Scarlet Letter

FINAL PROJECTS

Unit Learning goal: Students will demonstrate knowledge of sixteenth-nineteenth century foundation works of American Literature by choosing one of the four subsections of this Unit (Native American Experience, Early Explorers and Settlers, The Puritan Experience, and Writers of the Revolution) researching and reading an additional story, essay or speech of their choice and creating a video discussing the theme and how the work fits its particular period. 
Scale/Rubric relating to learning goal:
4 – The student can create a video that explores two or more of the subsections of this unit and relate it to a theme and time period.
3 – The student can create a video that explores one of the subsections of this unit and relate it to a theme and time period.
2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student can create a video that explores one of the subsections of this unit and relate it to a theme and time period.


1 – Even with help from the teacher the student is unable to can create a video that explores one of the subsections of this unit and relate it to a theme and time period.


Ethan Allen and Ticonderoga 

The Iroquois Constitution

from "The Crisis" on page 248.

"Letter to John Adams" on page 262

"Letter to the Reverend Samson Occom" by Phyllis Wheatley on page 260

"from the Defense of the Constitutions" by John Adams on page 292

OR LOOK HERE for MORE OPTIONS: https://sites.google.com/a/skagwayschool.org/mr-fielding/unit-i-student-projects


Remember - you will need to do the following:

1) Give An OVERVIEW of the TEXT
2) LIST a Major THEME
3) And discuss how it fits the period

It should be a video that you'll post on FLIPGRID;

https://flipgrid.com/fc75dc7d 

Scarlet Letter (reading schedule)

10/22 chapters 1-2

10/26 chapters 3-4
10/27 chapter 5
10/28 chapter 6
10/29 chapters 7-8
10/30 chapters 9-10
11/2 chapter 11
11/3 chapter 12
11/4 chapter 13
11/5 chapter 14
11/6 chapter 15
11/9 chapter 16-17
11/10 chapter 18-19
11/11 chapter 20
11/12 chapter 21-22
11/13 chapter 23-24
11/16 Finish Dialectical Journals
11/17 Review for Test
11/18 Test
11/19 - 11/9 Work on Scarlet Letter Essay
11/20 Essay Due

SCARLET LETTER:

LEARNING GOAL: RL9 - read and discuss classical literature of the 19th century.  Determine a theme of a text by referring to specifics from a text. 
 
Objective: Start keeping a dialectical journal.  Try to chose things that reflect a major theme and connect to each other.   


Effective students have a habit of taking notes as they read. This note-taking can several forms: annotation, post it notes, character lists, idea clusters, and many others. One of the most effective strategies is called a dialectical journal. The word “dialectical” has numerous meanings, but the one most pertinent is the “art of critical examination into the truth of an opinion” or reworded “The art or practice of arriving at the truth by using conversation involving question and answer.” As you read, you are forming an opinion about what you are reading (or at least you are SUPPOSED to be forming an opinion). That opinion, however, needs to be based on the text – not just a feeling. Therefore, all of your opinions need to be based on the text.

The procedure is as follows:

1. I expect you to publish these journal entries on your blogs nightly and number them as you go.

2. As you read, pay close attention to the text.

3. Whenever you encounter something of interest (this could be anything from an interesting turn of phrase to a character note), write down the word/phrase making sure that you NOTE THE PAGE NUMBER. If the phrase is especially long just write the first few words, use an ellipsis, then write the last few words.

4. Underneath your quotation, WRITE YOUR OBSEVRATIONS ABOUT THE TEXT. This is where you need to interact in detail with the text. Make sure that your observations are THOROUGH, INSIGHTFUL, and FOCUSED CLEARLY ON THE TEXT. 

5. On your BLOGS - 1st give the quotations and underneath it place your observation

Requirements:

1) You will need to complete a MINIMUM of 55 entries if you wish to be eligible for an “A”. 35 is the minimum for a passing grade. Make sure you number your entries.
2) A Dialectic journal should be done for every chapter
3) Dialectic journals will be used as part of class discussion and will be randomly collected and graded for homework.

When should you write things down?
• When certain details seem important to you
• When you have an epiphany
• When you learn something significant about a character
• When you recognize a pattern (overlapping images, repetitions of idea, details, etc.)
• When you agree or disagree with something a character says
• When you find an interesting or potentially significant quote.
• When you notice something important or relevant about the writer’s style.
• When you notice effective uses of literary devices.
• When you notice something that makes you think of a question

That is all there is to it. This way, once you have read your text you will already have a great set of notes on which to draw when you write your paper. You also should have gained a great deal of insight about your particular text.


Grading (based on 55 entries, if you have 45 entries an A= B, B= C, 35 entries A=C)

A—Detailed, meaningful passages, plot and quote selections; thoughtful interpretation and commentary about the text; includes comments about literary elements (like theme, diction, imagery, syntax, symbolism, etc.) and how these elements contribute to the meaning of the text; asks thought-provoking, insightful questions; coverage of text is complete and thorough; journal is neat, organized, numbered and readable.
B—Less detailed, but good selections; some intelligent commentary about the text; includes some comments about literary elements (like theme, diction, imagery, syntax, symbolism, etc.) but less than how these elements contribute to the meaning of the text; asks some thought-provoking, insightful questions; coverage of the text is complete and thorough; journal is neat, organized, numbered and readable.
C—A few good details about the text; most of the commentary is vague, unsupported or plot summary/paraphrase; some listing of literary elements, but perhaps inadequate discussion, but not very thoroughly; journal is relatively neat.
D—Hardly any good or meaningful details from the story; notes are plot summary or paraphrase; few literary elements, virtually no discussion on meaning; no good questions; limited coverage of text, and/or too short






Some links to previous student dialectical journals:
http://jennyaplit.blogspot.com/2018/10/the-english-patient-dialogue-journals_18.html

http://englishap12.blogspot.com/2011/
http://zoesapenglishliterature.blogspot.com/2013/10/
http://mapienglish11.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2010-11-07T18:42:00-08:00&max-results=7&start=7&by-date=false

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