E. Quinson
D-201
9H, period 1
Monday, February 23,
2009
SWBAT: Review verbals, phrases, and learn about participles and participial phrases.
DO NOW: Review your quizzarooni.
DEVELOPMENT:
H.W.: 1. Read in your green grammar book: p. 98 and first half of p. 99. then do the exercises: Ex. 6, pp. 99-100, Ex. 7 p. 100 2. Independent reading.
Tuesday, February 24
2009
SWBAT: students will be able to practice using, defining, and analyzing participles and participial phrases.
DO NOW: Take out homework for checking.
H.W.: 1. Read in your green grammar book: p. 101 to the very top of p. 102, then do: Ex. 9, p. 102. 2. Independent reading.
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
SWBAT: define and analyze the use and punctuation of appositives and appositive phrases.
DO
DEVELOPMENT:
H.W.: 1. Read pp. 113-114 in your green grammar book. 2. Then do Ex. 17, p. 115. 3. Independent reading.
Thursday, February
26, 2009
SWBAT: define and identify phrases, verbals and appositives.
DO NOW: Take out your homework.
DEVELOPMENT:
i. Subject
ii. Direct Object
iii. Predicate Nominative
iv. Object of the preposition
i. Subject
ii. Direct Object
iii. Predicate Nominative
iv. Object of the preposition
H.W.: Study for quizzarooni tomorrow!
Friday, February 27, 2009
SWBAT: demonstrate mastery of prepositional phrases, verbals and appositives.
DO NOW: Prepare for quiz.
DEVELOPMENT;
H.W.: Independent
reading. Next week we begin Ethan Frome.
Monday, March 2, 2009
SWBAT: begin our discussions of Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton.
DO NOW: Get a computer, log on, go to our blog and begin writing about the adage, “Believe half of what you see and none of what you hear.” What do you think it means? Do you follow that piece of advice? Why or why not?
DEVELOPMENT:
H.W.: 1.
Read beginning of Ethan Frome to pp. 14.
2. Blog it! Describe our narrator. Who is he?
What is he doing in Starkfield? Can we rely on
his judgment? Why or why not? What does the narrator learn about Frome from
other characters? What effect does this knowledge have on the narrator?
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
SWBAT: Discover what the townspeople say about Ethan
Frome and why he captures the narrator’s attention.
DO
NOW: Get a computer, log on, go to our
blog and begin writing about Starkfield,
Massachusetts as you visualize it. Pretend that you are describing the place to
someone who has not been there. Feel free to use the descriptive words from the
activity as well as others that may
occur to you.
DEVELOPMENT:
H.W.: 1. Read
Chapters 1 and 2. 2. Blog it!
What are your initial feelings about Ethan Frome, the protagonist? What
details from this section of the novella helped shape your feelings?
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
SWBAT: find out what happens when Ethan and Mattie find themselves alone for the first time.
DO NOW: : Get a computer, log on, go to our blog and begin writing: Recall an instance when you were tempted to do something that you might later have regretted. What prevented you from doing it? How did you feel afterwards?
DEVELOPMENT:
H.W.: 1. Read Chapters 3, 4, and 5. 2. Blog it! Zeena’s cold, quarrelsome, complaining character might be associated with the wintry Starkfield landscape. Using Mattie Silver as Zeena’s foil, describe the season that you would associate with Mattie’s personality. Use examples from these chapters to support your point of view.
Thursday, March 5, 2009
SWBAT: discover what motivates Ethan Frome to make a very difficult decision.
DO
NOW: Get a computer, log on, go to our
blog and begin writing: Is Ethan Frome
to blame for his plight—that of being trapped in a loveless marriage and having
to give up his aspiration to study engineering, or is he a victim of
circumstance, bound by family tradition? Does Mattie Silver represent his last
chance to attain happiness, or does his liaison with her represent another
instance of poor judgment on his part? You will later debate these issues in
your groups.
DEVELOPMENT:
H.W.: 1. Read Chapters 6, 7 and 8. 2. Blog it! In this section of the novella, both Ethan and Zeena make separate references to things or ideals that they value most. Write a paragraph that compares and contrasts these things. What does this indicate about the characters and their relationship to each other?
Friday, March 6, 2009
SWBAT: discover how our core values change our decision making and how this phenomenon plays out in Ethan Frome.
DO NOW: Get a computer, log on, go to our blog and begin writing: For which character do you have the most sympathy? Why?
DEVELOPMENT:
H.W.: 1.
Finish the novella. 2. Blog it!
Who or what is responsible for the outcome of this novella? Write a few
paragraphs explaining who or what caused the conditions that the narrator
observes in Ethan Frome’s house.
Monday, March 9, 2009
SWBAT: discuss denouement of Ethan Frome and analyze 3 examples of literary criticism about the novella.
DO NOW: Get a computer, log on, go to our blog and begin writing: Were Ethan and Mattie actually meaning to commit suicide? Why didn’t Ethan aim more carefully for the tree? What is it the author actually sees at the end? What meaning are we to make of this frame narrative, after all is said and done?
DEVELOPMENT:
· Were Ethan and Mattie actually meaning to commit suicide?
· Why didn’t Ethan aim more carefully for the tree?
· What is it the author actually sees at the end?
· What meaning are we to make of this frame narrative, after all is said and done?
· Frame structure.
· How did the narrator learn about Ethan: Herman Gow, Mrs. Ned Hale (Ruth Varnum), his own experience, and from going over the threshold…. What do you mean, going over the threshold? Was simply being in the house enough????? How can that be?
· Barbara White: setting.
· Blake Nevius, character – hero/protagonist/antagonist
· Marlene Springer – style, psyche
Students will read and respond to each extract and then discuss them in small groups.
H.W.: Finish lit. crit. Because we certainly will not be able to get it done in class. Re-read novel, well, as much as you can.
SWBAT: analyze 3 examples of literary criticism about the novella.
DO NOW: Write an entry: How does reading other people’s opinions of this novella enrich your understanding of it?
DEVELOPMENT:
1. Review H.W. and DO NOW entries.
2. Analyze literary criticism:
· Cynthia Griff Wolff – narrator as ghastly guide
· Elizabeth Ammons – fairy tale
· Lionel Trilling – a dead novel – no moral question
3. Students will read and respond to each extract and then discuss them in small groups.
4. Review summarize.
H.W.: Study for test. Vocabulary and short answer. Re-read novel, well, as much as you can. The test will cover vocabulary and 10 short answer questions. It is not one critical lens essay. In some ways, it requires greater command of the novel than that.
Wednesday, March 5,
2008 — Essay Test? — or multiple choice?