Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Quarterly Information

Quarterly Assessment – MP3
Monday, April 1 (Reading grade: 30 minute limit)

Format:  Responding to Nonfiction Text
·        You will be given a reading selection that is in some way related to The Secret Life of Bees.
·        You will respond to at least 10 (or more) multiple choice questions that ask you to analyze the reading selection in terms of literary devices, content, vocabulary, and inferences.
·        You will respond to one open-ended question that asks you to integrate the information from the reading selection.

What to Study (if you feel the need to study):
·        Your notes on writing a strong lead/hook (worms): You can incorporate this skill into your open-ended response.
·        Literary elements definitions
·        RATE/QASI
·        Grammatical risks: parentheses, dash, ellipses, repetition
·        How to use context clues to determine vocabulary meaning

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Wk. 3 blogs: Option A Sentence Structure

   Prompt: Writers may break traditional—and correct-- sentence structure to enhance drama and mystery.

 
Response Requirement:
a.    How does Sue Monk Kidd use sentence fragments to contribute to plot and conflict development?
b.     Why do writers use varied sentence structure to echo conflict and plot?


When completing open-ended responses, remember to use RATE.



Sunday, March 10, 2013

This Week's Postings

Choose two "Week 3" reading response options.  Your responses for the first week will be due Friday, March 28th by midnight.

 

Note: Your Freedom Write is due on the same day.

Week 2: Option F True Life: I Tried the Martha Whites

Prompt:
In chapter 1, T. ray punishes Lily by making her kneel on Martha Whites (rice/grits) for one hour.

Response Requirements:
Kneel on uncooked rice/grits yourself.  The opportunity will also be presented in class this week.

Use QASI/RATE to address the two bullets (each bullet requires its own paragraph)


-What does this punishment suggest about T.Ray and about Lily's childhood?
-Describe your experience of kneeling on grits.  Use descriptive language and details explaining how it felt, thoughts running through your head, etc.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Reading for this week and next

Assignment #
 Read BY Date (DUE)
Chapter(s)
Completed?
Pages

Assignment 1
Thursday, March 7
1

1 - 33

Assignment 2
Friday, March 8 (single session)
2

34- 56


WEEK #2
Assignment 3
Monday, March 11
3

57 - 66

Assignment 4
Tuesday, March 12 (Ch. 1-4 quiz)
4

67-81

Assignment 5
Thursday, March 14
5

82 - 101

Assignment 6
Friday, March 15 (blogs due tonight by midnight)
6

102 - 114

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

http://movies.yahoo.com/blogs/movie-talk/red-coat-girl-schindler-list-horrified-183008656.html#

‘Red coat girl’ from ‘Schindler’s List’: I was ‘horrified’

Oliwia Dabrowska, foreground, right, in 1993's 'Schindler's List' and Dabrowska nowOliwia Dabrowska, foreground, in 1993's 'Schindler's List' (Photo: Panos Pictures/Alamy)In 1993 she was just 3 years old. That's when Oliwia Dabrowska portrayed Red Genia in Steven Spielberg's Oscar-winning "Schindler's List." Fast-forward 20 years later, and now Dabrowska has revealed she was quite distressed the first time she saw her historic role in the Holocaust drama -- one in which she is depicted as having died at the hands of Nazis.
Dabrowska famously played the girl in the red coat, the only splash of color in the otherwise black-and-white film. During a pivotal emotional turning point of the historical drama, a shocked and repelled Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson) spots the girl's red coat. She appears to have been killed. Schindler is then spurred into action, to save more than 1,000 Jews from sure death in Nazi concentration camps.
Now a university student, Dabrowska has admitted she was "horrified" the first time she saw the film at age 11. "[I was] sure that I didn’t want to watch [it] ever again in my life," she said.
Spielberg had advised her to "grow up into the film," she told The Times, warning her not to watch it until she turned 18. But a curious Dabrowska screened the film anyway. It's a decision she said she "really regretted."
"I was ashamed of being in the movie and angry with my mother and father when they told anyone about the part," Dabrowska said of her initial position on being in "Schindler's List." "People said: 'It must be so important to you, you must know so much about the Holocaust.' I was frustrated by it all," she added.
But now Dabrowska's initial horror has turned into pride. "I had been part of something I could be proud of," she said of her current thinking on her iconic role.
The film depicts Red Genia in a Krakow, Poland, ghetto -- the city where Dabrowska grew up and still resides. The 23-year-old says she still acts as a hobby and hopes to go into publishing, finishing up her degree in Library Science.
Incidentally, "Schindler's List" 20th anniversary limited edition DVD/Blu-ray/digital copy/UltraViolet is available on March 5.