NO WARM-UP TODAY! Instead, wait for instructions….
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Transcript of NO WARM-UP TODAY! Instead, wait for instructions….
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ENGLISH IIJANUARY 23, 2012
NO WARM-UP TODAY! Instead, wait for instructions…
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ENGLISH IIJANUARY 25, 2012
Warm-up: Answer the following TRUE or FALSE questions. If the answer is false, write why it’s false.
1. Finding out the speaker of a poem means you simply have to find out if the speaker is male or female.
2. The mood of the poem is how the speaker feels in the story.
3. The following is an example of a theme: listening to authority vs. standing up for yourself.
4. In yesterday’s haiku, the word “sufficient” would be a good piece of diction to study because it is one word that adds a great deal of meaning to the poem.
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REMINDERS
I will stamp completed annotations
and analysis for “Piano” and “Those Winter Sundays”.
Does everybody have To Kill a Mockingbird?
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STANDARDS
Literary Criticism 3.11 Evaluate the aesthetic qualities of style, including the impact of diction and figurative language on tone, mood, and theme, using the terminology of literary criticism. (Aesthetic approach)
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POETIC TERMS RELAY RACE!!!
Stretch your legs out… it’s time for a poetic terms relay race!
You will be put into groups of four. Select one person in your group who does not
want to “race” to come up to the front of the room to be the “holder of definitions”.
The “holder of definitions” will be given a packet of definitions of poetic terms.
On the board, you will find the names of the poetic terms that we’ve gone over so far. The “holder of definitions” holds the definition toeach one of these terms.
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POETIC TERMS RELAY RACE!!!
When I say “go”, select the first group member to run to the “holder of definitions” to get your group’s first definition.
Group member #1 will run back to the group, talk to the team about which term the definition matches with. Group member #1 will have to run to the board to tape the definition FACE DOWN next to its definition.
Select the next group member to run to the “holder of definitions” to pick up the team’s next definition and find where it goes.
The first team done correctly wins!
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POETIC TERMS RELAY RACE!!!
RULES1. Every member of the team must remain behind
the LCD projector table unless they are running to the “holder of definitions” or to the board.
2. Each group member must participate in the race; if anybody in the group races twice, the group will be disqualified.
3. You have to discuss where the definition goes with your group; if each person tries to figure it out on his/her own, the team will be disqualified.
4. There are some “trickster” definitions that are not definitions for any term; if you get a trickster definition, you must tape it up on the “trickster” area of your group’s board.
5. The “holder of definitions” isn’t allowed to look at which definitions he/she is giving the group.
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“THE WIDOW’S LAMENT IN SPRINGTIME”… REVISITED
Now that we’ve reviewed, let’s read our next poem: “The Widow’s Lament in Springtime”.
After we read it twice, take five minutes to annotate for: metaphors** symbols** irony** diction speaker tone mood theme **focus on finding these
terms
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“The Widow’s Lament in Springtime”Sorrow is my own yardwhere the new grass flames as it has flamed often before but notwith the cold firethat closes round me this
year.Thirtyfive yearsI lived with my husband.The plumtree is white
todaywith masses of flowers.Masses of flowersload the cherry branchesand color some bushesyellow and some redbut the grief in my heartis stronger than they
for though they were my joy
formerly, today I notice them
and turned away forgetting.
Today my son told methat in the meadows,at the edge of the heavy
woodsin the distance, he sawtrees of white flowers.I feel that I would liketo go thereand fall into those flowersand sink into the marsh
near them.-William Carlos Williams
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HOMEWORK
Finish the worksheet for “The Widow’s Lament in Springtime”.
Read, annotate and complete the worksheet for “48 Hours After You Left”