Sunday, April 27, 2014

Drama/Poetry Exam & Oral Presentations

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Learning Tasks for Monday, April 28

Essential Question:  How are poetry and drama related?

Objectives:  I can...
-recall what I have learned about theatre and poetry this semester.
-define and apply terminology related to theatre and poetry.

1.  Writing into the Day



2.  Study for Exam

Use this collaborative Google Doc to define key terms and recall plot elements from the works we've read. 


***REMEMBER:  You must take the Drama/Poetry Exam by 11:59 PM on Wednesday, April 30!!!



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Learning Tasks for Tuesday, April 29

Essential Question:  How are poetry and drama related?

Objectives:  I can...
-recall what I have learned about theatre and poetry this semester.
-define and apply terminology related to theatre and poetry.


1.  Writing into the Day



2.  Study for Exam

Use this collaborative Google Doc to define key terms and recall plot elements from the works we've read. 


***REMEMBER:  You must take the Drama/Poetry Exam by 11:59 PM on Wednesday, April 30!!!



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Learning Tasks for Wednesday, April 30

Essential Question: Why are public speaking skills crucial to success?

Objectives: I can...
-research an author that I have read this semester.
-plan and create an organized presentation.


1.  Writing into the Day




2.  Planning Oral Presentations



Your final project in your ENG 113 course is an oral presentation.
This presentation is worth 10% of your final grade.

Your task: To very briefly (5-7 minutes) present some aspect of the research you have done this semester. 

Instead of simply reading your paper, try to present an aspect of your research to the class. Did you encounter some interesting ideas that didn’t quite fit into your paper? A story about your author you’d like to share? Was your author a member of any larger artistic movement? 

Some helpful presentation guidelines:
  1. Make eye contact with your audience (i.e. the camera...).
  2. Speak up - Make certain your voice carries and is audible
  3. Speak slowly and clearly
  4. Avoid repetitive mannerisms and phrases. We all say things like "Uhhh," "Umm," or "You know?" from time to time, so just be mindful.
  5. Relax and smile -- Enjoy the time you have to share information about a topic with which you are very familiar (or just pretend you're Miss America).
  6. Practice before you present - Go through your presentation several times to become familiar and comfortable with the content.  We will practice in class before filming your submission.
  7. Intro/Conclusion - Develop a clear introduction and conclusion to your presentation.
  8. Visual aids - Practice with visual aids so that they will be a positive addition to your presentation, not a distraction.  I highly recommend Prezi or Haiku Deck!
  9. Stay on schedule. You must stay within the 5-7 minute time limit.
  10. Finally - Enjoy your presentation and have fun with it! Don't worry about being nervous; it's normal. Stop, take a breath, and begin a sentence or phrase again if you need to. It's okay! :)
REMEMBER!!!  With practice, your presentation will be THIS:

 

Not that...




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Learning Tasks for Thursday, May 1

Essential Question:  Why are public speaking skills crucial to success?

Objectives:  I can...
-research an author that I have read this semester.
-plan and create an organized presentation.


1.  Writing into the Day





2.  Oral Presentations


See post for Wednesday, April 30.

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Learning Tasks for Friday, May 2

Essential Question:  Why are public speaking skills crucial to success?

Objectives:  I can...
-research an author that I have read this semester.
-plan and create an organized presentation.



1.  Writing into the Day






2.  Oral Presentations



See post for Wednesday, April 30.

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Monday, April 21, 2014

Drama 3 and Exam

Learning Tasks for Tuesday, April 22

Essential Question:  How is theatre relevant to real-life?

Objectives:  I can...
-identify elements of theatre in Chekhov's The Bear.
-analyze the plot of Chekhov's The Bear

1.  Writing into the Day




2. Reading
Together, we will read through and discuss Anton Chekhov's play, The Bear.





Learning Tasks for Wednesday, April 23

Essential Question:   How is theatre relevant to real-life?

Objectives:  I can...
-analyze the use of dramatic elements in Chekhov's The Bear.
-recall plot details from Chekhov's The Bear.

1.  Writing into the Day

“In order to feel comfortable among educated people, to be at home and happy with them, one must be cultured to a certain extent.” -Anton Chekhov

What does it mean to be cultured?








2. Reading
Together, we will read through and discuss Anton Chekhov's play, The Bear.




3.  Quiz
Log into Blackboard and take a brief quiz on The Bear.  The quiz has five multiple choice questions and a five-minute time limit.



Learning Tasks for Thursday, April 24

Essential Question:  What elements do poetry and theatre have in common?

Objectives:  I can...
-recall what I have learned about theatre and poetry this semester.
-define and apply terminology related to theatre and poetry.

1. Writing into the Day


2.  Study for Exam


Use this collaborative Google Doc to define key terms and recall plot elements from the works we've read.


***REMEMBER:  You must take the Drama/Poetry Exam by 11:59 PM on Wednesday, April 30!!!

Learning Tasks for Friday, April 25

Essential Question:  What elements do poetry and theatre have in common?

Objectives:  I can...
-recall what I have learned about theatre and poetry this semester.
-define and apply terminology related to theatre and poetry.

1.  Writing into the Day





2.  Study for Exam

Use this collaborative Google Doc to define key terms and recall plot elements from the works we've read. 


***REMEMBER:  You must take the Drama/Poetry Exam by 11:59 PM on Wednesday, April 30!!!

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Drama 2 & 3

Learning Tasks for Monday, April 14

Essential Question:  Are Shakespeare's plays still relevant?

Objectives:  I can...
-identify the themes and plot elements of Hamlet.
-rewrite Hamlet as a contemporary play.


1.  Writing into the Day
Hamlet repeatedly sees his father's ghost.  Do you believe in ghosts?  Why or why not?



2.  Assignment:  Rewriting Shakespeare
Choose one of the excerpts you have read from your textbook to paraphrase. You will paraphrase your chosen text into a contemporary script. In other words, you will rewrite the Shakespearean English into modern English. You should use the text annotation, a dictionary, and your summary to help you paraphrase the lines. Do not try to paraphrase in a word by word manner. Instead, look at the ideas that are conveyed, and try your best to get at the overall sense of the text.

Excerpts (choose just one):
  • Act I, scene ii: Hamlet, the Queen, and the King, lines 64-160.
  • Act I, scene ii: Horatio, Marcellus, Barnardo, and Hamlet, lines 165-255.
  • Act I, scene iii: Laertes and Ophelia, lines 1-54.
  • Act III, scene i: Hamlet and Ophelia, lines 56-161.
  • Act IV, scene vii: Laertes, the messenger, and the King, lines 1-89.
  • Act IV, scene vii: Laertes and the King, lines 75-195.
  • Act V, scene i:  Hamlet, the Gravedigger, and Horatio, lines 61-201
  • Act V, scene i: Hamlet, Laertes, the Doctor, the Queen, the King, and Horatio, ll. 207-343.

Awesome comic versions of Shakespeare's plays. Which one is your favorite?



A useful infographic that keeps track of all of Shakespeare's deaths for you.


Learning Tasks for Tuesday, April 15

GOOD LUCK ON THE... ehh, I'm not even going to jinx it.




Learning Tasks for Wednesday, April 16

Essential Question:  In what ways does theatre offer insight into real life?

Objectives:  I can...
-identify the necessary elements of theatre.
-analyze the plot of a play.

1.  Writing into the Day
Create a pie chart illustrating what YOU do.




2. Assignment:  Rewriting Shakespeare
Continue working on your play!  We will share our finished products with each other once we're finished.


FYI:  Benedict Cumberbatch to play Hamlet on stage in London


Learning Tasks for Thursday, April 17

Essential Question:  In what ways does theatre offer insight into real life?

Objectives: I can...

-compare dramatic conventions of tragedy and comedy.
-analyze plot devices used in Chekhov's The Bear.

1. Writing into the Day



2.  Lecture Notes
Together, we will read through and discuss the Lecture Notes posted in Blackboard.

3. Reading
Together, we will read through and discuss Anton Chekhov's play, The Bear.  Enjoy the light-hearted nature of this play after a long week of Hamlet!


Sunday, April 6, 2014

Drama 1 & 2

Learning Tasks for Monday, April 7

Essential Question:  In what ways does theatre offer insight into real life?

Objectives:  I can...
-identify the necessary elements of theatre.
-analyze the plot of a play.

1.  Writing into the Day
Is theatre important? Why or why not?

2. Reading
Together, we will read and discuss A Doll's House by Henrik Ibsen.




3. Homework
Finish reading A Doll's House and answer the following questions in your Word Doc:

Act III
1. Why is Kristine willing to “risk everything” for Krogstad?
2. Why does Kristine encourage Krogstad to let Torvald read the letter revealing Nora’s deception?
3. Dr. Rank suggests Nora should go to the next masquerade dressed as “Charmed Life,” and that she should dress “just as she looks every day.” What is the implication about Nora’s daily life? Is it charmed? Or is the charm a masquerade? Explain.
4. Discuss the irony in Torvald’s accusation that Nora has played with him “like a puppet.”
5. Helmer’s pronouncement that “before all else, (Nora is) a wife and mother” is contradicted by Nora’s “before all else, I’m a human being.” Is this issue significant today, or is it only a sign of Ibsen’s time? Explain.
6. Discuss Nora’s decision to leave her family. Is it truly the only way she can reclaim her identity and humanity?
7. The last sound the audience hears is the door slamming shut after Nora’s departure. Examine the theatrical, literary, and historical significance of this stage device.


Learning Tasks for Tuesday, April 8 and Wednesday, April 9

Essential Question:  In what ways does theatre offer insight into real life?

Objectives:  I can...
-identify the necessary elements of theatre.
-analyze the plot of a play.

1.  Writing into the Day
A Doll's House is full of references to puppets and playthings.  According to most critics, this theme is due to Ibsen's personal views on strict gender and social roles.  Do you think strict social roles are an issue in today's society?  Why or why not?



2. Quiz
You have 30 minutes to complete the Doll's House quiz in Blackboard.

3.  Discussion Board:  Task Two

Choose one of the following discussion questions to answer on the Task 2 discussion board. Your answer should be at least 100 words long. Respond thoughtfully to a classmate’s post.

1. Defend or support Torvald’s beliefs about moral corruption and heredity.
2. Is Nora’s decision to leave her husband and children acceptable? Explain.
3. When Nora submits to Torvald, telling him, “Whatever you do is always right,” Torvald replies, “Now my little lark’s talking like a human being.” But later, Nora says “Before all else, I’m a human being.” Compare and contrast Torvald’s and Nora’s definitions of “human being.”
4. Many Ibsen critics argue that A Doll’s House is not a feminist play, and is more about asserting self, regardless of gender. Yet Joan Templeton, in her afterword to the Signet Classics edition of Ibsen: Four Major Plays Volume I, disagrees, asserting that “Make (Nora) a man, and the play becomes not only ludicrous, but impossible.” What do you think? Is A Doll’s House a play about feminism or humanism? Explain.
5. At the end of the play, Nora slams the door to the “doll house” and walks away. Yet she leaves Torvald with hope for “the greatest miracle.” Why did Ibsen write an ambiguous ending? Cite evidence from Nora’s and Torvald’s closing speeches to indicate what you believe to be the ultimate ending to this drama.




4.  Discussion Board:  Task Three

In A Doll’s House, Nora is referred to by a number of nicknames such as, “little lark,” “squirrel,” “spendthrift,” and “sweet tooth.” Nora refers to her husband as “darling” and “dear.”


Brainstorm nicknames or pet names currently used when talking about men and women. Post at least five for each to the Task 3 discussion board.  Then write a second post noting any commonalities, trends or patterns you see after reading through your classmates’ posts. For instance, are the nicknames used for one gender more condescending than the other? Is one set more physically oriented? Is one more comparable to children? Or are both sets equal?



Learning Tasks for Thursday, April 10

Essential Question:  Are Shakespeare's plays still relevant?

Objectives:  I can...
-identify the themes and plot elements of Hamlet.
-make connections between the play and context of Hamlet.

1. Writing into the Day
Bottom line:  Shakespeare's tragedies are about terrible, terrible things.  Think of a time when you first became aware of a dark or evil side in the world.  How has that experience shaped or changed you? 




2.  Reading #1
Together, we will read through and discuss the Lecture Notes posted in Blackboard.

3. Reading #2
Together, we will read through and discuss Shakespeare's Hamlet.  Remember- we are reading the summary version in Blackboard, not the entire play!






Learning Tasks for Friday, April 11

Essential Question:  Are Shakespeare's plays still relevant?

Objectives:  I can...
-identify the themes and plot elements of Hamlet.
-rewrite Hamlet as a contemporary play.

1.  Writing into the Day
A tragic hero traditionally has a tragic flaw, some failing in his character that brings about his downfall.  What would you say your tragic flaw is?  It could be something serious OR silly (saaaay, an addition to pizza and Netflix). 



2. Reading
Together, we will read through and discuss Shakespeare's Hamlet.  Remember- we are reading the summary version in Blackboard, not the entire play!

3.  Assignment:  Rewriting Shakespeare
Choose one of the excerpts you have read from your textbook to paraphrase. You will paraphrase your chosen text into a contemporary script. In other words, you will rewrite the Shakespearean English into modern English. You should use the text annotation, a dictionary, and your summary to help you paraphrase the lines. Do not try to paraphrase in a word by word manner. Instead, look at the ideas that are conveyed, and try your best to get at the overall sense of the text.

Excerpts (choose just one):

  • Act I, scene ii: Hamlet, the Queen, and the King, lines 64-160.
  • Act I, scene ii: Horatio, Marcellus, Barnardo, and Hamlet, lines 165-255.
  • Act I, scene iii: Laertes and Ophelia, lines 1-54.
  • Act III, scene i: Hamlet and Ophelia, lines 56-161.
  • Act IV, scene vii: Laertes, the messenger, and the King, lines 1-89.
  • Act IV, scene vii: Laertes and the King, lines 75-195.
  • Act V, scene i:  Hamlet, the Gravedigger, and Horatio, lines 61-201
  • Act V, scene i: Hamlet, Laertes, the Doctor, the Queen, the King, and Horatio, ll. 207-343.