Extraordinary Eighths


How to Write a Poem

Posted in Guidelines,Lesson Plans,Poems by on the April 22, 2010

300px-Haiku_at_temple How to write a limerick? Go to

http://www.poetryamerica.com/Limerick.asp

How to write a cinquain?  Go to

http://childrensbooks.suite101.com/article.cfm/how_to_write_a_cinquain

How to write a haiku? Go to

http://www.wikihow.com/Write-a-Haiku-Poem

Book Requests

Posted in Uncategorized by on the April 20, 2010

We have an awesome book fair. Please respond here to tell me what new books I should buy for the class library!

April is Celebrate Poetry Month (at last!)

1. Write 5 Little Poems

Haiku, Limerick, Cinquain, Free Verse. Save and post on your blog.

Go to  <http://teacher.scholastic.com/writewit/poetry/poetry_engine.htm#> and seek Poetry Idea Engine

2. Poem in Your Pocket

Keep a poem in your pocket. Share it with family and friends each night. Discuss the ideas that come from it. Reflect on the sharing of your poem on your blog the next day.

3. Recite a Poem

Find a poem from a master poet (see me).  Memorize it and make a copy for each person in the class. Recite the poem from the Poetry Corner.

Peepmania

Posted in Stupid Stuff by on the March 25, 2010

We were joking around about snacks for our spring break party and we were talking about Peeps, the little marshmallow sugary coated chicks that are everywhere this time of year.  So we looked up Peeps and discovered that creativity must be inspired by gooey marshmallow. So here it is.

wizardpeeps purplepeeps shippeep  bikerpeeps

NEW AR OFFER!

Posted in Uncategorized by on the March 23, 2010

Just for the months of March and April, earn points for all your AR tests! That’s right! You can earn the total number of points you read regardless of how many books you read. So read as many books as possible and take as many tests as possible and earn every last point!  Your grade will be calculated for #/300!!! READ READ READ!

Layers A Poem

Posted in Uncategorized by on the March 12, 2010

by me

layers of gratitude
piles of hope
lists of longing
words of wonderment
files of faith
epoch encouragement
soulful survival
blissful being

Women in History

Posted in Geography by on the March 4, 2010

Part 1

Each Social Studies student is to research one person below on the Internet. Find out her birth date, her background, why she is famous and what her contribution to society was. Save notes and pictures in a Word document. Write a paper about her and present it to the class at the end of the week. Place it in the tray.

  1. Nancy Pelosi
  2. Geraldine Ferraro
  3. Sandra Day O’Connor
  4. Shirley Chisholm
  5. Eleanor Roosevelt
  6. Margaret Thatcher
  7. Jeanette Rankin
  8. Sonia Sotomayor
  9. Hillary Clinton

Part 2

Create a powerpoint presentation using this information. Must have 10 slides.

Author Research Project – LA Lesson Plans for March

Authors of books, poems, essays have fascinating lives.  Why did they write what they did? How did they come up with the ideas how did they complete their work? How did their lives influence their what they wrote and how did their writing influence their lives?

Pre-write Read Writer’s Inc text, purpose 245, thesis statement, 249

Thesis statement=subject + a stand, feeling, or feature.

Write a thesis statement about your author to be included in your introduction paragraph

Writing Plan- 100 points

Suggested topics to cover but your may mix up the order or merge some of these categories. You may also discover that your author needs a new category or topic so feel free to add to this list. This is merely a starting point.

  1. Introduction includes the thesis statement
  2. Birth/Death
  3. Childhood
  4. Family
  5. School
  6. Education/Training
  7. Jobs – Experiences
  8. Why writing?
  9. Books/Essays/Poems
  10. Awards
  11. Legacy – what can you tell us about him/her based on your research?
  12. Conclusion Restate the thesis statement.

Authors/Writers/Poets: Authors Who Shaped World History

Choose an author from the list below. Conference with me about your reasons for choosing this author and at that time you will receive final confirmation.

  1. Aesop  620-565 BC
  2. Homer 850-? BC
  3. Miguel Cervantes 1547-1616
  4. William Shakespeare 1564-1616
  5. John Milton 1608-1674
  6. William Blake 1747- 1827
  7. William Wordsworth 1770-1850
  8. James Fennimore Cooper 1789-1851
  9. Victor Hugo 1802-1885
  10. Nathaniel Hawthorne 1804-1864
  11. Ralph Waldo Emerson 1803-1882
  12. Edgar Allan Poe 1809-1849
  13. Charles Dickens 1812-1870
  14. Charlotte Bronte 1816-1855
  15. Mary Shelley
  16. Emily Bronte – 1818-1848
  17. Elizabeth Barret Browning
  18. Harriet Beecher Stowe 1811-1896
  19. Henry David Thoreau 1817-1862
  20. George Eliot 1819-1880
  21. Walt Whitman 1819-1892
  22. Herman Melville 1819-1891
  23. Fyodor Dostoevski 1821-1881
  24. Jules Verne 1828-1905
  25. Leo Tolstoy 1828-1910
  26. Emily Dickinson 1830-1886
  27. Louisa May Alcott 1832-1888
  28. Louis Carroll 1832-1898
  29. Mark Twain 1835-1910
  30. Robert Louis Stevenson 1850-1894
  31. Lyman Frank Baum 1856-1919
  32. O. Henry 1862-1910
  33. Rudyard Kipling 1865-1936
  34. HG. Wells 1866-1946
  35. Laura Ingalls Wilder 1867-1957
  36. Robert Frost 1874-1963
  37. Jack London 1876-1916
  38. Carl Sandburg 1878-1967
  39. Virginia Wolfe 1882-1941
  40. James Joyce 1882-1941
  41. Sinclair Lewis 1885-1951
  42. Agatha Christie 1891-1976
  43. Pearl Buck 1892-1973
  44. F. Scott Fitzgerald 1896-1940
  45. Ernest Hemingway 1899-1961
  46. John Steinbeck 1902-1968
  47. George Orwell 1903-1950
  48. Toni Morrison 1931
  49. Tom Clancy
  50. Langston Hughes
  51. Nikki Giovanni
  52. CS Lewis
  53. Stephen King
  54. JRR Tolkien
  55. Maya Angelou
  56. Rita Dove
  57. Ann Rice
  58. Alice Walker

Taking Notes – 100 points

Take notes in a numbered list careful not to copy the information directly. Use your own words but keep the information. You should have 80-130 notes depending on your style of writing. Email me the notes and I will give you point credit.

To help organize them you may want to put them in categories according to your writing plan above. For example, if you have notes about the author’s childhood, put them all together under the subheading #3 CHILDHOOD. This will make your writing easier.

For example: Notes on Edgar Allan Poe

  1. Birth and Death 1809-1849
  2. Poe is one of the greatest writers in the US.
  3. “Father of the Macbre”
  4. First person to include psychological elements in his stories.

Writing a Draft, Revising, Editing  – 100 points + 50 points

Hooks – ideas to begin your research paper

  • One word
  • Question
  • Interesting or shocking fact
  • Anecdote – a little story
  • Sound
  • Quote from the author’s work
  • Quote about the author

For example a good hook would be, ” Edgar Allan Poe had a difficult childhood because he did not really get along with his step father (interesting fact). His birth parents were actors who traveled the country but they died before he was two…”

Write a draft in Word. Save it to your file. Use Google docs to share it with your draft with your team and me. I will give you credit for this draft and make comments.  All teammates will do the same and get credit for the revisions they do so keep me in the collaborator loop.

I will be looking for a research paper that is rich with good information, sophisticated language and insight into the author. It’s not enough to say that Edgar Allan Poe was a good writer. You must state the reasons why. After you have done research, you will be in a good place to analyze the person and to make some bold statements about him/her. So if you tell me that Edgar Allan Poe was a master at strange and disturbing story telling because he had so many tragedies in his life and lost so many people who were close to him, then I will determine that you used your research to draw interesting conclusions about your author.

Writing partners should revise the research with these elements in mind

  • rich detail
  • sophisticated language
  • insight

Writing partners should edit the for MLA style (see Writers Inc 259-284).

Citations – Use Citation Machine to generate a list of sources.

Go to http://citationmachine.net

When you have made all of your edits, format the document in Word as described in the Writers Inc text, then print it out with a cover sheet and citations and submit it to the tray.  Post your research on your blog.

Creating a Project/Website using your Author Research  – 100 points

Create a website dedicated to your author. To get started we will use  webs.com.  View the tutorial and decide these key elements before you enroll:

  1. Name of your website  example: The Edgar Allan Poe Project
  2. URL or web address. You may need to submit several versions to get a new site. Example: edgarallanpoe.webs.com
  3. Add you first name only and no personal information
  4. Create a business/organization website and check education for a title
  5. Set it up using pages for categories.
  6. Add content from the web including links to videos, pictures and text from your paper.
  7. Make the site visually interesting and organized.
  8. Allow for others to comment.

http://istwilightyourbrandofheroin.webs.com/

Author Research Projects/Website Criteria

  • interesting and informative information
  • use of colors and graphics
  • organized text and pictures
  • lists of books/writings/awards
  • use of links for sources
  • use of video links when available
  • thought provoking
  • website set up for others to comment

Presentation – 100 points

  • good use of projection of website
  • good explanation of author
  • strong voice
  • length of presentation enough for understanding
  • ability to answer questions on the topic

Grades = 550 Points with extra credit for creativity.

Timeline:

  • Notes and research- March 3-19
  • Draft March 22-24.
  • Revise March 25-26
  • Edit and final due March 29
  • Project/Website March 30-April 1
  • Project Finals due April 14
  • Presentations April 15-16

Poems for March

Posted in Poems by on the February 26, 2010

Thanks For Remembering Us

Dana Gioia

The flowers sent here by mistake,
signed with a name that no one knew,
are turning bad. What shall we do?
Our neighbor says they’re not for her,
and no one has a birthday near.
We should thank someone for the blunder.
Is one of us having an affair?
At first we laugh, and then we wonder.

The iris was the first to die,
enshrouded in its sickly-sweet
and lingering perfume. The roses
fell one petal at a time,
and now the ferns are turning dry.
The room smells like a funeral,
but there they sit, too much at home,
accusing us of some small crime,
like love forgotten, and we can’t
throw out a gift we’ve never owned.

Love Poem With Toast

Miller Williams

Some of what we do, we do
to make things happen,
the alarm to wake us up, the coffee to perc,
the car to start.

The rest of what we do, we do
trying to keep something from doing something,
the skin from aging, the hoe from rusting,
the truth from getting out.

With yes and no like the poles of a battery
powering our passage through the days,
we move, as we call it, forward,
wanting to be wanted,
wanting not to lose the rain forest,
wanting the water to boil,
wanting not to have cancer,
wanting to be home by dark,
wanting not to run out of gas,

as each of us wants the other
watching at the end,
as both want not to leave the other alone,
as wanting to love beyond this meat and bone,
we gaze across breakfast and pretend.

Otherwise

Jane Kenyon

I got out of bed
on two strong legs.
It might have been
otherwise. I ate
cereal, sweet
milk, ripe, flawless
peach. It might
have been otherwise.
I took the dog uphill
to the birch wood.
All morning I did
the work I love.

At noon I lay down
with my mate. It might
have been otherwise.
We ate dinner together
at a table with silver
candlesticks. It might
have been otherwise.
I slept in a bed
in a room with paintings
on the walls, and
planned another day
just like this day.
But one day, I know,
it will be otherwise.

Lesson Plans March 1-5 Racing to the Goal

Posted in Lesson Plans by on the February 26, 2010

ski RACE TO THE GOAL!

Homework- Read AR Book for 30 minutes each night. Take 3 AR tests per marking period – we are in week 6.  All students must take three AR tests by Monday, March 1, 2010.

Essential Questions  – How to best describe a book? What elements are important and why? How does an author’s life influence their writing?

This week: Talking, thinking, researching and writing about books and authors.

Monday

  • Freewrite
  • Author Research – lesson on how to take notes and cite sources

Tuesday

  • Poem – “Thanks for Remembering Us” by Dana Gioia. Read, write, reflect.
  • Evaluating the Book Reviews – big reveal with suggestions from t-charts.

Wednesday

  • Authors Research- pre-write plan. Writers Inc text
  • Diigo for research sources

Thursday

  • Poem – “Love Poem with Toast” by Miller Williams. Read, write, reflect.
  • Author’s Research – taking notes

Friday

  • Freewrite
  • Author’s Research – students take note on author, on computers

Social Studies

This is week 6 of this nine week class.

globehouses

Essential Questions: How can we locate places on a map? What is the purpose? How do we use an atlas?

Homework: Watch and read world news. On Tuesdays and Thursdays be prepared to write about your news story.

Monday

  • Geo Team Game Quiz
  • Homework – killer whale posters and contest
  • Finishing the student atlas
  • Video

Tuesday

  • NEWS REPORT: Watch CNN clip
  • Do news summaries

Thursday

  • News Report: Watch CNN clip
  • Handout

Friday

  • Students finish team world maps
  • Use computers for information
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