Monday, June 11, 2012

Good Morning!

As you can see, I am on a field trip today. Please catch up by doing the following:

If you have not completed your portfolio, please do so today!
If you handed it in but it could use improvements, please do so today!
If you owe any missing work, please complete it today!
All caught up? Write a creative piece for extra credit!
Please do something productive in the lab today!

Here is an assignment you can work on if you don't have any extra credit ideas:

Creative Writing Project: The House on Mango Street

As Sandra Cisneros tells us in The House on Mango Street, “You can’t erase what you know. You can’t forget who you are.”  Through her writing, we learn about Cisneros intimately because of her detailed, personal writing. Choose one (or more of the topics below to write about!)  

The topics that you choose to write about will parallel those in The House on Mango Street.  You will choose from the following topics:

 Your name
 Your neighborhood
 Extended Metaphor: You as a plant
 What’s expected of males and females in our society
 Game/ Toy from childhood
 Time you got in trouble
 Time you saw someone else get in trouble
 Advice from an adult
 Your dreams versus your reality
 A time you made fun of someone and now regret
 Positive school story
 Negative school story
 Born _____ (You fill in the blank!)
 Your first job
 A holiday or birthday memory
 A tattoo you’d get and why

Have fun!

Monday, May 21, 2012

New You Can Use!

1. Please finish reading The Bluest Eye by Thursday, May 24th
2. Quiz/Mini Test on the remainder of the novel (pg.132-end) will be in class on Thursday!
3. Finish a rough draft of your short story by Wednesday, May 23rd (beginning of class)
4. You should use 4th period on Wednesday to peer edit.
5. Stories will be due at the end of class on Thursday (or before!) *You will need to turn in your peer edited rough draft with your final copy.
6. You also need your rough drafts of your qualities complete by Wednesday, May 23rd... Keep the work for both classes organized!
7. 'Quality' books will be due Wednesday, May 30th. ( Get your pages for the class book to me as soon as they are done!)

Questions? Please ask!

Monday, May 14, 2012

Good Morning!

Please spend 4th period working on your short story and/or newsletter.

Don't forget your deadlines: 5/16 for the newsletter and 5/24 for the story!

Do not forget to turn in all study guide questions as well.

Have a great/productive day!

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Themes

Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas explored in a literary work.
Your Task:

1. Choose a theme addressed in The Bluest Eye.
2. Find a quote in the novel that demonstrates the theme you chose.
3. Write your own unique 4-6 page story addressing your theme choice.

Potential Themes:

Race
Appearances
Standard of Beauty
Seeing vs. Being Seen
Love
Innocence
Society and Class
Jealousy
Women and Femininity
Nature
Economic Discrimination
Psychological Stereotyping

(and the list goes on...)

Monday, May 7, 2012

Good Morning!

Please type your responses to the following questions by the end of class. Do not forget to hand them in before you leave today! If you do not finish, please hand in the questions you answered and complete the rest for homework!

The Bluest Eye

pg.5-6 The Second Opening

1.  Who is the narrator of the italicized section that begins, “Quiet as it’s kept”?  Who is keeping what quiet? You should have some answers to these questions before you reach the end of this section.

2. What happened to Pecola?  How might her baby’s death connect to the withered seeds the narrator describes?

3. Why does Morrison “give away” Pecola’s fate so early on in this novel?  That is, what is her narrative’s message, and how is it enhanced by giving her unsuspecting readers the harsh facts right up front?  Be prepared to free write on this topic in class.

4. What might the “failed seeds” of this second opening symbolize—come up with 2-3 ideas.

Autumn
5. Note how we learn this narrator’s name on p.11. What is Morrison trying to show us?


6. After this rather harsh flashback to her childhood, Claudia ends with these words on p.12:

And in the night, when my coughing was dry and tough, feet padded into the room, hands repinned the flannel, readjusted the quilt, and rested a moment on my forehead. So when I think of autumn, I think of somebody with hands who does not want me to die.

Why does Morrison include these two sentences here?  How does it change the tone of all that Claudia has told us prior to this moment?

7. Given all the clues Morrison has handed us, when do you think this novel is set?



8. What connections do you see between Claudia’s attitude towards blue-eyed, blond-haired dolls and Pecola’s fascination with Shirley Temple’s image on the tea cup (p.23)?

9. Re-read the ending of this section on p.32 (“How do you get someone to love you?”) Can you connect it to the passage above in question 2?

pg.33-80

10. First section: Why does Morrison use the word “no” over 12 times in her description of the Breedlove’s home pp.36-37?

11. Given the way they live, how is the family’s name ironic?

12. Consider the dynamics of the parents’ relationship: why does Mrs. Breedlove need Cholly and why does Cholly need his wife? Note the origin of his hatred (see text detailing an early sexual experience).  Do we see this kind of displaced hatred and anger in our culture today?  Explain.

13. Why does Pecola wonder at the chapter’s final conclusion—“Were they real?”

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Penfield Poetry Contest

Homework! Due this Thursday!
Choose your best poem of the year.

Submissions Accepted
March 1 – April 30, 2012
For students in grades 6-12 who live in or attend school in Monroe County

THE RULES
Each contestant may submit one poem.
The poem must be the contestant’s original work.
To submit your poem via email:

The poem must be submitted as a Word document or a PDF. The contestant’s name should not appear on the same page as the poem. A separate page with the contestant’s name, grade, school, home address, and phone number must be included. Please send the poem as an attachment to lgrills@libraryweb.org. Please enter "Poetry Contest" in the subject line of the email. You will receive a confirmation reply email within a few days.

Poems must be received by Monday, April 30, 2012. Winners will be announced in mid- May.


THE PRIZES: Furnished by the Friends of the Penfield Public Library, the prizes are First Place -- $50, Second Place -- $35, and Third Place -- $25, in each of three Divisions: High School (Grades 9-12); 7th and 8th Grade; and 6th Grade.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Crossing the Line Activity

Bullying is any mean word, look, sign, or act that hurts a person's body, feeling or things. 


"Leadership is practiced not so much in words as n attitude and in actions." ~Harold Green

Please type a 1-2 page  (double spaced) response to the activity you participated in today. You can write about anything that captured your interest. Here are some ideas if you are stuck:


  • How did you feel during the activity?
  • What do you think about the issue of bullying?
  • Do you think bullying a is a serious issue at our school?
  • Has bullying ever impacted your life or the life of someone you care about?
  • Do you believe it is your responsibility to step in when you see someone who is being bullied?
  • What did you think of the presentation overall?
  • Was the college information helpful?
  • Did any of your views change after the presentation?
Remember, these questions are just suggestions. You may write about whatever you wish.