Whether or not you have romance in your life right now - I didn't at your age, unless you count secret, painful, unrequited crushes - I hope you feel loved and supported. We will celebrate Valentine's Day with a little candy and something from an American poet, in addition to continuing the argument unit, and the reading and discussions about gender.
MONDAY/TUESDAY: Journal warm-up. Valentine's Day poem. Discuss assigned reading as pairs, then with the whole group. "I Want a Wife" reading, analysis. Notes: fallacies in arguments (next 3). Small group challenge with the fallacies.
Due: Read and annotate "Professions for Women" (challenging) and "There is No Unmarked Woman," from the Gender Packet.
Read the next 10 pages of your independent reading book (up to page 25).
Read the next 10 pages of your independent reading book (up to page 25).
Homework: Please read and annotate "A Challenge for Girls Today: Moving Beyond How Do I Look?" page 24-29 in the Gender Packet. Think about your own personal experiences and experiences with friends and family.
Study for the quiz on Thursday/Friday.
Study for the quiz on Thursday/Friday.
Due: n/a
Homework: (same as Monday) Please read and annotate "A Challenge for Girls Today: Moving Beyond How Do I Look?" page 24-29 in the Gender Packet. Think about your own personal experiences and experiences with friends and family.
Study for the quiz.
Study for the quiz.
THURSDAY/FRIDAY: Journal warm-up. Quiz covering vocab 16, grammar, fallacies, reading. Female body images in popular culture over time, depictions in current popular media - video and links, whole class discussion.
Due: Please read and annotate "A Challenge for Girls Today: Moving Beyond How Do I Look?" page 24-29 in the Gender Packet.
Please leave journals in the bin at the end of the period for points. Be sure you've either answered all of the warm-up questions, or marked the date and "absent" for each day.
Please leave journals in the bin at the end of the period for points. Be sure you've either answered all of the warm-up questions, or marked the date and "absent" for each day.
Homework: Please read another 20 pages in your independent reading book.
For next class, please write an outline (not the whole essay) to answer the following prompt. When brainstorming evidence and examples for your position, go for quality and variety if possible. I handed out a piece of paper with this prompt in class, but writing it on a separate piece of paper is fine:
For next class, please write an outline (not the whole essay) to answer the following prompt. When brainstorming evidence and examples for your position, go for quality and variety if possible. I handed out a piece of paper with this prompt in class, but writing it on a separate piece of paper is fine:
In
1891, Irish author Oscar Wilde (1854–1900) observed, “Disobedience, in
the eyes of anyone who has read history, is man’s original virtue. It is
through disobedience that progress has been made, through disobedience
and through rebellion.”
Wilde
claims that disobedience is a valuable human trait and that it promotes
social progress. Write an essay that argues your position on the
extent to which Wilde’s claims are valid. Use appropriate examples from
your reading, experience, or observations to support your argument.
Enjoy the three-day weekend!
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