Friday, October 21, 2016

FIELD TRIP LINKS

 A Mighty Mighty People
Here are some of the songs from Act I:

"How I Got Over"
"Rocka My Soul"
"Mary Don't You Weep"
"Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around"
"Swing Low, Sweet Chariot"

AGENDA 10/21

Reading Calendar for A Tale of Two Cities

for Monday, 10/24
read and annotate Book the Second chapter 6
in-class timed essay practice, prose prompt

for Tuesday, 10/25
read and annotate Book the Second chapters 7, 8, 9
in-class timed essay practice, prose prompt

for Wednesday, 10/26
read and annotate Book the Second chapters 10 and 11

for Thursday, 10/27
read and annotate Book the Second chapters 12 and 13

for Friday, 10/28
read and annotate Book the Second chapters 14, 15, 16

for Monday, 10/31
read and annotate Book the Second chapters 17, 18, 19

for Tuesday, 11/1
read and annotate Book the Second chapters 20, 21, 22

for Wednesday, 11/2
read and annotate Book the Second chapters 23 and 24

for Thursday, 11/3
no reading homework; prepare for timed prose essay prompt using FLT sheet and practice essays
**TIMED ESSAY IN CLASS 11/3**

for Friday, 11/4
read and annotate Book the Third chapters 1, 2, 3

for Monday, 11/7
read and annotate Book the Third chapters 4, 5, 6

for Tuesday, 11/8
read and annotate Book the Third chapters 7, 8, 9

for Wednesday, 11/9
read and annotate Book the Third chapters 10 and 11

for Thursday, 11/10
read and annotate Book the Third chapters 12 and 13

for Monday, 11/14
read and annotate Book the Third chapters 14 and 15

Final discussions and review 11/14-11/17 including timed Open Q essay and complete review sheet

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

AGENDA 10/19

Quick quiz over chapters 1-6 of A Tale of Two Cities using Socrative. Join room 910209 and respond.
Give points for annotations from Book 1, chapters 1-6.

HW: Read and annotate Book the Second, chapters 1 "Five Years Later" and 2, "A Sight," and be ready to discuss tomorrow.

Thursday, October 13, 2016

AGENDA 10/13


Reading background information and adding to our circle maps for Charles Dickens’ Life and Times and the French Revolution

Share and discuss what you learned
What to look for as we read:
“In the nineteenth century everyone, from Queen Victoria to the street sweepers, either read Dickens or had Dickens read to them.” --David Perdue, member of The Dickens Fellowship and contributor to The Charles Dickens Museum
  • Serial publication: lots of cliffhangers, more like episodes of a TV show than one sustained “movie”
  • Character: Dickens’ writing endures because of his memorable character descriptions
  • History and Social Reform: Dickens feared the violence and upheaval of France, and saw class tensions and underrepresentation/care for working people becoming huge issues as England industrializes
  • Themes: Dickens tends to believe in humanity’s goodness and in optimism, even in difficult times
  • Motifs: blood, light, family, stability, golden, duality/doubles, sacrifice, revolution, bank, wine, the law, aristocracy, resurrection

HW: Read Ch 1 of Tale:  consider using an audiobook!