Monday, March 28, 2011

Plans for March 28 to April 1

Monday (B)

  • Read: Introduction to Oscar Wilde (Shaw Festival Production Packet, pg. 4)
  • Watch and Discuss: A&E Biography – Oscar Wilde
  • Introduction to Play: The Importance of Being Earnest takes place in London and the countryside in 1895, the last few years of the period that would be termed Victorian England. The English aristocracy flourished during this time. It is this group on which Wilde’s satire focuses, along with their view that marriage has nothing to do with love, but is rather a means for achieving social status.
  • Small-Group Work: Students will break into groups of 3-4 and will receive one scenario.  They must discuss the scenario as a group, respond to the questions, and be prepared to share with the class. 
  • Discuss: Group work
  • Perform: We will begin acting out Act 1 of The Importance of Being Earnest as a class.  Students will volunteer to begin reading the play in the front of the room.  We will pause to discuss key lines and plot developments.
o   Set up: Algernon Moncrieff, an upper-class English Bachelor, and his Manservant, Lane, are preparing for the arrival of Algernon’s aunt, the Lady Bracknell. He is visited by his friend Jack Worthing—though Algernon knows Jack as “Ernest.”
  • Homework: Wuthering Heights papers due next class!  Please bring both your Wuthering Heights books and The Importance of Being Earnest to class!

Tuesday or Wednesday (A/B)

  • Discuss: Students will have the opportunity to share what they decided to write about for their final paper for Wuthering Heights.  Students will then turn in their papers.
  • Recap: What have we read thus far in The Importance of Being Earnest?  Students will provide a short summary of the beginning of Act 1 before we continue performing the play.
  • Perform and Discuss: The Importance of Being Earnest Act 1 (Lady Bracknell and Gwendolyn enter, pg. 37 to Gwendolyn is told to sit in the carriage, pg. 44)
  • What’s in a name?: Students will return to their seats and view a PowerPoint presentation with 10 different names.  They will be asked to write down their impressions of what they believe these “people” are like based on their impressions of the names. 
  • Discuss: “What’s in a Name?” Activity
  • BehindtheName.com: We will then visit the website BehindtheName.com, which provides etymological information about names from around the world.  A few students will volunteer their names to demonstrate how the website can be used to find historical and linguistic information about their names. 
  • Perform and Discuss: The Importance of Being Earnest Act 1 (Lady Bracknell interviews Jack, pg. 44 to the top of 49)
o   *Special props*
  • Type II Quick Write
  • Closing Activity: Discuss and turn in quick write responses. 

Thursday or Friday (A/B)

  • Recap: What have we read thus far in The Importance of Being Earnest?  Students will provide a short summary of the beginning of Act 1 before we continue performing the play.
  • Perform and Discuss: The Importance of Being Earnest Act 1 (Algernon and Jack discuss women, hard work, and wit, pg. 49-55)
  • Type II Quick Write
  • Small Groups: Students will get into groups of no more than four and respond to the following prompt in their notebooks.  Select one of the following lines from Algernon that are supposedly his “words of wisdom.”  What exactly is he saying here?  Respond to what he is saying (agree, disagree or qualify) and support your position with at least one specific example from life, literature, or film.
o   “Relations are simply a tedious pack of people, who haven’t got the remotest knowledge of how to live, nor the slightest instinct about when to die.”
o   “All women become like their mothers.  That is their tragedy.  No man does.  That’s his.”
o   “The only way to behave to a woman is to make love to her, if she is pretty, and to someone else, if she is plain.”
o   “It is awfully hard work doing nothing.  However, I don’t mind hard work where there is no definite object of any kind.”
  • Discuss: Small group work
  • Watch: The Importance of Being Earnest (Miramax, 2002) Act 1
o   Act 1 – Approx. 30 min.
o   At 08:41 (short diversion w/ Cecily) -- play through
o   At 19:25 (diversion w/ Cecily) -- skip to DVD Ch. 4 (21:35), Lady Bracknell interview
o   End part way through DVD Ch. 5 (31:00)
  • Closing Activity: As a class, we will discuss the changes that the director decided to make to scenery, lines, and the order of particular scenes and the students’ opinions about the changes.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Plans for March 21 to March 25

Monday or Tuesday (A/B)

  • Wuthering Heights in Sixty Seconds! Students will have 1 hour to prepare.  They will have to capture and dramatize a set of chapters from Wuthering Heights in 60 seconds.  They will be required to ...
    • Use at least 3 direct quotes from the novel (but more are better!)
    • Act out the lines they choose and create stage directions to go along with them
    • A narrator may speak one time, for no more than 5 seconds.
  • Students are encouraged (but are not required to) use…
    • Props and costumes
    • Scenery
    • Name tag
    • A sense of humor J
  • Chapter Breakdowns:
    • Four Groups: 1-9, 10-16, 17-24, 25-34 (approx. 80 pgs. each)
    • Five Groups: 1-7, 8-12, 13-18, 19-27, 28-34 (approx. 64 pgs. each)
  • By the end of the block, students will hand in a copy of their “script” and perform their chapters for the class.
  • Homework: Study for the Wuthering Heights test.  Use your reading check quizzes to help you prepare.  Be sure to also bring your materials for your Wuthering Heights paper and your novels to class!  You will receive a homework grade for being prepared!

Wednesday or Thursday (A/B)

  • Wuthering Heights Final Assessment: Students will take a final assessment on Wuthering Heights.
  • Writing Workshop: When students have completed the Wuthering Heights final assessment, they will be asked to take out their materials for their papers for a homework grade.  We will then spend the remainder of the block, reviewing the requirements for the paper and addressing any questions the students may have.  Students will have the opportunity for individual conferencing if they choose. 
  • Homework: Continue working on your Wuthering Heights papers.  Due: 3/29 or 3/30

Friday or Monday (A/B)

  • Read: Introduction to Oscar Wilde (Shaw Festival Production Packet, pg. 4)
  • Watch and Discuss: A&E Biography – Oscar Wilde
  • Introduction to Play: The Importance of Being Earnest takes place in London and the countryside in 1895, the last few years of the period that would be termed Victorian England. The English aristocracy flourished during this time. It is this group on which Wilde’s satire focuses, along with their view that marriage has nothing to do with love, but is rather a means for achieving social status.
  • Small-Group Work: Students will break into groups of 3-4 and will receive one of four scenarios.  They must discuss the scenario as a group, respond to the questions, and be prepared to share with the class.
  • Discuss: Group work
  • Perform: We will begin acting out Act 1 of The Importance of Being Earnest as a class.  Students will volunteer to begin reading the play in the front of the room.  We will pause to discuss key lines and plot developments.
  • Homework: Wuthering Heights papers due next class!  Please bring both your Wuthering Heights books and The Importance of Being Earnest to class!

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Plans for March 14 to March 18

Monday (B)

  • Reading Check Quiz: Wuthering Heights, chapters 25-28
  • Full Class Discussion: Students will volunteer to contribute to a short summary of the plot developments in chapters 25-28. 
  • Quick Write Type II
  • Small Groups: Students will break into small groups of no more than 4.  Each group will use these chapters to create a chart to compare and contrast the characters of Linton and Heathcliff.  They will be required to create a list of each character’s traits in addition to finding at least one quote that reflects each character’s personality.  Students will have 10 minutes.  Everyone must be taking notes in their notebooks.
  • Discuss: Small group work – How has Linton become more like Heathcliff in these chapters?
  • Close Reading Focus: p. 256 – Heathcliff’s selfishness, *p. 263 – Cathy’s ironic plea to Heathcliff, p. 267 – Linton acts like Heathcliff (selfishness),
  • Closing Activity: Students will view Quack! Vol. 8 Part 1 for a second time. 
  • Homework: Read chapters 29-31 for next class, and be prepared for a reading check quiz.  Be sure to also find one significant quote for each of the three chapters.  Remember: You will also be quizzed on the Quack! words, so be sure to review the words before coming to class! 

Tuesday or Wednesday (A/B)

  • Quack! Quiz 8.1 
  • Reading Check Quiz: Wuthering Heights chapters 29-31
  • Full Class Discussion: Students will volunteer to contribute to a short summary of the plot developments in chapters 29-31. 
  • Quick Write Type 1
  • Small Groups: Students will get into groups of no more than four.  They will be assigned one of the key themes that we have been examining throughout the novel.  They will be asked to review their quote guide and be prepared to give the class a short explanation of how their theme has developed through the novel.  They will also be required to provide one representative quote from the novel on the theme. 
  • Closing Activity: Discuss small group work
  • Homework: Read chapters 32-34 for next class, and be prepared for a reading check quiz.  Remember: Your finalized quote guides are DUE next class.  This is a 100 point assignment!  The extra credit study guide for chapters 18-34 is also due next class.

Thursday or Friday (A/B)

  • Reading Check Quiz: Wuthering Heights, chapters 32-34. 
  • Full Class Discussion: We will discuss the end of the novel and specific plot developments in the last three chapters. 
  • Cumulative Assessments: We will discuss the two cumulative assessments for the novel, including a multiple choice test (3/23 or 3/24) and a paper (due: 3/29 or 3/30).
  • View: Wuthering Heights, Paramount Pictures Film Version
    • DVD Chapters 18-25 (1:08:00 – 1:43:00) (approx. 35 minutes)
    • Corresponding novel chapters: 19-34
  • Closing Activity: Discuss the film’s interpretation of these chapters.
  • Homework: Begin studying for the Wuthering Heights test.  Begin working on your Wuthering Heights paper, and please see me if you have any questions or would like to discuss an idea for an alternative topic. 

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Plans for March 7 to March 11

Monday or Tuesday (A/B)

  • Reading Check Quiz: Wuthering Heights chapters 19-21. 
  • Full Class Discussion: Students will volunteer to contribute to a short summary of the plot developments in chapters 19 to 21. 
  • Small Groups: Students will break into small groups of no more than 4.  Each group will use these chapters to create a chart to compare and contrast the characters of Hareton Earnshaw and Linton Heathcliff.  They will be required to create a list of each character’s traits in addition to finding at least one quote that reflects each character’s personality.  Students will have 10 minutes.  Everyone must be taking notes in their notebooks.
  • Close Reading Focus: We will closely examine a few passages from these three chapters.
  • Full-Class Discussion:
    • What does young Cathy think of Hareton?  What about Linton?
    • Does Nelly Dean like Hareton?  What about Linton?  Does she clearly favor one over the other? 
    • What are Heathcliff’s feelings about Hareton?  What about his son, Linton? 
  • Homework: Read chapters 22-24 for next class, and be prepared for a reading check quiz.  Be sure to also find one significant quote for each of the three chapters.

Wednesday or Thursday (A/B)

  • Reading Check Quiz: Wuthering Heights chapters 22-24. 
  • Full Class Discussion: Students will volunteer to contribute to a short summary of the plot developments in chapters 22-24. 
  • Small Groups: Students will break into small groups of no more than 4.  Each group will use these chapters to create a chart to compare and contrast the characters of Linton Heathcliff and Cathy Linton.  They will be required to create a list of each character’s traits in addition to finding at least one quote that reflects each character’s personality.  Students will have 10 minutes.  Everyone must be taking notes in their notebooks.
  • Discuss: Small group work – Why is Cathy in “love” with Linton when they are clearly so different from one another? 
  • Close Reading Focus: We will closely examine a few passages from these three chapters.
  • If time permits, view and discuss: North York Moors, North Yorkshire, England
  • Closing Activity: Students will view Quack! Vol. 8 Part 1 and take notes on the next set of vocabulary words. 
  • Homework: Read chapters 25-28 for next class, and be prepared for a reading check quiz.  Be sure to also find one significant quote for each of the four chapters. 

Friday or Monday (A/B)

  • Reading Check Quiz: Wuthering Heights chapters 25-28.
  • Full Class Discussion: Students will volunteer to contribute to a short summary of the plot developments in chapters 25-28. 
  • Quick Write Activity: Linton’s letter to Edgar 
  • Small Groups: Students will break into small groups of no more than 4.  Each group will use these chapters to create a chart to compare and contrast the characters of Linton and Heathcliff.  They will be required to create a list of each character’s traits in addition to finding at least one quote that reflects each character’s personality.  Students will have 10 minutes.  Everyone must be taking notes in their notebooks.
  • Close Reading Focus: We will closely examine a few passages from these three chapters.
  • Closing Activity: Students will view Quack! Vol. 8 Part 1 for a second time. 
  • Homework: Read chapters 29-31 for next class, and be prepared for a reading check quiz.  Be sure to also find one significant quote for each of the three chapters.  Remember: You will also be quizzed on the Quack! words, so be sure to review the words before coming to class!