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English 9, Week 1
  January 24-27

           Mrs. Navejar
         Ms. Dammanna
               Mr. Huth
Common Core State Standards-ELA
 Key Ideas and Details
 •    RL.9-10.1. Cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says
      explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text.
 Craft and Structure
 •    RL.9-10.4. Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in the text, including
      figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the cumulative impact of specific word choices on
      meaning and tone (e.g., how the language evokes a sense of time and place; how it sets a formal or
      informal tone).
 Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity
 •    RL.9-10.10. By the end of grade 9, read and comprehend literature, including stories, dramas, and
      poems, in the grades 9–10 text complexity band proficiently, with scaffolding as needed at the high
      end of the range.
 Language
 L.9-10.5. Demonstrate understanding of figurative language, word relationships, and nuances in word
      meanings.
        – Interpret figures of speech (e.g., euphemism, oxymoron) in context and analyze their role in the
            text.
        – Analyze nuances in the meaning of words with similar denotations.
 Speaking and Listening
  Come to discussions prepared, having read and researched material under study; explicitly draw on that
     preparation by referring to evidence from texts and other research on the topic or issue to stimulate a
     thoughtful, well-reasoned exchange of ideas.
Tuesday, January 24th
• Welcome!
• Take attendance/check your schedule
   – Are you in the right class?
   – Room 375- Mrs. Navejar
• Look at the tent cards on the desk for your assigned
  seat
• Please take out
   – Notebook
   – Pencil or pen
• Wait for class to start
   – Bell rings
Tuesday, January 24th
                  Introductions
• Instructors in the room
   – Mrs. Navejar
   – Ms. Dammanna
   – Mr. Huth
• English 9/Second Semester
• Today we will:
   –   Course Overview
   –   Grading Policy
   –   Grade Scale
   –   Required Class materials
   –   Classroom expectations
Welcome to English 9!
               A Few Things to Remember
•   Take notes
•   Attendance is critical, be on time
•   Be prepared, always bring required materials
•   No cell phones or electronic devices
•   Enter the classroom and begin work quietly
•   If you respect your fellow students, teachers, and
    environment, you will be respected too
•   All Hamilton HS conduct rules apply in this class
•   Take notes
Instructors
• Instructors in the room
   – Mrs. Navejar
   – Ms. Dammanna
   – Mr. Huth
• Mrs. Navejar
   – B.A. -Mount Mary College
      • English/History Middle-Secondary Education
   – M.S.- UW-Madison
      • Educational Psychology
   – Ph.D doctoral student- UW-Milwaukee
      • Educational Psychology- learning and development
   – MPS Teacher for 12 years
      • 10 years at Pulaski
      • I’m in my 3rd year at Hamilton High School
• Ms. Dammanna
• Mr. Huth
Who Am I?
•   Mr. Huth (rhymes with “youth”)
•   B.A., English, UWM
•   B.A., Art History, UWM
•   Worked as a librarian at Marquette U.
•   Worked in the IT industry
•   Finishing my teaching license at UWM
•   Loves swimming, hiking, travelling, reading, going to galleries
    and museums, movies, trying new food
•   Favorite city: London
•   Favorite TV shows: The Sopranos, Monty Python, Doctor
    Who
•   Favorite movie: Pulp Fiction
•   Favorite book: Bleak House, by Charles Dickens
•   Favorite music: The Clash, Patti Smith, Mozart, Woody
    Guthrie, Nick Cave, Tom Waits
•   Favorite team: Green Bay Packers
Course Description
                 *Look at syllabus*
• The central purpose of this course is to expand
  students’ foundational skills in all communication
  arts.
• These include reading, analyzing literature, writing,
  listening, speaking, discussing, using language,
  understanding media, using technology, and
  employing research skills.
• Students will apply these skills as they continue to
  develop their abilities as creative and critical thinkers.
• The goal of this course is to engage students in a
  meaningful survey of various genres of literature and
  writing.
• Equipping students with effective foundational
  reading and writing skills is paramount. There are no
  prerequisites for this course.
21st Century Grading Policy
• Hamilton is enforcing the 21st Century Grading Policy.
  A student’s grade is dependent upon several factors.
• Foremost, the grade is determined by academic
  achievement during the mark period.
• High quality work is achieved through the daily
  practice and review of class skills and ideas learned
  during the class hour.
• A student’s grade is dependent upon active daily
  participation and skills mastery based upon
  standards which require regular attendance.
Grade Scale
• Advanced: Demonstrates in-depth understanding
  of academic knowledge and skills tested at the
  9th grade level.
• Proficient: Demonstrates competency in the
  academic knowledge and skills tested at the 9th
  grade level.
• Basic: Demonstrates some academic knowledge
  and skills tested at the 9th grade level.
• Minimal Performance: Demonstrates very
  limited academic knowledge and skills tested at
  the 9th grade level.
Required items to bring to class
You must bring:
1. A sharpened pencil or pen
2. A notebook that you will keep in the class
   (notebooks are .50 in the bookstore)
3. A folder
Classroom Expectations
1. Please arrive on time. If you are late, enter in quietly.
   Students who are repeatedly late will require
   disciplinary action.
2. This classroom is a “safe-zone”. We do not allow
   students to make fun of others, or make them feel
   unsafe in any way. We believe that each student
   deserves the right to learn in an environment where
   we can all relax, have fun, learn, and be equals.
3. Come prepared to learn. We have designed this class in
   an “honors” format. We have high expectations, and
   we expect each student will arrive with the necessary
   materials and attitudes to fully realize themselves as
   successful scholars.
4. Hamilton High School and room 375 has a no cell
   phone policy. Do not take out your phone for any
   reason. Students who break this important school rule
   will be taken to the administrator.
Classroom Procedures
• Start taking notes
  Summarize in your note book:
   • Objectives
  • I’m learning: ________
  • I will know I learned because I can: ___
  • I want to know: _____
  • I have questions about: _____
Speaking and Listening
• Speaking and Listening are parts of your grade
• What does “speaking” look like?
   – Reflect on the question (think time)
   – Write down a response before you speak (prepare)
   – Raise your hand (we want to give everyone a chance)
• What does listening look like?
   – Why is it important to hear everyone’s thoughts and
     opinions?
   – What are your experiences with people who “hog” the
     conversation?
   – How do you feel when people interrupt you? Talk over
     you?
   – The body language of listening
       • Looking at the speaker
       • The white of your eyes should be facing the speaker
       • Do not write or play with items on your desk when someone is
         speaking
What if…
• What do I do if I get bored? _________
• What do I do if I get tired? __________
• What if another student is bothering
  me?_______
• What if I’m not doing well in the class and I
  want to try to improve my grade?____
Who Are You?
                       *Handout*

• Take about 7 minutes to fill out the handout
• Turn to your neighbor and share 3 things
  about yourself you are willing to share
• Introduce yourself and your neighbor to the
  class, and tell us one thing about your
  neighbor
• “Hi, my name is Regina. I would like to
  introduce Aaron. He likes London, cats, and
  reading.”
1. Sit down
2. Take out your notebook
3. Write down the following notes in your notebook
     (you have three minutes):
Lesson Objective (Write down the following)
I am learning
--How to read and listen to poetry
--How to write a response to poetry
--How to discuss poetry
I am doing
--Reading and listening
--Writing
--Discussing
I know I learned because
--I can…
--I can…
I have questions about…
Terms and Definitions
Free Verse: Verse without formal meter or rhyme patterns. Free verse relies
upon the natural rhythms of everyday speech. Modern and contemporary
poets of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries often employ free verse.
Figurative Language: A form of language use in which writers and speakers
convey something other than the literal meaning of their words in order to
show an imaginative relationship between different things. Simile, metaphor,
and personification are examples of figurative language.
Simile: A figure of speech involving a comparison between unlike things using
the words like or as. An example is "My love is like a red, red rose.“
Metaphor: A comparison between essentially unlike things without
comparative words such as like or as. An example is "My love is a red, red
rose."
Personification: A type of figurative language in which inanimate objects or
abstract ideas are given human characteristics. Personification is a form of
metaphor.
Imagery: The creation of images using words. Poets usually achieve this by
invoking comparisons by means of metaphor or simile or other figures of
Terms and Definitions 2
• Alliteration
  The repetition of consonant sounds, especially at the beginning of
  words. Brenda’s got a baby, but Brenda’s barely got a brain.
• Rhythm
  The recurrence of accent or stress in lines of verse. In the following
  lines from "Same in Blues" by Langston Hughes, the accented words
  and syllables are underlined:
  I said to my baby, (6)
  Baby take it slow.... (5)
  Lulu said to Leonard (6)
  I want a diamond ring (6)
• Diction
  The selection of words in a literary work. A work's diction forms one
  of its centrally important literary elements, as writers use words to
  convey action, reveal character, imply attitudes, identify themes,
  and suggest values.
Thursday, January 26th
1. Review expectations
2. You need a notebook for this class and keep
    one in here (with your name on it)
    -I need to get 5 boxes
   -dividers
3. Pens/Pencils required
4. Begin taking notes as soon as you come in
Thursday, January 26th
Review what we did yesterday
 1. Handout 1- Poetry Observation form
        -worth 11 points
    - we’re interested in learning what you think, feel and know about poetry
 2. We wrote down our learning objectives
    - get notes from a partner
 3. We began reading poetry
        - all classes read Jack Kerouack (as read by Johnny Depp) except period 7/8
 Preview
 1. You took notes
 2. We will briefly review notes
 3. We will re-read Mexico City Blues
     a.     Look for literary terms you wrote down in your notes in the poem
4.        We will move on to The X is Black
     a.     Look for literary terms you wrote down in your notes n the poem
****All of your responses will go in your notebook*** We will collect either your
      responses or your notebook when we enter in your grades. Title each
      assignment correctly. ****
Extra credit: Bring in a song/lyrics and music so we can see what you consider
      poetry
Terms and Definitions 2
                 *sit and write down notes*
• Alliteration
  The repetition of consonant sounds, especially at the beginning of
  words. Brenda’s got a baby, but Brenda’s barely got a brain.
• Rhythm
  The recurrence of accent or stress in lines of verse. In the following
  lines from "Same in Blues" by Langston Hughes, the accented words
  and syllables are underlined:
  I said to my baby, (6)
  Baby take it slow.... (5)
  Lulu said to Leonard (6)
  I want a diamond ring (6)
• Diction
  The selection of words in a literary work. A work's diction forms one
  of its centrally important literary elements, as writers use words to
  convey action, reveal character, imply attitudes, identify themes,
  and suggest values.
Friday, January 27th
• Go over our learning objectives
• Review yesterday’s poetry terms
• Review Mexican City Blues
   – What terms did we discover
• Preview today’s activities
   – Review terms you wrote down today
• Listen/read "A Three Point Shot from Andromeda"
  by Paul Beatty (11:17 PM)
   – Identify terms used in this poem
   – Extra credit for going back to yesterday’s terms and
     finding them in Andromeda’s poem
      • E.g. Image: ninety nine thousand/ BB sized holes
1. Sit down
2. Take out your notebook
3. Write down the following notes in your notebook
     (you have three minutes):
Lesson Objective (Write down the following)
I am learning
--How to read and listen to poetry
--How to write a response to poetry
--How to discuss poetry
I am doing
--Reading and listening
--Writing
--Discussing
I know I learned because
--I can identify the following terms…
--I can…
I have questions about…
Opening Procedures-2 MINUTES
Review
1. Walk in quietly
2. Enter the room BEFORE the bell rings
    – Do not stand outside the door
3. Sit in your assigned seat
4. Take out notebook and pen/pencil
    –      You must bring your own pencil/pen and notebook
    – You will keep your notebook in the class
    – Write your name on the top of the notebook and on the inside cover
5. Write down the notes for the day or begin the activity that is posted on the
      overhead
Remember:
1. We begin on time, and we do not waste time.
2. Do not get up from your seat without permission.
3. When the class ends, you must stay in your seat and wait till I dismiss you.
Speaking and Listening-2 Mins
• Speaking and Listening are parts of your grade
• What does “speaking” look like?
   – Reflect on the question (think time)
   – Write down a response before you speak (prepare)
   – Raise your hand (we want to give everyone a chance)
• What does listening look like?
   –   Why is it important to hear everyone’s thoughts and opinions?
   –   What are your experiences with people who “hog” the conversation?
   –   How do you feel when people interrupt you? Talk over you?
   –   The body language of listening
        • Looking at the speaker
        • The white of your eyes should be facing the speaker
        • Do not write or play with items on your desk when someone is speaking
Read and Listen to Poetry
 Read along from your handout as we listen to
 the following poems
• Johnny Depp reads Jack Kerouac
• "The X Is Black" by Amiri Baraka
• "A Three Point Shot from Andromeda" by
   Paul Beatty (11:17 PM)
• Project Princess by Tracie Morrison
In your notebook
Date: Thursday, January 26th
Poem: Mexico City Blues
Directions:
1. Look at the list of literary terms
2. Look at the poem Mexico City Blues
3. Identify a term that’s Line from poem
       Term
                            being used
      Imagery            Got buried/
                         In a coffin in the grave (line 3-
                         4)
      Metaphor
Term                   Line
                       Then died and got buried
Imagery                     in a coffin in the grave
                       went out & got laid
                       it is perfect
                            with emptiness
                       it is perfect
Metaphor                    with emptiness
                       your goal
                            is your starting place
                       No race was run, no walk
                            of prophetic toenails
                       depressed, angry, hopeless, numbly
Tone- the speaker is   Sad, wise, and conscious,
   feeling             Upset with ignorance
                       Because it is empty,
Repetition             Because it is perfect
                          with emptiness,
                       Because it's not even happening
                       Man
                       Empty, emptiness, perfect, it is
                       Teaching, Anger, Diamond
Term       Line from poem
 Imagery    If a flag catch/fire (lines 1 & 2)
 Metaphor   that X is black




Message:
Tone:
Images
Term                  Line from the poem Mexico City Blues
 Imagery                  Got up and dressed up
                       in a coffin in the grave
                       went out & got laid
                       died and got buried

 Repetition            Because it is empty,
                       Because it is perfect
                       empty
                       Emptiness
                       own emptiness
 Personification       Anger
                       Doesn't like to be reminded of fits
                       Everything
                       Is Ignorant of its own emptiness
 Tone                  Sad, mad, numb, depressed, lonely,
 Metaphor              your goal
                          is your starting place,

Date: Thursday, January 26th
Poem: Mexico City Blues
Respond to Poetry
• On a separate piece of paper,
  – write your name,
  – period, and
  – date at the top
• Be prepared to turn in your paper
• As we listen/view each poem again,
  – note the poem on your paper and
  – answer the questions on your handout
• Be prepared to discuss your responses
  before you turn in your paper
English 9
Friday, January 24 th
        Mr. Huth


   Poetry Day 3
1. Sit down
2. Take out your notebook
3. Take down the following notes in your notebook
   (you have three minutes):
Lesson Objective
•I am learning
--What a line is in poetry
--What a stanza is in poetry
--What an end rhyme is
--What a rhyme scheme is
--What an image and imagery are
•I am doing
--Reading and listening
--Writing
--Discussing
I know I learned because
--I can…
--I can…
I have questions about…
Review of Poetry Introduction
• What were some of the literary terms used in
  Mexico City Blues?
• What is the meaning of The X Is Black?
• How is imagery used in Three Point Shot From
  Andromeda?
• How did the writer feel about the subject of
  Project Princess?
• What vocabulary words did you learn?
The Road Not Taken
        By Robert Frost
• Read along on your handout as we view
   and listen to the following versions of the
   poem
• The Road Not Taken (Open to page 189 in
   your green text book)
 (read by Robert Frost)
• The Road Not Taken
 (with images)
Literary Terms--Always Take Notes!
• Line: A basic structural component of a poem. Lines can be written in
  free form, in syllabic form (e.g. haiku) or in metrical form. A single line
  may or may not end in punctuation.
• Stanza: One or more lines that make up the basic units of a poem -
  separated from each other by spacing. Often used to organize a poem
  by ideas, setting, speaker, time, or other factors.
• End Rhyme: The effect produced when similar vowel sounds chime
  together and where the final consonant sound is also in agreement e.g.
  'bat' and 'cat'. An end rhyme occurs at the end of lines in poetry.
• Rhyme Scheme: The pattern of rhymes in a poem. The rhyme scheme
  in a poem can be analyzed by using letters at the end of lines to denote
  similar vowel sounds:
          There once was a big brown cat a
          That liked to eat a lot of mice.      b
          He got all round and fat             a
          Because they tasted so nice.           b
• Image, Imagery: Images are representations of sensations perceived
  through the five senses: sight, hearing, smell, touch and taste. Visual
  images are the most common. Imagery includes the "mental pictures"
  that readers experience in a passage of literature. It signifies all the
  sensory perceptions referred to in a poem.
Respond to Poetry

• Answer the questions on your handout
  using a separate piece of paper
• Write your
  – name,
  – period, and
  – date at the top of the paper
• Be prepared to discuss your answers
• Be prepared to hand in your paper

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Week of january24

  • 1. English 9, Week 1 January 24-27 Mrs. Navejar Ms. Dammanna Mr. Huth
  • 2. Common Core State Standards-ELA Key Ideas and Details • RL.9-10.1. Cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text. Craft and Structure • RL.9-10.4. Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in the text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the cumulative impact of specific word choices on meaning and tone (e.g., how the language evokes a sense of time and place; how it sets a formal or informal tone). Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity • RL.9-10.10. By the end of grade 9, read and comprehend literature, including stories, dramas, and poems, in the grades 9–10 text complexity band proficiently, with scaffolding as needed at the high end of the range. Language L.9-10.5. Demonstrate understanding of figurative language, word relationships, and nuances in word meanings. – Interpret figures of speech (e.g., euphemism, oxymoron) in context and analyze their role in the text. – Analyze nuances in the meaning of words with similar denotations. Speaking and Listening Come to discussions prepared, having read and researched material under study; explicitly draw on that preparation by referring to evidence from texts and other research on the topic or issue to stimulate a thoughtful, well-reasoned exchange of ideas.
  • 3. Tuesday, January 24th • Welcome! • Take attendance/check your schedule – Are you in the right class? – Room 375- Mrs. Navejar • Look at the tent cards on the desk for your assigned seat • Please take out – Notebook – Pencil or pen • Wait for class to start – Bell rings
  • 4. Tuesday, January 24th Introductions • Instructors in the room – Mrs. Navejar – Ms. Dammanna – Mr. Huth • English 9/Second Semester • Today we will: – Course Overview – Grading Policy – Grade Scale – Required Class materials – Classroom expectations
  • 5. Welcome to English 9! A Few Things to Remember • Take notes • Attendance is critical, be on time • Be prepared, always bring required materials • No cell phones or electronic devices • Enter the classroom and begin work quietly • If you respect your fellow students, teachers, and environment, you will be respected too • All Hamilton HS conduct rules apply in this class • Take notes
  • 6. Instructors • Instructors in the room – Mrs. Navejar – Ms. Dammanna – Mr. Huth • Mrs. Navejar – B.A. -Mount Mary College • English/History Middle-Secondary Education – M.S.- UW-Madison • Educational Psychology – Ph.D doctoral student- UW-Milwaukee • Educational Psychology- learning and development – MPS Teacher for 12 years • 10 years at Pulaski • I’m in my 3rd year at Hamilton High School • Ms. Dammanna • Mr. Huth
  • 7. Who Am I? • Mr. Huth (rhymes with “youth”) • B.A., English, UWM • B.A., Art History, UWM • Worked as a librarian at Marquette U. • Worked in the IT industry • Finishing my teaching license at UWM • Loves swimming, hiking, travelling, reading, going to galleries and museums, movies, trying new food • Favorite city: London • Favorite TV shows: The Sopranos, Monty Python, Doctor Who • Favorite movie: Pulp Fiction • Favorite book: Bleak House, by Charles Dickens • Favorite music: The Clash, Patti Smith, Mozart, Woody Guthrie, Nick Cave, Tom Waits • Favorite team: Green Bay Packers
  • 8. Course Description *Look at syllabus* • The central purpose of this course is to expand students’ foundational skills in all communication arts. • These include reading, analyzing literature, writing, listening, speaking, discussing, using language, understanding media, using technology, and employing research skills. • Students will apply these skills as they continue to develop their abilities as creative and critical thinkers. • The goal of this course is to engage students in a meaningful survey of various genres of literature and writing. • Equipping students with effective foundational reading and writing skills is paramount. There are no prerequisites for this course.
  • 9. 21st Century Grading Policy • Hamilton is enforcing the 21st Century Grading Policy. A student’s grade is dependent upon several factors. • Foremost, the grade is determined by academic achievement during the mark period. • High quality work is achieved through the daily practice and review of class skills and ideas learned during the class hour. • A student’s grade is dependent upon active daily participation and skills mastery based upon standards which require regular attendance.
  • 10. Grade Scale • Advanced: Demonstrates in-depth understanding of academic knowledge and skills tested at the 9th grade level. • Proficient: Demonstrates competency in the academic knowledge and skills tested at the 9th grade level. • Basic: Demonstrates some academic knowledge and skills tested at the 9th grade level. • Minimal Performance: Demonstrates very limited academic knowledge and skills tested at the 9th grade level.
  • 11. Required items to bring to class You must bring: 1. A sharpened pencil or pen 2. A notebook that you will keep in the class (notebooks are .50 in the bookstore) 3. A folder
  • 12. Classroom Expectations 1. Please arrive on time. If you are late, enter in quietly. Students who are repeatedly late will require disciplinary action. 2. This classroom is a “safe-zone”. We do not allow students to make fun of others, or make them feel unsafe in any way. We believe that each student deserves the right to learn in an environment where we can all relax, have fun, learn, and be equals. 3. Come prepared to learn. We have designed this class in an “honors” format. We have high expectations, and we expect each student will arrive with the necessary materials and attitudes to fully realize themselves as successful scholars. 4. Hamilton High School and room 375 has a no cell phone policy. Do not take out your phone for any reason. Students who break this important school rule will be taken to the administrator.
  • 13. Classroom Procedures • Start taking notes Summarize in your note book: • Objectives • I’m learning: ________ • I will know I learned because I can: ___ • I want to know: _____ • I have questions about: _____
  • 14. Speaking and Listening • Speaking and Listening are parts of your grade • What does “speaking” look like? – Reflect on the question (think time) – Write down a response before you speak (prepare) – Raise your hand (we want to give everyone a chance) • What does listening look like? – Why is it important to hear everyone’s thoughts and opinions? – What are your experiences with people who “hog” the conversation? – How do you feel when people interrupt you? Talk over you? – The body language of listening • Looking at the speaker • The white of your eyes should be facing the speaker • Do not write or play with items on your desk when someone is speaking
  • 15. What if… • What do I do if I get bored? _________ • What do I do if I get tired? __________ • What if another student is bothering me?_______ • What if I’m not doing well in the class and I want to try to improve my grade?____
  • 16. Who Are You? *Handout* • Take about 7 minutes to fill out the handout • Turn to your neighbor and share 3 things about yourself you are willing to share • Introduce yourself and your neighbor to the class, and tell us one thing about your neighbor • “Hi, my name is Regina. I would like to introduce Aaron. He likes London, cats, and reading.”
  • 17. 1. Sit down 2. Take out your notebook 3. Write down the following notes in your notebook (you have three minutes): Lesson Objective (Write down the following) I am learning --How to read and listen to poetry --How to write a response to poetry --How to discuss poetry I am doing --Reading and listening --Writing --Discussing I know I learned because --I can… --I can… I have questions about…
  • 18. Terms and Definitions Free Verse: Verse without formal meter or rhyme patterns. Free verse relies upon the natural rhythms of everyday speech. Modern and contemporary poets of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries often employ free verse. Figurative Language: A form of language use in which writers and speakers convey something other than the literal meaning of their words in order to show an imaginative relationship between different things. Simile, metaphor, and personification are examples of figurative language. Simile: A figure of speech involving a comparison between unlike things using the words like or as. An example is "My love is like a red, red rose.“ Metaphor: A comparison between essentially unlike things without comparative words such as like or as. An example is "My love is a red, red rose." Personification: A type of figurative language in which inanimate objects or abstract ideas are given human characteristics. Personification is a form of metaphor. Imagery: The creation of images using words. Poets usually achieve this by invoking comparisons by means of metaphor or simile or other figures of
  • 19. Terms and Definitions 2 • Alliteration The repetition of consonant sounds, especially at the beginning of words. Brenda’s got a baby, but Brenda’s barely got a brain. • Rhythm The recurrence of accent or stress in lines of verse. In the following lines from "Same in Blues" by Langston Hughes, the accented words and syllables are underlined: I said to my baby, (6) Baby take it slow.... (5) Lulu said to Leonard (6) I want a diamond ring (6) • Diction The selection of words in a literary work. A work's diction forms one of its centrally important literary elements, as writers use words to convey action, reveal character, imply attitudes, identify themes, and suggest values.
  • 20. Thursday, January 26th 1. Review expectations 2. You need a notebook for this class and keep one in here (with your name on it) -I need to get 5 boxes -dividers 3. Pens/Pencils required 4. Begin taking notes as soon as you come in
  • 21. Thursday, January 26th Review what we did yesterday 1. Handout 1- Poetry Observation form -worth 11 points - we’re interested in learning what you think, feel and know about poetry 2. We wrote down our learning objectives - get notes from a partner 3. We began reading poetry - all classes read Jack Kerouack (as read by Johnny Depp) except period 7/8 Preview 1. You took notes 2. We will briefly review notes 3. We will re-read Mexico City Blues a. Look for literary terms you wrote down in your notes in the poem 4. We will move on to The X is Black a. Look for literary terms you wrote down in your notes n the poem ****All of your responses will go in your notebook*** We will collect either your responses or your notebook when we enter in your grades. Title each assignment correctly. **** Extra credit: Bring in a song/lyrics and music so we can see what you consider poetry
  • 22. Terms and Definitions 2 *sit and write down notes* • Alliteration The repetition of consonant sounds, especially at the beginning of words. Brenda’s got a baby, but Brenda’s barely got a brain. • Rhythm The recurrence of accent or stress in lines of verse. In the following lines from "Same in Blues" by Langston Hughes, the accented words and syllables are underlined: I said to my baby, (6) Baby take it slow.... (5) Lulu said to Leonard (6) I want a diamond ring (6) • Diction The selection of words in a literary work. A work's diction forms one of its centrally important literary elements, as writers use words to convey action, reveal character, imply attitudes, identify themes, and suggest values.
  • 23. Friday, January 27th • Go over our learning objectives • Review yesterday’s poetry terms • Review Mexican City Blues – What terms did we discover • Preview today’s activities – Review terms you wrote down today • Listen/read "A Three Point Shot from Andromeda" by Paul Beatty (11:17 PM) – Identify terms used in this poem – Extra credit for going back to yesterday’s terms and finding them in Andromeda’s poem • E.g. Image: ninety nine thousand/ BB sized holes
  • 24. 1. Sit down 2. Take out your notebook 3. Write down the following notes in your notebook (you have three minutes): Lesson Objective (Write down the following) I am learning --How to read and listen to poetry --How to write a response to poetry --How to discuss poetry I am doing --Reading and listening --Writing --Discussing I know I learned because --I can identify the following terms… --I can… I have questions about…
  • 25. Opening Procedures-2 MINUTES Review 1. Walk in quietly 2. Enter the room BEFORE the bell rings – Do not stand outside the door 3. Sit in your assigned seat 4. Take out notebook and pen/pencil – You must bring your own pencil/pen and notebook – You will keep your notebook in the class – Write your name on the top of the notebook and on the inside cover 5. Write down the notes for the day or begin the activity that is posted on the overhead Remember: 1. We begin on time, and we do not waste time. 2. Do not get up from your seat without permission. 3. When the class ends, you must stay in your seat and wait till I dismiss you.
  • 26. Speaking and Listening-2 Mins • Speaking and Listening are parts of your grade • What does “speaking” look like? – Reflect on the question (think time) – Write down a response before you speak (prepare) – Raise your hand (we want to give everyone a chance) • What does listening look like? – Why is it important to hear everyone’s thoughts and opinions? – What are your experiences with people who “hog” the conversation? – How do you feel when people interrupt you? Talk over you? – The body language of listening • Looking at the speaker • The white of your eyes should be facing the speaker • Do not write or play with items on your desk when someone is speaking
  • 27. Read and Listen to Poetry Read along from your handout as we listen to the following poems • Johnny Depp reads Jack Kerouac • "The X Is Black" by Amiri Baraka • "A Three Point Shot from Andromeda" by Paul Beatty (11:17 PM) • Project Princess by Tracie Morrison
  • 28. In your notebook Date: Thursday, January 26th Poem: Mexico City Blues Directions: 1. Look at the list of literary terms 2. Look at the poem Mexico City Blues 3. Identify a term that’s Line from poem Term being used Imagery Got buried/ In a coffin in the grave (line 3- 4) Metaphor
  • 29. Term Line Then died and got buried Imagery in a coffin in the grave went out & got laid it is perfect with emptiness it is perfect Metaphor with emptiness your goal is your starting place No race was run, no walk of prophetic toenails depressed, angry, hopeless, numbly Tone- the speaker is Sad, wise, and conscious, feeling Upset with ignorance Because it is empty, Repetition Because it is perfect with emptiness, Because it's not even happening Man Empty, emptiness, perfect, it is Teaching, Anger, Diamond
  • 30. Term Line from poem Imagery If a flag catch/fire (lines 1 & 2) Metaphor that X is black Message: Tone: Images
  • 31. Term Line from the poem Mexico City Blues Imagery Got up and dressed up in a coffin in the grave went out & got laid died and got buried Repetition Because it is empty, Because it is perfect empty Emptiness own emptiness Personification Anger Doesn't like to be reminded of fits Everything Is Ignorant of its own emptiness Tone Sad, mad, numb, depressed, lonely, Metaphor your goal is your starting place, Date: Thursday, January 26th Poem: Mexico City Blues
  • 32. Respond to Poetry • On a separate piece of paper, – write your name, – period, and – date at the top • Be prepared to turn in your paper • As we listen/view each poem again, – note the poem on your paper and – answer the questions on your handout • Be prepared to discuss your responses before you turn in your paper
  • 33. English 9 Friday, January 24 th Mr. Huth Poetry Day 3
  • 34. 1. Sit down 2. Take out your notebook 3. Take down the following notes in your notebook (you have three minutes): Lesson Objective •I am learning --What a line is in poetry --What a stanza is in poetry --What an end rhyme is --What a rhyme scheme is --What an image and imagery are •I am doing --Reading and listening --Writing --Discussing I know I learned because --I can… --I can… I have questions about…
  • 35. Review of Poetry Introduction • What were some of the literary terms used in Mexico City Blues? • What is the meaning of The X Is Black? • How is imagery used in Three Point Shot From Andromeda? • How did the writer feel about the subject of Project Princess? • What vocabulary words did you learn?
  • 36. The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost • Read along on your handout as we view and listen to the following versions of the poem • The Road Not Taken (Open to page 189 in your green text book) (read by Robert Frost) • The Road Not Taken (with images)
  • 37. Literary Terms--Always Take Notes! • Line: A basic structural component of a poem. Lines can be written in free form, in syllabic form (e.g. haiku) or in metrical form. A single line may or may not end in punctuation. • Stanza: One or more lines that make up the basic units of a poem - separated from each other by spacing. Often used to organize a poem by ideas, setting, speaker, time, or other factors. • End Rhyme: The effect produced when similar vowel sounds chime together and where the final consonant sound is also in agreement e.g. 'bat' and 'cat'. An end rhyme occurs at the end of lines in poetry. • Rhyme Scheme: The pattern of rhymes in a poem. The rhyme scheme in a poem can be analyzed by using letters at the end of lines to denote similar vowel sounds: There once was a big brown cat a That liked to eat a lot of mice. b He got all round and fat a Because they tasted so nice. b • Image, Imagery: Images are representations of sensations perceived through the five senses: sight, hearing, smell, touch and taste. Visual images are the most common. Imagery includes the "mental pictures" that readers experience in a passage of literature. It signifies all the sensory perceptions referred to in a poem.
  • 38. Respond to Poetry • Answer the questions on your handout using a separate piece of paper • Write your – name, – period, and – date at the top of the paper • Be prepared to discuss your answers • Be prepared to hand in your paper