1 / 8

Agenda, Homework, and Warm-up

Agenda, Homework, and Warm-up. On pgs. 36-37 write the date, copy the agenda, homework, and warm-up Agenda: Warm-up Finish Cornell Notes – pgs 4-17 American Lit Textbook Work on final draft of Summary/Response Period 5 – no class Assembly in MPR Homework:

Download Presentation

Agenda, Homework, and Warm-up

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Agenda, Homework, and Warm-up • On pgs. 36-37 write the date, copy the agenda, homework, and warm-up • Agenda: • Warm-up • Finish Cornell Notes –pgs 4-17 American Lit Textbook • Work on final draft of Summary/Response • Period 5 – no classAssembly in MPR • Homework: • Final Draft due Monday 9/15 • Written in neatly blue or black pen • Extra credit if typed neatly and/or turned in early 9/11 or 9/12

  2. WARM-UP • How do you think the internet has changed the way we write and read? • How do you think it has changed the way we learn?

  3. Cornell Notes-- Literary Movements Critical ViewpointsAcademic Vocabulary Pages 4-17 Literature

  4. Cornell Notes • On page 39 INB, continue taking Cornell Notes of Literary Movements and Critical Viewpoints • Only use page 39 INB. You may attach a separate sheet of paper if necessary

  5. Historical/Cultural Lens • What is the Historical/Cultural Lens? • Historical/cultural lens – focuses on how history and culture influenced the author and the writing. Key historical events provides context. • Key Questions • What was going on at the time the work was written? • What attitudes, trends, and priorities characterized the times? • How are key events and attitudes, and the author’s attitudes toward them, reflected in the writing?

  6. Historical/Cultural Lens • To understand the historical/cultural context, ask yourself these questions • What is the author’s purpose? How might his purpose affect the tone and choice of detail? • Who is the audience? How might the audience influence the writing? • What is the author’s perspective? How does the text reflect the author’s biases or viewpoints? • These questions are important to ask with both fiction and nonfiction

  7. Biographical Lens • What is the Biographical Lens? • Focuses on the author’s personal life • It considers heritage, experiences, economic circumstances ($$$) • Key Questions • What were some key events and people in the author’s life? • What were his social and economic circumstances? • Did culture or heritage shape his attitude?

  8. Other Lenses • Psychological • What motivations influence a character’s behavior? • Social • Political • Philosophical/moral • Are the character’s choices, behaviors, actions ethical (honest)?

More Related