Greetings!
Thursday, April 29, 2021
Writing 2 Class Notes -- Week 13 (April 29)
We had a wonderful day in class. We started the class period with a Quick Write, and today's prompt was connected with the fact that it is National Poem in Your Pocket Day. I gave the students a sheet of paper with an extra large pocket outline. They were to write a poem within the lines of that pocket. They could write originals or copy one from our poetry book.
Here are our unusual Words of the Day:
Hexadosioihexekontahexaphobie -- the fear of the number 666
ructation -- the act of belching
heaven -- a place regarded as the home of God, the skies
resplendent -- attractive and impressive through being richly colorful or sumptuous.
The Final Drafts of the Evaluation Essays were due today, and I introduced the next writing assignment, which is an Essay Re-Write. For this essay, students can choose any essay they have written this year for Writing 2, or they can choose an essay that they've written for another class. They should take a one of their final drafts and look for ways to improve it. I often suggest that students choose the essay that they got the worst grade on or that they want to spend some more time on. Another option can be to trade essays with a friend and re-write the friend's essay. This writing assignment is due next week, and students should hand in the original along with the re-write. (Note: This isn't our regular pre-write to rough draft to final draft process.)
For our Literature portion of the class, we spend most of our time talking about one of my favorite poems by William Carlos Williams, "A Red Wheelbarrow." After our discussion, I explained our Poetry Jam, which we will have for the next 2 weeks. The class has been divided into teams, and those teams will compete in a group by reciting poetry. (It looks like we might have some guest "judges" for the day.) Each student should bring in 2 poems next week for the first round of the Poetry Jam.
Here are the teams:
Team 1: Maria, Maddy, Anna, Sam, Josie
Team 2: Ethan, Raya, Zach, Nalani, Grace
Team 3: Carson, Peter, Bennett, Ellie, Ava
Team 4: Ingrid, Leighton, Jessie M, Kara, James
Team 5: Elliot, Benjamin, Levi, Michael S.
Team 6: Philip, Tyler, Michael M, Jesse T
Finally, to conclude our Grammar for the year, I have a Final Comma Test that they will take next week. For this week, they have a review sheet that they should complete and then correct. Correcting their own work will further help them review and will be much more beneficial than waiting a week to see if they got the answers right.
We have a couple fun weeks planned to finish out our year, so let's make sure you get caught up on any late work.
Assignments for Next Week:
-- Bring 2 poems for your contribution to the Poetry Jam (Here is the scoring information)
-- Complete the Mastering the Comma Review sheet and correct it. (Bring the corrected version to class)
Links for This Week
Class Notes
Have a great weekend!
Blessings,
Mrs. Prichard
Saturday, April 24, 2021
Writing 2 Class Notes -- Week 12 (April 22)
Greetings!
Just a brief note this week.
As always, we had a good class today. In addition to our Quick Writes and Words of the Day, we had a discussion about common errors & corrections for the rough drafts of the Evaluation Essays. Then, we broke into small groups to discuss the assigned poems. Finally, for our grammar section I taught the students how to use the semicolon using Reese's peanut butter cups as an object lesson.
A gentle reminder: Masks are still required at CHAT (including in the classroom) unless a student's parents have contacted Mrs. Nelson or Mrs. Johnson. I often ask students to temporarily pull down their masks when I am having a hard time hearing their comments, but otherwise, the masks should be on.
Assignments for Next Week:
Poetry: Read Frost (49-50), Sandburg (53-54), Williams (60- 61), Hughes (75-78)
Note: The individual poems have been posted on Google Classroom: Week 13 Poetry
This Week's Class Notes: Writing 2 Class Notes -- Week 12 (April 22)
Be blessed this weekend!
Mrs. Prichard
Thursday, April 15, 2021
Writing 2 Class Notes -- Week 11 (April 11)
Greetings!
We had a lovely class this week. One aspect that I especially enjoy with this Writing 1 class is that they all get along well and participate in a harmonious way. We have good, productive conversations.
For our Quick Writes, here were their options:
1). If your life had a theme song, what song would it be and why? 2) If your life was a movie, what would the title be and what genre would it be? Why? 3) Skittles of M & Ms? Why? and 4) If you could design a “National Day” what would it be and why?
We had some unusual Words of the Day:
xanthophobia -- fr. Greek, xanthos, "yellow;" phobia, "fear" -- the fear of yellow
pentheraphobia -- fr. Greek, penthera, "mother in law"; phobia, "fear" -- a fear of your mother-in-law
tumultuous -- fr. Latin, tumultus, "commotion, bustle" -- a loud uproar
sarcasm -- fr. Latin, sarcasmus, "sneer, taunt"
dunk -- fr. Old German thunkon, "to dip" -- to dip something into a liquid
redhibition -- fr. Latin, rehibitio, "a taking back" -- to return a faulty or damaged product
We had a very short quiz after our Words of the Day. I asked the students to memorize the state of being words: am, is, are, was, were, be, being, and been. I had them list the words, and they did a great job.
They have handed in the rough drafts of their Evaluation Essays. I'm looking forward to reading them; these were probably the most complex essays that they will write this year. I also asked them today to think about how they've improved as writers. They shared some insightful comments.
We are now reading poetry for our Literature portion of the class. Some students like poetry, but many aren't that crazy about it. Today, we watched a couple of videos of poetry recitations. (See links at the bottom.) The class has their new poetry books, and they should read the poems of the poets listed below. We had some delightful poetry reading by the class of a number of Emily Dickinson poems.
For their homework, they need to respond to 2 poems, and the have 5 options:
1. Fill out a Poetry Worksheet for one or both2. Write a paragraph about the poem(s) that analyzes the poem; discuss what you think it means and why you like or don't like it.3. Instead of writing a paragraph, record a video commentary about the poem. Youtube LiveStream or some other app on a device is OK as long as it can be seen by me.4. Do a piece of art that connects with the content and meaning of the poem.5. Make a video of your recitation of the poem.
For our Grammar section of the class, we worked on 2 worksheets for the students to practice some more punctuation: quotation marks and italics.
Have a beautiful weekend!
Blessings,
Mrs. Prichard
Assignments for Next Week:
Poetry: Read Harper (27-29), Wilcox (33), Thayer (34-35), Johnson (41), Dunbar (p. 41 – 43)
Poetry Packet (2 Poems)
- Grammar: Wk12 - Italics & Quotation Marks
- Grammar: Wk12 - Using Italics
Links for this Week
Class Notes
2019 Poetry Out Loud Winner -- Bella Callery (from my other school, Arcadia Charter School)
Saturday, April 3, 2021
Writing 2 Class Notes -- Week 10 (April 1)
Greetings!
For our Quick Writes, we had 3 options: 1) Write about a memorable joke or prank; 2) Write about your family's or church family's Easter traditions; 3) Ask Mrs. Prichard 3 questions. Over the years, the students have enjoyed when this third option comes up; they ask thoughtful, curious, and often quirky questions.
We had a brief check in on their Evaluation Essay; the rough drafts are due on April 15. Some students have given this some thought, and others have waited until this next week to work on it. Establishing criteria and evaluating something with that criteria is an important academic skill.
We had a quiz about our the four Short Stories that we read for this week, and even though I mentioned last week that I might do this, some students were not prepared. I expected that to happen. When spring arrives and the end of the year is in sight, most students turn their thoughts to activities other than school. (The 2020-21 school year has been exceptionally long, so I really don't blame them.) This was a low stakes reminder for them to do their homework.
We are finished with our Short Stories and are now onto Poetry. Some students picked up books last week, and I didn't have the extras with me. So, I have links for the poems they are to read. These poems come from a book titled 101 Great American Poems, and they will be reading a chronological collection of poems, starting with poetry from the early 1800s to that of the mid-1900s.
After the students read all of the poems, they are to choose 2 poems to respond to. They need to respond to 2 poems, and here are their options:
1. Fill out a Poetry Worksheet for one or both2. Write a paragraph about the poem(s) that analyzes the poem; discuss what you think it means and why you like or don't like it.3. Instead of writing a paragraph, record a video commentary about the poem. Youtube LiveStream or some other app on a device is OK as long as it can be seen by me.4. Do a piece of art that connects with the content and meaning of the poem.5. Make a video of your recitation of the poem.
Finally, for our Grammar portion of the class, we continued our discussion of punctuation. This week we went over how parentheses and dashes are used and how they differ from commas.
Have a blessed Easter weekend!
Blessing,
Mrs. Prichard
Assignments for Week 11 (April 15)
-- Evaluation Essay Pre-Write
-- Evaluation Essay Rough Draft
-- Poetry: Read Emerson (4-5); Longfellow (6-10); Holmes (21), Whitman (22-26),Dickinson (29 - 32)
Week 11 Poetry Pt. 1 -- Emerson, Holmes, Longfellow
Week 11 Poetry Pt. 2 -- Whitman, Dickinson
-- Poetry Responses (2 Poems)
-- Grammar: Wk10 - Dashes & Parentheses
-- Grammar: Wk10 - Parentheses & Dashes
-- Grammar: Wk10 - Ellipsis
Links for this Week:
Class Notes
Poetry for Week 11 (April 15) (Note: I've added some poetry that wasn't on the syllabus)
Holmes (p. 21 - 22) Old Ironsides
Emerson (p. 4, 5) Concord Hymn, and The Snowstorm
Longfellow (p. 6 – 10) The Arrow and the Song, and The Builders, and Paul Revere's Ride
Whitman (p. 22 – 26) I Hear America Singing and O Captain, My Captain
Dickinson (p. 29 – 32) Because I could not stop for death, and Hope is a thing with feathers, and If I can stop one heart from breaking, and I'm nobody, who are you? and There is no frigate like a book, and This is my letter to the world
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