Warm Up - April 20 th There are five stacks of readings on the front table. There are six readings...

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Warm Up - April 20 th There are five stacks of readings on the front table. There are six readings per stack. Please grab the reading that sounds most interesting to you, and wait for further instructions!

Transcript of Warm Up - April 20 th There are five stacks of readings on the front table. There are six readings...

Page 1: Warm Up - April 20 th  There are five stacks of readings on the front table. There are six readings per stack. Please grab the reading that sounds most.

Warm Up - April 20th There are five stacks of readings on the

front table. There are six readings per stack. Please grab the reading that sounds most interesting to you, and wait for further instructions!

Page 2: Warm Up - April 20 th  There are five stacks of readings on the front table. There are six readings per stack. Please grab the reading that sounds most.

Learning Targets:• I can identify the ten most important points

of an article that I read with a group.• I can share these ten important points with

a grouping of students who each worked with a different article.

• I can use the information I learn today as a historical/biographical basis for my reading of The Importance of Being Earnest.

Page 3: Warm Up - April 20 th  There are five stacks of readings on the front table. There are six readings per stack. Please grab the reading that sounds most.

Group Work, Step One Get into a group with the other students

who chose the same handout you did. Read over the handout, as it provides

important background information for our reading of The Importance of Being Earnest.

As you read, create a list of the ten most important points from your reading.

You have 15 minutes.

Page 4: Warm Up - April 20 th  There are five stacks of readings on the front table. There are six readings per stack. Please grab the reading that sounds most.

Group Work, Step Two Once all groups have finished, we will disband the

existing groups and regroup! These new groups will contain five people, each

having read different readings. Once you have your new group, each member will

share the list of ten important points that were compiled in the first step (do NOT just copy. Think about what your group mates are saying, and, if need be, ask questions for clarification).

Write down all the information that each student from your group shares.

You have 15 minutes.

Page 5: Warm Up - April 20 th  There are five stacks of readings on the front table. There are six readings per stack. Please grab the reading that sounds most.

The Slums of East London: Many of these people were descendants of those who

were once prosperous but saw their trades suffer Poor families lived in single rooms without sanitation

or ventilation. Crime-ridden The aristocratic class would actually become

“tourists” and visit these slums out of sheer curiosity (eventually, good samaritans would visit in order to try to help).

Toward the end of the Victorian era, London as a whole began to make concerted efforts to help out their poor population.