!

Parent Participation

Do you want extra credit points? It is really important to me that this blog is useful not only to you, but also to your parents. I want you to show them this blog so that it is a resource for them too and help them make a comment--if they don't know how to do this. This means you have to figure it out too!

If you have your parents post a question or a comment onto this blog, I will give you 5 extra credit points. They can ask a question about the literature we are reading, an assignment you are working on, or comment on the use of technology in the classroom.

Character Notes Due Tomorrow!

Don't forget to finish your character notes tonight because they are due tomorrow!

Monday, October 1, 2007

Challenge Project Proposals

There are three things you need to include in your challenge project proposal:
1) Description of your project
2) Explanation of why you are interested in the project and what you hope to learn.
3) Your preliminary research (in MLA format--see the first entry of your reading log and the half sheets you got in the library on citations)

Challenge project proposals, as well as the challenge project itself, must be typed! They will never be accepted if they are not typed. They are never accepted late--so make sure you get this in on time!

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Challenge Projects for The Catcher in the Rye

All final assignments must be typed. Proposals must be typed. Look at the calendar for the due date. If you fail to turn in a proposal, a project will not be accepted. NO proposal or Challenge Project is EVER accepted late.

Choose ONE of the following topics for your challenge project:

1. Write a description of Holden through the eyes of a female his age. Use Holdenese. 3-4 pages minimum.
2. Draw a portrait of Holden or any other character in Catcher. Explain the technique used to convey your subject’s personality in a 1-2-page essay.
3. Write a paper describing the political climate of the fifties. Mention political slogans, presidential accomplishments, and legislative triumphs. 3-4 page minimum.
4. Create a video of TV segments reflecting the values of the fifties. Explain these values and Holden’s reactions to them.
5. Dress dolls in fashions of the fifties. Explain how these fashions reflect values/ life of the time in a two to three page essay.
6. Draw, exhibit photos, or show models of cars from the fifties. Explain how these cars influenced or reflected fifties’ values.
7. Play live or taped music of the fifties. Explain how the music reflects or influenced the fifties.
8. Video a scene from Catcher, using narration to represent Holden’s thoughts.
9. Serve the class popular foods of the fifties. Explain their social significance in a two to three page essay.
10. Video Central through the eyes of Holden. Narrate in Holdenese.
11. Keep a journal in Holdenese, covering one day in your life. Two to three page minimum.
12. Write a paper on the standards of censorship, comparing censorship in the fifties and censorship today.
13. Visit a treatment center for today’s teenagers and compare the services available now with the services available to Holden. Two to three page minimum.
14. Write a paper determining what parts of Holden and J. D. Salinger’s life are the same. Explain how these things are autobiographical to J. D. Salinger in a three to four page essay.
15. Write a three to four page paper explaining how Catcher would be different if written from the point of view of a female.
16. Teach the class two favorite dances from the fifties.
17. Analyze the words from three songs of the fifties. Explain how these songs reflect the values/life of this time.
18. Develop ten questions based on Holden’s viewpoint. Interview someone who was a teenager in the fifties. Do their views match Holden’s? Why or why not? Total of three to four pages minimum.
19. Rent Thirty-Nine Steps. Evaluate the film in Holdenese. Two to three page minimum.
20. Design your own challenge project. Must be pre-approved by Ms. Peifer.
21. Design a poll to reflect student and adult reactions to Catcher. Summarize your conclusions, trying to determine reasons for your findings.
22. Write a book review for Central’s school paper. Submit a copy to the paper as well as a copy to Ms. Peifer.
23. Compare/contrast the beginning of David Copperfield with Catcher. Why does Salinger mention David Copperfield? Three to four pages.

The Catcher in the Rye Dialogue Journal

Note: Choose a partner that you trust. You will journal with each other about The Catcher in the Rye. It is very important that both partners fulfill their responsibility to journal or you both will get a lowered grade due to less dialogue in your dialogue journal.

Here is what you do:
  • Write a journal of about 1/2 to 3/4 of a page long.
  • You can ask questions, write about their thoughts on Holden or the other characters Holden interacts with. You may write about the themes or the actions of the book. You may agree or disagree with Holden's thoughts. You may ask literary questions about the characters motivations. Basically, you need to react to what you read.
  • Your partner then reads this journal and responds. Write about what the first person journaled about either commenting, agreeing, or disagreeing with the journal. Then add your own ideas and thoughts so we can continue the process of responding to the text. This journal should be about 1/2 a page to 3/4 of a page as well. Make sure you give this back to the first journal-er and so on.
  • You will then respond to your partner's journal when he/she is responding to your journal. Each journal will then be a page to a page and a half long.
  • You should have at least 8 entries per person. You may choose to write shorter but more frequent journals. This is fine as well as you are responding to the text. Also, you may journal via e-mail as long as you follow the same criteria and you print the emails out to turn in.
  • The final journal should have minimum: 8 entries per person, 8 pages in length. These journals do not need to be typed but they must be legible for me to grade them. You will be graded on the depth of insights and the ideas generated.

The Catcher in the Rye Schedule UPDATED (10/15)

9 Quest The Catcher in the Rye Calendar
September/October

September 27:
In class--Finish autobiography presentations
Start Catcher in the Rye (check out books)
Handouts include: Journal handout, Challenge Project handout, Characterization notes handout

HW: Read Ch 1-3 and write in journal, and start characterization notes

28
In class--Independent Reading day
Reading Log Due

HW: Rd Ch 4-6 and write journal, continue with characterization notes

October 1
In class--Characterization notes and vocabulary assignment

HW: Rd 7-9 and write in journal

October 2
In class--Discuss book

HW: Rd Ch 10-13 and journal

October 3
In class--Challenge Project Proposal Due!

HW: Rd Ch 14-16 and journal

October 4
In class--Vocabulary 2 assignment

HW: Rd Ch 17-19 and journal

October 5
In class--Independent Reading day
Reading log due

HW: Rd Ch 20-22 and journal

October 8
In class--Discuss themes

HW: Rd Ch 23-26 and journal

October 9
In class--Work on paper
DUE: CHARACTERIZATION NOTES (please add this to the schedule I passed out in class!)

HW: finish journals…work on challenge project

October 10
In class--Journal due!

HW: work on paper/challenge project

October 11
In class--discuss book

HW: work on paper/Challenge project

October 12
In class--Independent Reading day
Reading log due

HW: work on paper/Challenge project

October 15
In class--Discuss book
Start Multi-genre paper

HW: work on paper/finish Challenge project

October 16
In class--Challenge Projects Due—
Presentations
Continue working on paper

HW: work on paper

October 17
Testing...
No class hour one and three
Hour five: continue working on paper

HW: work on paper

October 22
Work on paper

HW: finish paper

October 23
Paper Due!
Present papers

October 24
Final Catcher Test--don't forget to study your literary terms as well.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Independent Reading

Don't forget to bring your independent reading book to class on Friday! This is the book you are reading on your own with the theme personal identity.

Also, so many of you have asked me in class, "What do you mean by personal identity?" Remember back to our discussion on what makes a person's identity as well as when you created your personal identity visuals and wrote your personal identity essay. If that still leaves you stumped, here are a few definitions that I liked that I found on the web:
  • identity: the distinct personality of an individual regarded as a persisting entity; "you can lose your identity when you join the army"
    wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
  • identity: The collective aspect of the set of characteristics by which a thing is definitively recognizable or known
  • The set of behavioral or personal characteristics by which an individual is recognizable as a member of a group.
  • The distinct personality of an individual regarded as a persisting entity; individuality. http://www.answers.com/topic/identity?cat=health
A note about the reading log--
You do not have to write a long summary. A paragraph is fine for this entry. You should concentrate on the personal response and the literary appreciation sections of your reading log. The personal response should be at least two paragraphs long. The literary appreciation section should fully explain the quote, what it means to you, and why you liked the phrase you selected. Remember to cite the page number the quote comes from!



Autobiography Assignment

The autobiography project is due Tuesday, September 25th. Please have all the major components with you in class on Monday, September 24th to review the separate pieces and then put your project together. Also on Monday we will create your coat of arms and talk about your personal quotes.

Here are the things you should have with you in class:
  1. Title page
  2. Table of contents
  3. Timeline--this is the timeline that includes both your personal lives and what is happening around the world during the same time frame.
  4. The story of your birth OR your first memory
  5. Your two "I Am" poems
  6. Your personal composition--this is the 3-5 page essay about one major event in your life that we peer edited in class on Wednesday, September 19th.
  7. 100 dreams list
  8. "One Step Closer" journal
  9. At least 3 more journals

Welcome to English 9 Quest

Hello students!
This is a place where you can re-read the assignments for class and ask questions. You can post your questions under "comments" and then other students can learn from those questions and post their own comments to them.

Hopefully, this will be a great place to learn from each other and share ideas too. Don't be shy--ask questions, post comments, share your thoughts!

Ms. Peifer