Friday 30 December 2016

January 9th

Today you need to continue to memorize your poem for the POETRY OUT LOUD competition.  

The POL competition is on Wednesday 1/19 at 6 pm on the school stage.  This is a requirement.  You must have a poem memorized and ready to perform.  This is also an easy grade:

50 points for the memorization
30 points for showing up to the performance
20 points for the acting of the poem.

The winner of POL receives a $50 gift certificate to Radio Shack and has a chance to go the State Championship in March.

Here is a link to the POL judging guidelines
This rubric is also how you will be graded on the "acting" portion.

Poetry Out Loud website can be found here

Tips for performance can be found here


Unit Learning goal: Students will demonstrate an understanding of Hamlet by choosing a prompt from below, developing a thesis statement out of it, and answering the thesis statement by analyzing and using direct evidence from the text.  



QUESTIONS TO DEVELOP THESIS STATEMENTS ABOUT AND ANSWER


  1. Polonius is sometimes played as a senile old fool, sometimes as a shrewd and worldly old man.  Which interpretation do you agree with and why?
  2. Pick one character who could, at some point, have changed the whole chain of events.  Discuss.
  3. Analyze the three appearances of the ghost seen in the play.  Where did he appear; to whom did he appear?  How does the third appearance differ from the first two?  What is the significance of this?
  4. Discuss the reasons for Hamlet’s apparent delay in seeking revenge for his father.  What is your opinion regarding his procrastination?
  5. Compare and contrast Hamlet, Laertes, and Fortinbras as avengers.
  6. What is Hamlet’s attitude towards life and people?  How does it affect his actions?
  7. Apply the following quote to Hamlet: “A man who wishes to make a profession of goodness in everything must necessarily come to grief among so many who are not good.  Therefore, it is necessary for a prince, who wishes to maintain himself, to learn how to not to be good, and to use this knowledge and not use it, according to the necessity of the case.”  -- THE PRINCE, Machiavelli
  8. Examine the reoccurring pun on sun and son.  How does this symbol work in the overall meaning of the play.
  9. Was Ophelia pregnant with Hamlet’s child?
  10. Did Hamlet slip into madness?
  11. It is Hamlet who causes the downfall of Denmark.
  12. What is the meaning of the pirates?
  13. Is Hamlet Jesus Christ?  How is Horatio either John the Baptist or an apostle.
  14. Why or how is Denmark the Garden of Eden?
  15. Gertrude knows about the murder?
  16. The meaning of prostitution in Hamlet?
  17. Can Hamlet be compared to our current society?  If so, how?
  18. Perhaps others—as we read or when we finish

    Scale/Rubric relating to learning goal:

    4 – The student is able to combine more than one question into a thesis statement, and answer it by evaluating the text and using specifics to back up his/her position.
    3 – The student can choose a question, develop it into a thesis statement, and analyze the text using specific evidence to back up their position.
    2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student can choose a question, develop it into a thesis statement, and analyze the text using specific evidence to back up their position.
    1 – Even with help from the teacher the student is unable to choose a question, or develop it into a thesis statement, and analyze the text using specific evidence to back up their position.





    Objectives (smaller chunks of overall goal) and suggested time periods

    OBJECTIVES:  At the end of this unit students will be able to

    Knowledge:

    1. List the five elements of tragedy
    2. List the five elements of a tragic hero
    3. Define theme, plot, setting, foreshadow, oxymoron, soliloquy, personification, dramatic foil, metaphor (direct, implied, extended), symbol, simile, pun
    4. Give the four elements of a sonnet and a brief description of traditional sonnet themes
    5. Define various vocabulary words from the play

          
    Comprehension:

    1. Identify a metaphor (direct, implied, extended), simile, pun or symbol within the play
    2. Identify the rhyme scheme of a English sonnet and break a sonnet into quatrains and couplets
    3. Give a brief description of all the characters and their roles in the play
    4. Given a line of dialogue identify the speaker

    1. Outline the plot and break in up into exposition, inciting event, rising action, climax, falling action and catastrophe (or resolution)
    2. Summarize each scene into a headline
    3. Answer various discussion questions and come to class prepared to discuss/jutify/argue answers in a group setting

    Application

    1. Demonstrate an understanding of a scene in a drawing
    2. Demonstrate a relation of characters to contemporary times through a simulation
    3. Demonstrate an understanding of characters and acting techniques by writing out a script (including the lines, subtext, emotion or tone, and blocking) and acting out the scene from memory
    4. Demonstrate an understanding of the play by writing journal entries and in-class writing assignments including a Dear Abbey Letter, interviews with citizens of Denmark, personal responses, and in-class presentations on characters.   
    5. Demonstrate an understanding of parts of the play by translation Shakespeare’s lines into contemporary English
    6. Write a poem or a rap about Hamlet
    7. Research a character: the different critical views and present findings to class

    Analysis

    1. Write a analysis paper on some element or question of Hamlet and present the paper to class as an
    oration
    1. Students will view different versions of the same scene and describe the interpretation of the characters
    And ideas that have taken by the actors/director.  
    1. Students will take a question and prepare an extemporaneous commentary speech based Hamlet.

    Synthesis

    1. Write a sonnet
    2. Write Shakespearean Insults

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