Showing posts with label ala carte. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ala carte. Show all posts

Friday, September 11, 2020

Writing 2 Class Notes -- Week 2 (Sept. 10)

 Greetings!


We had a great class yesterday.  These students are coming in with a readiness to learn and are encouraging a positive perspective for one another.

Our Quick Write today was from the National Days Calendar.  Yesterday was National Swap Ideas Day, in which people are encouraged to share their ideas and creativity with one another.  I asked them to write about any big, outside-the-box ideas they've done or had.  They could also write about whether or not they are creative.  I've just finished reading their Quick Writes, and this class has a wonderful variety of creative and practical students!

This week students handed in their first paper assignment of the year, their Personal Essay Rough Drafts.  I'm looking forward to reading them.  My procedure with student papers is to go through and correct them after they're handed in and then hand them back the next week.  Students are to take that following week to make revisions.  If they haven't already, they should answer the Discussion Question posted on Google Classroom, "From your perspective, what is the easiest part of writing an essay and what's the hardest?"

Last week for the Literature portion of the class, we started My Antonia by Willa Cather with an  introduction and a quiz on Google Classroom.  Before they started reading the book, they also wrote a little bit about their family history.  For next week, they are to complete 3 Reader Responses.  We talked in class about the study guide questions that are listed per chapter and also the ala carte options if students would like more creative opportunities to respond to their reading.  Students can do any combination of questions and ala carte options -- they just need to choose 3.  NOTE:  These reader responses can be done on paper and handed in during next week's class time OR they can be done on the Google Classroom assignment.  Students DO NOT need to do it both ways.

For the final third of the class time, we covered some Grammar.  Last year in Writing 1, the students did parts of speech projects during which they were the teachers.  I'm starting this year out with quick reviews of those parts of speech.  This week, the assigned worksheets are reviews of Nouns, Pronouns, Adjectives, and Adverbs.  All of the grammar worksheets for the semester will be on the Rocketbook template, so if students want, they can either hand in the assignment during class next week OR scan the worksheet using the Rocketbook app and upload it to the Google Classroom assignments.


Have a great weekend!
Blessings,
Mrs. Prichard

This Week's Homework
Note:  Many of the assignments have hyperlinks to the Google Classroom assignment.  If you're doing the paper version of the assignment, you can disregard the Google Classroom assignment.  ONLY if it has GC after the assignment is it required that you do it on Google Classroom.
-- Read p. 1 - 23 of My Antonia
-- 3 Reader Responses. 
-- Writing Discussion Question (if not already done) (GC)
-- Grammar Worksheets:  Nouns, Pronouns, Adjectives, and Adverbs

This Week's Links
Class Notes -- Week 2 (Sept. 10)
Mrs. Prichard's  Zoom link 

Saturday, August 24, 2019

My Antonia Study Questions



WEEK 1:  Before reading
Discussion
Literary Terms:  Setting, Theme, Characterization. Simile, Metaphor, Personification
Bildungsroman (“formation novel”) or coming-of-age story
Themes:  Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas explored in a literary work.

Humakind’s relationship to the past
Humankind’s relationship to its environment
The immigrant experience in the United States
The traditional nature of frontier values                
The American dream
Happiness and success


About the Study Guide Questions and Optional Responses: 
Each week, students are assigned 3 study guide questions to answer relating to the assigned reading. These answers should be thoughtful and refer back to specific points in the book.  However, written answers to prescribed questions are not the only way to respond to a book.  Therefore, at the end of the Week 9 questions, students will find a list of “ala carte” options that can substitute for one of the questions.



WEEK 2 -- Intro & Book I; Sections I – VI (p. 1 – 23)
Study Guide Questions
1.      Describe Jim’s first impressions of the Nebraska prairie.  How does the prairie make him feel?
2.      Contrast the ways of life of the Burden family and the Shimerda family.
3.      What is Mrs. Shimerda’s attitude towards the Burden family?
4.      What clues in the writing does Cather give that this is a nostalgic novel?
5.      List some specific descriptions of nature that Jim includes.
6.      Ala carte selection.


WEEK 3 -- Book I, Sections VII – XIII (p. 24 – 47)
Study Guide Questions
1.      Describe Antonia’s father’s character and his relationships in his family.
2.      What is significant about the encounter with the snake?
3.      What cultural differences make it difficult for the various families to understand each other.
4.      What effects does the landscape have on the characters?  Give specific examples from the text.
5.      How are both Jim and Antonia “immigrants?”  How are their situations similar, and how are they different?
6.      List differences between the different cultures of the families in this story.
7.      Ala carte selection.


WEEK 4 -- Book I, Sections XIV – XIX (p. 47 – 69)
Study Guide Questions
1.      How would you describe the friendship of Jim and Antonia?
2.      Which events did you find the most memorable?  Why?
3.      Describe Jim’s character.  Describe Antonia’s character.
4.      “Personification” refers to giving human characteristics to non-human entities.  Give examples of the personification of the landscape and weather found in Book I.
5.      How are differences in religion portrayed?  What are the characters’ attitudes and perspectives?
6.      What differences in gender roles are expressed by the characters and by the author?
7.      Ala carte selection.

WEEK 5 -- Book II, Sections I – VII (p. 70 – 94)
Study Guide Questions
1.      In this book, the emphasis changes from the influence and power of the land to an increased emphasis on individuals.  Name some of the newly introduced people and discuss how the writer describes them.
2.      In the town, Jim becomes “quite another boy.”  Describe how his behavior changes.
3.      Who are the “hired girls”? How are they different from other people in Black Hawk?
4.      Ala carte selection.



WEEK 6 -- Book II, Sections VIII – XV (p. 94 – 118)
Study Guide Questions
1.      What happens to Jim when he spends the night at Wick Cutter’s home?
2.      Jim says of the immigrant girls who work in Black Hawk, “If there were no girls like them in the world, then there would be no poetry.” Explain his statement.
3.      Frances Harling says of Jim, “the problems with you, Jim, is that you’re romantic.”  Was this meant as a compliment or as an insult.  Is it an accurate comment?
4.      How does the dancing pavilion represent differences in social and gender roles?
5.      How do the characters deal with growing up and leaving childhood behind?
6.      Jim and Antonia have experienced a number of changes so far in the book.  List at least 6 changes for each.
7.      Ala carte selection.



WEEK 7 -- Book III, Sections I – IV (p. 119 – 140)
Study Guide Questions
1.      Describe the character of Lena Lingard. In what ways is she different from Ántonia in terms of her values and her relationship with Jim?
2.      In your opinion, why does Cather temporarily shift the focus from Ántonia and devote a section of the novel to Lena Lingard?
3.      Does Jim feel any nostalgia for his home, family, or old times once he’s at the university?  Explain.
4.      Does the play, Camille, symbolize anything?   Why did Cather write this into the novel?  Explain.
5.      Ala carte selection.



WEEK 8 -- Book IV, Sections I – IV (p. 141 – 153)
Study Guide Questions
1.      When Jim first returns to Nebraska after being at Harvard, what does he learn about Ántonia? Why does Jim feel bitterness when Mrs. Harling says “poor Ántonia”?
2.      What is Ántonia’s response to the idea of raising her child by herself? What does her response reveal about her character?
3.      Do Lena Lingard and Tiny Soderball become successful?  What does Jim think about them?
4.      “To the romantic individual, a specific place becomes invested with the quality of an emotion felt at a specific time.”  How is this statement expressed in this novel?  To whom does it apply?  Give specific examples.
5.      What part does reminiscing play with Jim and Antonia?  Why is it important?
6.      Ala carte selection.






WEEK 9 -- Book V; Sections I – III (p. 154 – 175)
Study Guide Questions
1.      “battered but not diminished.” What does he mean? How does her appearance reflect her character and her life?
2.      Describe Ántonia’s life with her family at the end of the novel. How does her family life affect Jim?
3.      In your opinion, why did Jim and Ántonia never marry? Do you believe this would have been a logical path for their relationship? Why or why not?
4.      When you reached the end of the novel, how did you feel about Ántonia and Jim?
5.      Ala carte selection.




Ala Carte Responses

Any of the activities below can be substituted for one of the weekly study guide questions.  Some options could be repeated as long as it is a new response that relates to the assigned reading.

1.      Create a new book cover.
2.      Select 3 – 5 quotes that sum up the selection or especially highlight a specific quality of a character, the setting, or the plot.
3.      Write a paragraph that describes your relationship with a grandparent.
4.      Write a paragraph about someone from your past who is especially memorable.
5.      Write a text conversation that coincides with an actual conversation or “could have happened.” 
6.      Write a series of Facebook posts for the plot of the section.
7.      Write a paragraph that starts “I would change . . .” that relates to the assigned reading. 
8.      Write a poem that relates to the assigned reading.
9.      Illustrate a scene.
10.  Create a found poem.  To create a concrete found poem, students must only use words, phrases or even whole sentences “found” in their text. Then, they must shape these words into a visual representation on paper. They are not drawing; they must arrange the words, phrases, or sentences into an image on the page. 
http://www.middleweb.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/MP-prometheus.png
11.  Make a character “To Do” list.
12.  Write a set of 5 – 6 postcards that one of the characters might send to someone.
13.  Create a soundtrack or playlist that relates to the assigned reading.
14.  Write diary entries that relate to the assigned reading.
15.  Put together a cast for a film version of the book
16.  Write a radio play excerpt that relates to the assigned reading.
17.  Write a letter to the author that relates to the assigned reading.
18.  Write a letter to one of the characters that relates to the assigned reading.
19.  Design/draw the clothing of one of the characters that relates to the assigned reading.
20.  Make a word game, such as a crossword or word search, that relates to the assigned reading.
21.  Write up a quiz that relates to the assigned reading.
22.  Draw a comic strip that relates to the assigned reading.
23.  Write a paragraph that starts “I wonder why . . .” that relates to the assigned reading.
24.  Rewrite a paragraph in a different style.  For example, write it in a “flowery” over-dramatic style or as a play or as slang, etc.
25.  Design a t-shirt that relates to the assigned reading.
26.  Make a collage that relates to the assigned reading.
27.  Design/draw a timeline that relates to the assigned reading
28.  Draw a map that relates to the assigned reading.
29.  Compare two characters that relates to the assigned reading.
30.  Find or create a recipe for one of the foods mentioned.














Sunday, August 27, 2017

My Antonia Study Guide Questions & Ala Carte Options

My Antonia (Willa Cather)
Study Questions


WEEK 1:  Before reading
Discussion
Literary Terms:  Setting, Theme, Characterization. Simile, Metaphor, Personification
Bildungsroman (“formation novel”) or coming-of-age story
Themes:  Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas explored in a literary work.


Humakind’s relationship to the past
Humankind’s relationship to its environment
The immigrant experience in the United States
The traditional nature of frontier values                
The American dream
Happiness and success



About the Study Guide Questions and Optional Responses: 
Each week, students are assigned 3 study guide questions to answer relating to the assigned reading. These answers should be thoughtful and refer back to specific points in the book.  However, written answers to prescribed questions are not the only way to respond to a book.  Therefore, at the end of the Week 9 questions, students will find a list of “ala carte” options that can substitute for one of the questions.



WEEK 2 -- Intro & Book I; Sections I – VI (p. 1 – 23)
Study Guide Questions
1.      Describe Jim’s first impressions of the Nebraska prairie.  How does the prairie make him feel?
2.      Contrast the ways of life of the Burden family and the Shimerda family.
3.      What is Mrs. Shimerda’s attitude towards the Burden family?
4.      What clues in the writing does Cather give that this is a nostalgic novel?
5.      List some specific descriptions of nature that Jim includes.
6.      Ala carte selection.


WEEK 3 -- Book I, Sections VII – XIII (p. 24 – 47)
Study Guide Questions
1.      Describe Antonia’s father’s character and his relationships in his family.
2.      What is significant about the encounter with the snake?
3.      What cultural differences make it difficult for the various families to understand each other.
4.      What effects does the landscape have on the characters?  Give specific examples from the text.
5.      How are both Jim and Antonia “immigrants?”  How are their situations similar, and how are they different?
6.      List differences between the different cultures of the families in this story.
7.      Ala carte selection.


WEEK 4 -- Book I, Sections XIV – XIX (p. 47 – 69)
Study Guide Questions
1.      How would you describe the friendship of Jim and Antonia?
2.      Which events did you find the most memorable?  Why?
3.      Describe Jim’s character.  Describe Antonia’s character.
4.      “Personification” refers to giving human characteristics to non-human entities.  Give examples of the personification of the landscape and weather found in Book I.
5.      How are differences in religion portrayed?  What are the characters’ attitudes and perspectives?
6.      What differences in gender roles are expressed by the characters and by the author?
7.      Ala carte selection.

WEEK 5 -- Book II, Sections I – VII (p. 70 – 94)
Study Guide Questions
1.      In this book, the emphasis changes from the influence and power of the land to an increased emphasis on individuals.  Name some of the newly introduced people and discuss how the writer describes them.
2.      In the town, Jim becomes “quite another boy.”  Describe how his behavior changes.
3.      Who are the “hired girls”? How are they different from other people in Black Hawk?
4.      Ala carte selection.



WEEK 6 -- Book II, Sections VIII – XV (p. 94 – 118)
Study Guide Questions
1.      What happens to Jim when he spends the night at Wick Cutter’s home?
2.      Jim says of the immigrant girls who work in Black Hawk, “If there were no girls like them in the world, then there would be no poetry.” Explain his statement.
3.      Frances Harling says of Jim, “the problems with you, Jim, is that you’re romantic.”  Was this meant as a compliment or as an insult.  Is it an accurate comment?
4.      How does the dancing pavilion represent differences in social and gender roles?
5.      How do the characters deal with growing up and leaving childhood behind?
6.      Jim and Antonia have experienced a number of changes so far in the book.  List at least 6 changes for each.
7.      Ala carte selection.



WEEK 7 -- Book III, Sections I – IV (p. 119 – 140)
Study Guide Questions
1.      Describe the character of Lena Lingard. In what ways is she different from Ántonia in terms of her values and her relationship with Jim?
2.      In your opinion, why does Cather temporarily shift the focus from Ántonia and devote a section of the novel to Lena Lingard?
3.      Does Jim feel any nostalgia for his home, family, or old times once he’s at the university?  Explain.
4.      Does the play, Camille, symbolize anything?   Why did Cather write this into the novel?  Explain.
5.      Ala carte selection.



WEEK 8 -- Book IV, Sections I – IV (p. 141 – 153)
Study Guide Questions
1.      When Jim first returns to Nebraska after being at Harvard, what does he learn about Ántonia? Why does Jim feel bitterness when Mrs. Harling says “poor Ántonia”?
2.      What is Ántonia’s response to the idea of raising her child by herself? What does her response reveal about her character?
3.      Do Lena Lingard and Tiny Soderball become successful?  What does Jim think about them?
4.      “To the romantic individual, a specific place becomes invested with the quality of an emotion felt at a specific time.”  How is this statement expressed in this novel?  To whom does it apply?  Give specific examples.
5.      What part does reminiscing play with Jim and Antonia?  Why is it important?
6.      Ala carte selection.






WEEK 9 -- Book V; Sections I – III (p. 154 – 175)
Study Guide Questions
1.      “battered but not diminished.” What does he mean? How does her appearance reflect her character and her life?
2.      Describe Ántonia’s life with her family at the end of the novel. How does her family life affect Jim?
3.      In your opinion, why did Jim and Ántonia never marry? Do you believe this would have been a logical path for their relationship? Why or why not?
4.      When you reached the end of the novel, how did you feel about Ántonia and Jim?
5.      Ala carte selection.




Ala Carte Responses

Any of the activities below can be substituted for one of the weekly study guide questions.  Some options could be repeated as long as it is a new response that relates to the assigned reading.

1.      Create a new book cover.
2.      Select 3 – 5 quotes that sum up the selection or especially highlight a specific quality of a character, the setting, or the plot.
3.      Write a paragraph that describes your relationship with a grandparent.
4.      Write a paragraph about someone from your past who is especially memorable.
5.      Write a text conversation that coincides with an actual conversation or “could have happened.” 
6.      Write a series of Facebook posts for the plot of the section.
7.      Write a paragraph that starts “I would change . . .” that relates to the assigned reading. 
8.      Write a poem that relates to the assigned reading.
9.      Illustrate a scene.
10.  Create a found poem.  To create a concrete found poem, students must only use words, phrases or even whole sentences “found” in their text. Then, they must shape these words into a visual representation on paper. They are not drawing; they must arrange the words, phrases, or sentences into an image on the page. 
11.  Make a character “To Do” list.
12.  Write a set of 5 – 6 postcards that one of the characters might send to someone.
13.  Create a soundtrack or playlist that relates to the assigned reading.
14.  Write diary entries that relate to the assigned reading.
15.  Put together a cast for a film version of the book
16.  Write a radio play excerpt that relates to the assigned reading.
17.  Write a letter to the author that relates to the assigned reading.
18.  Write a letter to one of the characters that relates to the assigned reading.
19.  Design/draw the clothing of one of the characters that relates to the assigned reading.
20.  Make a word game, such as a crossword or word search, that relates to the assigned reading.
21.  Write up a quiz that relates to the assigned reading.
22.  Draw a comic strip that relates to the assigned reading.
23.  Write a paragraph that starts “I wonder why . . .” that relates to the assigned reading.
24.  Rewrite a paragraph in a different style.  For example, write it in a “flowery” over-dramatic style or as a play or as slang, etc.
25.  Design a t-shirt that relates to the assigned reading.
26.  Make a collage that relates to the assigned reading.
27.  Design/draw a timeline that relates to the assigned reading
28.  Draw a map that relates to the assigned reading.
29.  Compare two characters that relates to the assigned reading.
30.  Find or create a recipe for one of the foods mentioned.