Tuesday, April 30, 2019

JUST IN CASE: Here is Thursday's lesson plan

Get journals out and PAIR up to share the orange textbooks under the desks. Together, pairs of students should read “The Sniper” (page ______). When done, INDIVIDUALLY answer the short story worksheet questions in your own journal. You can discuss answers, but must have your own answers in your journal. Return the textbooks under the desks.
“Little Brother TM”: Read this one aloud as a class. Afterwards, complete the same worksheet questions (attached/taped in journals) for this story, individually (10-15 min).

Reflection on Craft questions -- thoughtfully answer them for these two short story examples and then reconsider your OWN three short story ideas in light of the techniques used by these two authors. We will discuss their ideas/understanding of technique on Monday, so you must have answers written down. 

Reflection on Craft Questions
(after reading “The Sniper” and “Little Brother TM”)
1)      How are the endings of “The Sniper” and “Little Brother TM” similar? 
What made these plot twists effective (be as specific as you can)?
2)      Looking back on each story, where were there hints (foreshadowing) of the ending? 
How can you “steal” these techniques in your own story?
3)      What is useful/entertaining about a surprise ending? When can a surprise ending fail?
4)      How does the lens of historical fiction or sci-fi/futuristic fiction change your 
reaction to the story? Consider what this means as you plan your own short story—the 
audience will react in specific ways to different genres.
5)      Pay close attention to the KINDS of details each story employs (and the different 
levels of detail between the two stories). How can you learn from their description and what 
style more closely resembles what you want to use in your own story?

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Upcoming work due.....

On THURSDAY, April 18 you will have 4 completed socratic seminar reflections in your journal to show me (or the replacement assignment, if you missed a discussion). You will also have a PRINTED copy of your rough draft for the Great Expectations thematic essay.

Monday, April 22 is a B-day due to grading on Friday.

On TUESDAY, April 23, you will have your FINAL DRAFT printed before class. You will also have submitted your essay to the turnitin.com website.

THURSDAY, April 25 is the last day to submit late work or revisions for this six-weeks. If you are done with your art project (assigned 4-23), you may work on revisions during class. Your ONE-PAGER is due at the end of the period on April 25.

Tuesday, April 9, 2019

The final CLOSE READING assessment of this semester is on Thursday, April 11. Be sure you are confident about what was happening in chapters 30-39.... and good luck.

Just a reminder that the second six-weeks grading period is fast approaching and you have several deadlines coming up!
Your essay rough draft is due on 4-18 and the final draft is due on 4-23.
Your thematic art project (not yet assigned) is due on or before 4-25.
ALL LATE WORK AND MAKE-UP WORK is due by the end of class on 4-25.

Thursday, April 4, 2019

CURRENT REMINDERS:

DUE MONDAY, April 8: close reading practice #2 (must be complete before class begins)

The Close Reading TEST will be on Thursday, April 11

Goal to finish the book? DONE by class on April 18.

Your ROUGH DRAFT of the final essay is due on Thursday, April 18 (for peer edits and points!) and the FINAL DRAFT is due Tuesday, April 23.

Late work for this six-weeks is due by April 25th.