Monday, May 6, 2013

Final Paper/Test on Fahrenheit 451

Descriptive Essay 






















Our final test for Fahrenheit 451 this year will also be our final paper for this class: a descriptive essay. A descriptive essay is similar to the narrative essay we wrote earlier this year - it is an essay where specifics and details are the most important feature for the reader. Just like any five paragraph essay we've written this semester, you need generalization+thesis+three body paragraphs+conclusion. Here is your topic:

TOPIC: Write a descriptive essay about one book that has impacted/changed/had an influence on your life. Give the background, talk about the book, how it influenced your life, etc. 


I. Introduction
   A. Generalization
   B. Thesis

II. First Body Paragraph
     A. Transition Sentence
     B. Give the Background Information on Your Life
          a. How old were you when you read this book?
          b. Describe your life at the time
          c. Were you experiencing a hard time before you read this book? etc.

III. Second Body Paragraph
      A. Transition Sentence
      B. Talk about the Book
           a. Overall describe the book
           b. Author, basic plot, themes, etc.

IV. Third Body Paragraph
       A. Transition Sentence
       B. Explain how the Book Influenced Your Life
            a. Describe your first time reading the book, etc.
            b. Describe how it changed/influenced your life

V. Conclusion 



Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Interpreting the Raw Data From Your Surveys

You have to use basic math to interpret the raw data from your surveys - fractions and percentages!!!

Here are some examples of what you should be interpreting from your surveys:

* 45% of the teenagers we surveyed answered that they have been bullied at some time 

* 50% of female teenagers said they felt peer pressure while only 35% of male teenagers said 
   they felt peer pressure before

You have to use basic fractions to create your percentages. You put the total number as the bottom of the fraction (the denominator) and the amount that answered a certain way on the top (the numerator); then, you divide the bottom number into the top number.

EXAMPLE:

25 teenagers who answered one question the same way / 50 total teenagers =

50% of teenagers said they were once bullied.

Case Study Poster

The following needs to be on your poster for your case study:

1. The Purpose of Your Case Study
* What was your hypothesis?
* What did you want to find out about it?

2. Background Research
* What was some background research your group discovered about your hypothesis?
* Just include brief summaries/highlights of your group's background research

3. Your Survey
* Have a copy of your survey on the poster
* What were the results of your survey? (should be percentages and statistics)

4. The Final Result of Your Case Study
* What did your group find out about your hypothesis? What did you discover from your survey?
* Was your hypothesis proven right or wrong, etc?

5. Future Study
* What does your group wish that you could've done differently?
* What is some future study you think could be done on your hypothesis?

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Case Study on Fahrenheit 45




While we are reading the novel this week for homework, we will be working on a case study in class on the social issues prevalent in the novel. The purpose of this project is to hypothesize and investigate. We want to discover something about a real social issue through interviews and research. Here are the requirements for this group project:

1. Case Study Report
    A. It's up to your group who writes what part in the report.
    B. In section 3.0 Research Background, everyone needs to write one section each (needs an
        authentic source)
    C. Example in Dropbox

2. Survey
    A. Your group needs to create a survey to give out for people to fill out
    B. You need to have at least 50 people surveyed
    C. Example in Dropbox

3. Poster
    A. Present your findings to the class
         * summarize your case study report: what were you trying to find out about your social issue?
         * what did you find out about your hypothesis through your survey?


Social Issues to Study
1. The Potential Dangers of Technology vs Ethics
     A. How far is too far with technology?
     B. What is ethical/right or wrong when it comes to technological advances? 
     C. Does technology hinder/destroy social abilities? Family bonds? 
     D. Weapons of mass destruction? Spying? etc.

2. Censorship/Freedom of Speech and Thought
     A. Internet censorship vs user freedom?
     B. Freedom of speech in press,etc. vs censorship 
     C. Banning certain types of media vs freedom of speech

3. Lack of Morals in Teenagers/Youth
     A. What is the root cause of teenage troubles/problems/suicide/drug use? 

4. Government Control vs Individual Rights
    A. How much control should the government have over an individual's rights?
  

Monday, April 15, 2013

"It was a pleasure to burn..."


Last night we were introduced into a world where firemen did not put out flames - they ignited them. Instead of extinguishing fires, they burned books and houses. And, according to our protagonist Montag, it was done happily. While we may quickly assume it is wrong to destroy all books, is it always wrong? If books are a gateway to knowledge and freedom - especially in the school setting for young minds - is there ever a reason any book should be banned from the public? 

Your task for the next few days is to research a banned or challenged book in the US. It can be a book that was historically banned/challenged or is now currently being banned/challenged. This is an individual test grade. Here are your requirements:

1. Minimum of two authentic sources on the book you choose.

2. One page written report. Parenthetical citation of at least two sources in report. 
   (Use a mixture of summary/direct quotes).
   
   A. The report should explain WHAT the book is about (author, plot, summary, etc.)
   B. The report should explain WHY the book is/was banned or challenged.
   C. The report should explain HOW YOU feel about the book. Give your personal opinion such 
        as: Should it have been banned? Why or why not? etc.

3. A Keynote presentation of your banned book and your opinion. 

Monday, April 8, 2013

Movie Test


Test for Cast Away

















For your test on the movie, you will be working with one other classmate to write an in-class five paragraph essay (typed or written). This will be a test grade; here are your requirements:

1. You and your partner need to work together to write a four paragraph essay. It's up to you and your
    partner to decide how you'll write this essay. You can take turns, dictate to each other, etc.

2. Choose one of the following prompts to write an essay on:
    A. Compare and Contrast the Theme of "Effects of Isolation" in the book to the movie.
         1. Think about the need for conversation
         2. Consider the children being stranded together and Chuck having Wilson and the effects
         3. Consider the children's sanity vs Chuck's sanity

    B. Compare and Contrast the Theme of "Savagery of Human Nature" in the book to the movie.
         1. Consider the children's transformation vs Chuck's transformation and the similarities/differences
         2. Think about the age differences
         3. Think about the ending to the children's savagery to the ending for Chuck in the movie

3. Your essay will be graded on the same aspects as your other papers: grammar, formal tone,
     analyzing vs summarizing, etc.

4. Follow this essay guideline for your four paragraphs (6-8 sentences per paragraph):

    I. Introduction
        A. Generalization
        B. Thesis

    II. First Body Paragraph
         A. Compare/Contrast

    III. Second Body Paragraph
          A. Compare/Contrast

 IV. Third Body Paragraph
       A. Compare/Contrast

  V. Conclusion Paragraph
          A. Summarize your thesis and two body paragraphs briefly
          B. End with a lasting statement





Thursday, March 21, 2013

Figurative Language in Lord of the Flies





Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth.
Oscar Wilde 




1. Select an important quotation from our novel.
Choose a quote that contains figurative language of some kind. It could be something a character says or just a description. Try to find an important quotation that you think nobody else will use. 


2. Make a two-sided mask that illustrates the figurative language in your quotation.
A. The front side of the mask needs to have your quote written on it. It needs to show the literal interpretation of your quote.

B. The back side of the mask needs to show the figurative/symbolic interpretation of your quote. 

C. Make the mask hands free wearable (use yarn!)

Monday, March 18, 2013

Grammar Review

Make a poster with the following on it:

1: The Grammar Rule

2: Examples of the Rule

3: Practice Problems of the Rule

Here are the rules the groups will be working on: 

A. Phrase vs Clause / Independent vs Dependent Clauses / Signifier Words

B. Four Types of Sentences: Simple, Compound, Complex, Compound-Complex

C. Fragments and Run-on Sentences

D. 9 Comma Rules


Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Debate Rules and Regulations


I. Presentation of Arguments by One Team

* Each member of the team will take turns reading their debate speech

II. Criticism by the Opposing Team

* The opposing team will listen to the first team's speeches and take notes while listening. They will
   then have time to talk as a group and gather their criticisms together.

* The team will elect one person to read the criticisms to the audience.

III. Rebuttal by the First Team

* The first team will then have time to speak together to answer the criticisms of the second team.

* The first team will elect one person to speak their rebuttals.

IV. Closing Speech

* Each team will then have TWO minutes to share ideas on a closing speech to present to the audience.

* One person one each team will present the closing speech to the audience. The speech should
   summarize the strengths of their argument and point out the weaknesses of the opponent's argument.

Debate Topics



First Topic:

1. Mankind, without civilization and order, becomes an evil savage. He is not innocent by nature.

2. The savage man is pure and innocent by nature because he is uncorrupted by civilization.

Second Topic: 

1. The best government is a pure democracy that is run by the people with no elected leader. 

2. The best government is one where there is an elected leader who governs others. 

Third Topic

1. The most important characteristic in a leader is moral character. Any other skill or ability is secondary 
    in importance.

2. There are other characteristic(s) that are more important and necessary in a leader than his moral 
    character.

Fourth Topic:

1. Religion has no place in a government. It can only cause trouble in leadership 
    or the people. 

2. Religion can play an important role in a government. It can lead to good within leadership and the 
    people.

The Debate Speech














Your team should take time to study the claim that you are supposed to prove. Each member of your team will write a debate speech. Each member's debate speech should be a different and unique reason why your claim is true. For example, let's say this was your team's claim:

CLAIM: Smoking is an unhealthy habit that should not be practiced. 

As a team, you want to come up with different reasons each member of your team can have to write a speech on. So, let's say your team comes up with these important reasons:

REASONS: 1) Smoking can cause lung cancer
                     2) Smoking can cause gum disease
                     3) Smoking can harm others who are around by second-hand smoke
                     4) Smoking can harm a baby if a woman is pregnant 

If these are the four most important reasons your group comes up with, then each member on your team would write a speech on one of the four reasons. EACH SPEECH NEEDS TO BE UNIQUE AND DIFFERENT THAN THE OTHERS. There should be FOUR paragraphs in each debate speech:

I. Introduction/Generalization/Claim 
* Your first paragraph should begin with generalization on your topic to get your audience familiar
* You should end your introduction with your team's CLAIM

II. Your Main Reason/Support for Your Claim
* Here is where you will focus on your unique reason why your team's claim is true
* Need at least ONE authentic sources CITED in your debate speech - either a direct
   quote/summary/paraphrase of each source; look for studies, statistics, definitions, etc.

III. Counter-Argument against Other Team's Claim
* Briefly explain why the other team's claim is wrong

IV. Conclusion
* Summarize your debate speech
* What was your team's claim again? Why is your team's claim correct?


Monday, February 25, 2013

Survival Guide: Surviving in the Wild

















Survival in the wild is a key theme in Lord of the Flies. For this project, you will be working in groups on creating a survival guide. This is will be a part research and part creative project. Here are your requirements:

1. A Survival Manual
Your group will write a survival guide manual that will contain appropriate visuals/pictures/covers, etc. Each member of your group will write a chapter in the manual. Your chapter needs to be 350 words and needs to have TWO AUTHENTIC SOURCES. Your group needs to pick an environment and survival situation for the basis of your environment (think jungle, the arctic, the desert, etc.) Here are the chapters:

A. Government
* What would be the best government to set up in your survival situation? Why?
* Explain how it would be set up and how it would work

B. Environment
* What is the environment your group is choosing?
* Describe the environment

C. Essentials/Shelter/Equipment/Food
* What are the essentials/shelter/equipment/food needed in your survival situation?
* This will also be specific to your environment and survival situation

D. Potential Dangers
* What are the potential dangers in your specific survival situation?
* How would you respond?


2. Presentation of Survival Manual
Your group needs to make a presentation of your survival manual. Here are your options:

A. Instructional Survival Guide Video
* Think about the shows Survivor Man or Man vs Wild

B. Show and Tell Presentation
* Bring objects/items and have a show-and-tell type of presentation to the class

C. Survival Guide Tour
* Set up and create your survival situation outside using obstacles, etc. and take the class on an
   instructional, guided tour



Tuesday, January 29, 2013

The ELEMENTS of Literature

I. Setting - The place or location of the action.  The setting provides the historical and cultural context 
                  for characters. It often can symbolize the emotional state of characters. Example – In Poe’s 
                  The Fall of the House of Usher, the crumbling old mansion reflects the decaying state of 
                  both the family and the narrator’s mind. We also see this type of emphasis on setting in 
                  Thomas Mann’s Death in Venice.

II. Symbolism - When an object is meant to be representative of something or an idea greater than the 
                          object itself.

IIITone/Mood - The implied attitude towards the subject of the poem. Is it hopeful, pessimistic,  
                             dreary, worried? A poet conveys tone by combining all of the elements listed above 
                             to create a precise impression on the reader.

IV. Character - Representation of a person, place, or thing performing traditionally human activities or  
                           functions in a work of fiction

                          * Protagonist - The character the story revolves around.
                          * Antagonist - A character or force that opposes the protagonist.
                          * Minor character - Often provides support and illuminates the protagonist.
                          * Static character - A character that remains the same.
                          * Dynamic character - A character that changes in some important way.
                          * Characterization - The choices an author makes to reveal a character’s personality,  
                                                             such as appearance, actions, dialogue, and motivations.  
V. Theme - The main idea or underlying meaning of the literary work

VI. Conflict - The struggle within the story between characters, events, etc.
  • Man vs Man
  • Man vs Society
  • Man vs Nature
  • Man vs Outside Force
  • Man vs Himself 

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

The Russian Revolution and Animal Farm

Making the Connection: From Fiction to Real Life










As we're finishing up our reading of Animal Farm, we will focus on the real historical connections to this allegory written by George Orwell. Every character and action in the novel can be traced to a person or event that took place during the Russian Revolution - which we will discover this week. Here are your group requirements:

1: 350 word research report. MLA format. Parenthetical citation. TWO authentic 
    sources cited in the paper (Direct Quote/ Paraphrase/ Summary) 

2: Keynote presentation: Essential Question (Opening discussion and Closing discussion) 

3: Connection to the Book - Who/what does each person/action/group represent in the book?


There are two main lessons the class will be teaching. Your group will do one of the following:

I. LESSON ONE:

1: Karl Marx
* Who was Karl Marx?
* What kind of life did he lead?
* His legacy?
* Brief bio
* Connection to the book

2: Leon Trotsky
* Who was Leon Trotsky?
* What kind of leader was he?
* Brief bio
* Connection to the book

3: Joseph Stalin
* Who was Joseph Stalin?
* What is he notorious for?
* Brief bio
* Connection to the book

4: Czar Nicholas II
* Who was Czar Nicholas II?
* Was he a good leader?
* How did he treat the people?
* Brief bio
* Connection to the book


II. LESSON TWO:

1: Russian Propaganda
* What were the techniques of Russian propaganda during the war?
* What were its effects on the people?
* Examples?
* Brief history
* Connection to the book


2: KGB
* What was the KGB?
* How was it a tool in the Russian Revolution?
* Brief history
* Connection to the book


3: Religion
* How did Karl Marx view religion?
* What was the role of religion in the Russian Revolution?
* Connection to the book


4: Russian Revolution
* What are the overall details of the Russian Revolution?
* Why did it start? How did it end?
* Connection to the book



Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Satire: A Modest Proposal





















What is the best way to tackle social/economic/political issues? Is it to protest by picketing or rioting? Is it to give moving speeches? One way that writers throughout history have tackled issues in their lifetime is through satire. In Animal Farm Orwell tackles political issues through satire with the animals on the farm. Similarly, in Jonathan Swift's A Modest Proposal, he tackles the issue of poverty, homelessness, and economic struggles through a terrifying solution. For the next few days, we will read A Modest Proposal in class and then write our own version of a satire.

1. Read A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift: A MODEST PROPOSAL

2: Write your own satire that tackles a social/political/religious/governmental/economic issue


Thursday, January 10, 2013

Group Project: The Power of Speech




Create a COMPARE/CONTRAST diagram for Old Major and Martin Luther King Jr.’s speeches

Answer these questions in your COMPARE/CONTRAST diagram:

  1. Give the specific literary devices used by each speaker. Give as many examples as possible for each literary device found. 
  2. For each example you write down, give an explanation. For example, in a metaphor, why did he compare those two objects? etc.
  3. What is the purpose of each speech? What did the speaker want to create in the people? 
  4. What was the effect created in the people from each speech?
  5. What is the enemy of each speech?
  6. What was the solution offered in each speech against their enemy?

Friday, January 4, 2013

Dystopian Lyrics

"A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" by Bob Dylan


Oh, where have you been, my blue-eyed son ?
And where have you been my darling young one ?
I've stumbled on the side of twelve misty mountains
I've walked and I've crawled on six crooked highways
I've stepped in the middle of seven sad forests
I've been out in front of a dozen dead oceans
I've been ten thousand miles in the mouth of a graveyard
And it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard, and it's a hard
It's a hard rain's a-gonna fall.

Oh, what did you see, my blue eyed son ?
And what did you see, my darling young one ?
I saw a newborn baby with wild wolves all around it
I saw a highway of diamonds with nobody on it
I saw a black branch with blood that kept drippin'
I saw a room full of men with their hammers a-bleedin'
I saw a white ladder all covered with water
I saw ten thousand takers whose tongues were all broken
I saw guns and sharp swords in the hands of young children
And it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard, and it's a hard
It's a hard rain's a-gonna fall.

And what did you hear, my blue-eyed son ?
And what did you hear, my darling young one ?
I heard the sound of a thunder, it roared out a warnin'
I heard the roar of a wave that could drown the whole world
I heard one hundred drummers whose hands were a-blazin'
I heard ten thousand whisperin' and nobody listenin'
I heard one person starve, I heard many people laughin'
Heard the song of a poet who died in the gutter
Heard the sound of a clown who cried in the alley
And it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard
And it's a hard rain's a-gonna fall.

Oh, who did you meet my blue-eyed son ?
Who did you meet, my darling young one ?
I met a young child beside a dead pony
I met a white man who walked a black dog
I met a young woman whose body was burning
I met a young girl, she gave me a rainbow
I met one man who was wounded in love
I met another man who was wounded and hatred
And it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard
And it's a hard rain's a-gonna fall.

And what'll you do now, my blue-eyed son ?
And what'll you do now my darling young one ?
I'm a-goin' back out 'fore the rain starts a-fallin'
I'll walk to the deepths of the deepest black forest
Where the people are a many and their hands are all empty
Where the pellets of poison are flooding their waters
Where the home in the valley meets the damp dirty prison
Where the executioner's face is always well hidden
Where hunger is ugly, where souls are forgotten
Where black is the color, where none is the number
And I'll tell and think it and speak it and breathe it
And reflect it from the mountain so all souls can see it
Then I'll stand on the ocean until I start sinkin'
But I'll know my songs well before I start singin'
And it's a hard, it's a hard, it's a hard, and it's a hard
It's a hard rain's a-gonna fall.

Thursday, January 3, 2013


Utopia: The Perfect Society












Is it possible for a perfect society to exist? Describe what you think would make a perfect society.