Between now and 12/2, students are to finish reading and annotating the rest of "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings".
On or before 12/2, students are required to turn in a written and/or typed 2 page double spaced essay where they make a claim (thesis) about the book using 1 of the 6 critical theories we discussed this summer (and reviewed today 11/3). I have told students that if they struggle with coming up with their thesis statement, or anything in general, they are to email me. I will be checking my email at least once a day between now and when I see them next.
They must share their essay with me electronically before 12/2 OR come with a hard copy on 12/2 when they take their ISEE exam. I will be on site to collect it first thing in the morning, and I will grade them and give feedback on them while they take the exam. The essay will be 50 points.
Their annotations on the rest of the book will be checked on 12/9 when we have our final discussion on the book. The final annotations will be 30 points.
Additionally, I will be accepting bonus vocabulary squares from students on or before 12/9. Students were emailed their current grade this evening around 5pm (to their famefund.org email account), and they should understand what they need to accomplish to end this semester with an acceptable grade. If they are doing bonus vocabulary, they should be doing this using words they have not already done.
Please email me with questions.
Below are the PowerPoint slides from our Critical Theory review today.
Saturday, November 4, 2017
Saturday, October 28, 2017
Saturday, October 21, 2017
Due 10/28
Continue reading and annotating chapters 14-18 (also read chapter 18).
You will complete a vocabulary square for at least 8 words. As always, I encourage more. Even though you are looking for vocabulary, your annotations should be more than just circling unknown words.
Remember that I am starting to move over to the fameacademy.literacy@famefund.org email address, but if you send things to the other address, I will still get them for a few weeks.
Please message me with any questions.
You will complete a vocabulary square for at least 8 words. As always, I encourage more. Even though you are looking for vocabulary, your annotations should be more than just circling unknown words.
Remember that I am starting to move over to the fameacademy.literacy@famefund.org email address, but if you send things to the other address, I will still get them for a few weeks.
Please message me with any questions.
Saturday, October 14, 2017
Vocabulary Assignment Due 10/21
For chapters 7-13 I still want you to annotate as you normally would, but I want you to focus on vocabulary as an "after reading" assignment.
Go back through the reading and find the words you circled. I would like you to complete a "Vocabulary Four Square" for at least 8 words you didn't know (I encourage you to really do it for EVERY word you don't know...it can only help you). Please do not come to class and say there weren't words you didn't know...unless you are 100% confident that is true. To keep it fair, I plan to pull words I feel are newer to students in our group and give those words as a quiz to anyone who thinks they knew every word from the selection.
Below I have included the PowerPoint slides from our class where I showed what the Vocabulary Four Square is, gave an example of how to use a vocabulary word in the Vocabulary Four Square, and the words I pulled from chapters 1-6. Feel free to complete a Vocabulary Four Square for words you didn't know from chapters 1-6 as well...it can only help you to become more successful.
As always, email me with questions. I am going to be switching to the fameacademy.literacy@famefund.org email, but I will still be checking the fameacademy.literacy@gmail.com for a few more weeks until everyone is used to the change.
Go back through the reading and find the words you circled. I would like you to complete a "Vocabulary Four Square" for at least 8 words you didn't know (I encourage you to really do it for EVERY word you don't know...it can only help you). Please do not come to class and say there weren't words you didn't know...unless you are 100% confident that is true. To keep it fair, I plan to pull words I feel are newer to students in our group and give those words as a quiz to anyone who thinks they knew every word from the selection.
Below I have included the PowerPoint slides from our class where I showed what the Vocabulary Four Square is, gave an example of how to use a vocabulary word in the Vocabulary Four Square, and the words I pulled from chapters 1-6. Feel free to complete a Vocabulary Four Square for words you didn't know from chapters 1-6 as well...it can only help you to become more successful.
As always, email me with questions. I am going to be switching to the fameacademy.literacy@famefund.org email, but I will still be checking the fameacademy.literacy@gmail.com for a few more weeks until everyone is used to the change.
Thursday, October 5, 2017
Reading Schedule Fall 2017
This Saturday you will be getting your Fall books for Critical
Literacy, "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings". Below is your reading
schedule for this book.
October 14 - Chapters 1-6 (you must have read up to, AND including, Chapter 6 BEFORE this class)
October 21 - Chapters 7-13
October 28 - Chapters 14-18
November 4 - Chapters 19-23
November 11 - Classes Cancelled
December 2 - No class for ISEE exam
December 9 - Chapters 24-36
*As always, you MUST annotate as you read.
**You are welcome to work ahead, but I would recommend trying to keep pace with the course as I may assign you different tasks as you read different sections.
***If you read ahead, you should take more notes on the reading. It will not be acceptable for you to come to class and not participate because you "forget" details you read weeks ahead. You are responsible to make sure you are prepared.
Email me with questions.
October 14 - Chapters 1-6 (you must have read up to, AND including, Chapter 6 BEFORE this class)
October 21 - Chapters 7-13
October 28 - Chapters 14-18
November 4 - Chapters 19-23
November 11 - Classes Cancelled
December 2 - No class for ISEE exam
December 9 - Chapters 24-36
*As always, you MUST annotate as you read.
**You are welcome to work ahead, but I would recommend trying to keep pace with the course as I may assign you different tasks as you read different sections.
***If you read ahead, you should take more notes on the reading. It will not be acceptable for you to come to class and not participate because you "forget" details you read weeks ahead. You are responsible to make sure you are prepared.
Email me with questions.
Saturday, September 30, 2017
OBAMA Speech TDA and a few other announcements
Sometime BEFORE next Saturday morning (10/7), share your Obama Speech TDA with me at:
fameacademy.literacy@gmail.com
The text, without words cut off can be found at:
The video for the speech can be found at:
Please
remember that if you view/listen to the ENTIRE speech, your TDA should
still only be on the part of the speech you have been given on the link
above (which is the same amount of text you were given in class on 9/30)
Email me with questions.
**Please
don't forget that I still want your "Snow Cave" and "Sea Wolf" TDAs
turned in next time I see you. You should have marked the Points,
Evidence, and Analysis, as I showed you in class on 9/30. The next time I
will see you in person will be on Saturday, October 14. Please note
that your Obama TDA is due the week before this.
***I
am also hoping you will receive your Fall book very shortly. As soon as
I know you have them, I will post your reading schedule here. Please
understand that with the delay in receiving your books, you will be
expected to read more each week than I had planned, but it should still
be a very manageable expectation.
Thursday, July 20, 2017
Monologue Example
I’m Edmund from “The Chronicles of Narnia: the Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe”. In my story I entered a magical land that was under a spell of eternal winter with my siblings. I met a witch who promised me power, and I let the greed of potential power affect my reasoning. I betrayed my siblings by abandoning them and going to the witch with information about their whereabouts. I found out that my siblings and I were the saviors of the land that would help defeat the witch, and she wanted us dead. In the end I was saved by the great Aslan who made a deal with the witch to save me, and my siblings and I defeated the witch and her army to save Narnia. My character is said to be an allegory representation of Kane from the bible. Just like Kane, I taught readers a lesson in betrayal and showed that even the most innocent person is capable of causing harm. My story was also set in WWII, and showed the history of how parents would send children out of their home country to avoid the war. We study my story today because it is an engaging tale that puts a spin on a familiar religious story, and I feel that readers can learn from my mistakes. Despite the fantasy of my story, readers are able to relate to my family and me as children who seek their purpose in the world with some bumps along the way.
Wednesday, July 19, 2017
Thank You, Ma'm (Due Friday 7/21)
Click the following link to view your next text. Ignore the question and chart on the document, but answer the questions that follow the link after you have read.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BxMR2fnByMrIRER1R1RNU0JaTms/view?usp=sharing
1. Was Mrs. Jones’s treatment of the boy effective or foolish? Explain your answer.
2. Which character should have been more afraid of the other? Explain your answer.
3. What do you think is the most effective treatment for criminals? Explain.
4. Create a plot triangle for the story and label the exposition, rising actions, climax (turning point), falling actions, and resolution. Also, make a note of what conflict is driving this story forward.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BxMR2fnByMrIRER1R1RNU0JaTms/view?usp=sharing
1. Was Mrs. Jones’s treatment of the boy effective or foolish? Explain your answer.
2. Which character should have been more afraid of the other? Explain your answer.
3. What do you think is the most effective treatment for criminals? Explain.
4. Create a plot triangle for the story and label the exposition, rising actions, climax (turning point), falling actions, and resolution. Also, make a note of what conflict is driving this story forward.
Monday, July 17, 2017
Caged Bird Assignment (Due July 19)
Click the link below, download the document, and read the poems and answer the questions with them.
Complete this BEFORE class on Wednesday, July 19, 2017.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BxMR2fnByMrIU3J4dmdRSW1heGc/view?usp=sharing
Complete this BEFORE class on Wednesday, July 19, 2017.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BxMR2fnByMrIU3J4dmdRSW1heGc/view?usp=sharing
Monday, July 10, 2017
Monologue/Wax Museum Guidelines (Examples Coming Soon!)
Monologue/Wax Museum Project
Students
will be choosing a character or author from one of the first four books we read
this summer, and I will guide them through becoming that character/author in an
effort to educate their parents on what we learned from that character/author
in the book in which we met them.
Students
will write a monologue for their character/author based on these provided
guidelines, and on parent day at the end of the summer, they will dress like
their character/author to present their monologue. The goal is to have students
frozen as their character in a living wax museum. Parents will walk through the
museum and activate the wax figures to hear their informational monologue.
Monologue
requirements:
¨
Should be 60-90 seconds long
¨
Should have the character/author introduce
themselves and what book they are from
¨
Should contain a summary of what the character’s
role in the story was
o
For authors: contain a small summary of their
life that you learned through research
¨
Should inform listeners on what that
character/author taught us about history/humanity
Some examples:
o
Did they teach us the roles of women at a
certain time period?
o
Did they teach us about human nature, stages of
grief, etc?
o
Did they teach about a civil injustice in our
country or another?
¨
Should contain how that character would feel
about their issue in present day (are they shocked to see racism is still a
problem, that rights for women have come so far, etc.) This can tie into why it’s
important that we still study the book in present day.
o
If the book takes place in present day, explain
why it/the character is so noteworthy/relevant
¨
If your character was a symbol/allegory/etc.,
feel free to explain that in your monologue
Wednesday, July 5, 2017
Week 4 Reading Schedule
The Watsons
go to Birmingham (the chapters listed on each day must be read before our class
period on the days they are listed for)
7/10
Chapters 1-4
7/11
Chapters 5-7 (JOURNALS DUE THIS DAY)
7/12 Chapters
8-9
7/13
Chapters 10-11
7/14
Chapters 12-15 & EpilogueThursday, June 29, 2017
Week 3 Reading Schedule
Journals are
due on 7/5 this week...click here to review the journal guidelines.
Bad Boy (the pages must be completed before
class on the date they are listed for)
7/3 pages
1-64
7/4 July 4th
No Classes
7/5 pages 65-129
7/6 pages
130-164
7/7 pages
165-206Thursday, June 22, 2017
Week 2 Reading Schedule
Journals are
due on 6/26 this week.
By 6/26 you
are to have finished “A Long Walk to Water.” I would suggest reading this on
the evening of 6/23 (25 pages) and then following the reading schedule below
for your next book.
Lord of the Flies (the chapters must be
completed before class on the date they are listed for)
6/27
chapters 1-5 (87 pages)…if you read on 6/24, 6/25, and 6/26, you’re only
reading about 29 pages per day.
6/28
chapters 6-7 (28 pages)
6/29 chapters
8-9 (30 pages)
6/30
chapters 10-12 (47 pages)Wednesday, June 14, 2017
A Long Walk to Water Reading Schedule
The pages for each assigned day must be read by the
beginning of our class on that day.
A Long Walk to Water
6/21 Pages 1-32
6/22 Pages 33-63
6/23 Pages 64-89
6/26 Pages 90-115Due to the cancellation of classes on 6/19, you will have to finish this week's book and start next week's book over this weekend of 6/24-6/25.
2017 Grade 7 Weekly Reading List
*A detailed
list will be posted for the pages due each day each Friday for the following
week*
Week 1: A
Long Walk to Water
Week 2: Lord of the Flies
Week 3: Bad
Boy: A Memoir
Week 4: The
Watsons Go to Birmingham-1963
Weeks 5-6:
Brothers and Keepers
Annotations
As you read:
·
Circle unknown vocabulary words
·
Underline/highlight powerful phrases or sections
·
Record responses to ideas
·
Record your reactions to sections
·
Pose questions to clarify text meanings
·
Pose questions to further class discussions
*Annotations can be done INSIDE of your books as I will be looking at
your annotations to ensure you have read.
Journals
·
One journal entry is due per week.
·
Tuesday is the day journal
entries are due by the start of your class period.
·
Look at the “How to Write an Independent Reading
Journal Entry” for guidance.
2017 Summer Critical Literacy Syllabus
FAME Academy Critical Literacy
Summer 2017
Mr. Krupitzer
Course
Description
At
the Intermediate level students demonstrate their ability to read challenging, complex
texts closely and cite multiple examples of specific evidence to support their
claims. They are able to recognize the interplay between setting, plot,
and characters and provide an objective summary of a text apart from their own
reaction to it. They are adept at stepping back to compare and contrast
different interpretations of a topic, identifying how authors shape their
presentation of key information and choose to highlight certain facts over
others. Students trace how an argument develops within a text and assess the
validity of the evidence. They make their reasoning clear to their
listeners and readers and constructively evaluate others’ use of evidence while
offering several sources to back up their own claims. The use of vocabulary
has developed to the point where they distinguish between denotative and
connotative meaning and analyze the effect of specific word choice on
tone. As growing analyzers, students cite several sources of specific,
relevant evidence when supporting their own point of view about texts and
topics.
Grading
Procedure
Grades
will be based on the percent of total points earned from class assignments,
participation and effort.
Letter
grades will be based on the standard grading scale:
90 – 100% = A
80 – 89% = B
70 –
79% = C
60 – 69% = D
50 – 59% = F
Attendance and participation in class
are essential. Participation includes being in class on time, taking part in
class discussions, and working on assignments productively. Homework will be
assigned due to the rigorous and condensed nature of the course.
Assignments are to be completed on time.
Late assignments will not be accepted. Grades will be
posted at the middle and end of the course. Students are expected to stay one
top of their assignments.
Assignments/Participation
Assignments
will be turned in to the teacher in class or via Google docs; depending on
where the students are to work on their assignment. The book that is being read
is expected to be in class each day with the annotations that prove students
have read. Critical Literacy is a student
driven course. Students are required to do the necessary work to drive this
course forward. Journal entries are due once per week: at the start
of class on Tuesdays.
Academic Integrity
Students are encouraged to help one another to
enhance the overall learning experience. However, cheating, copying, and
plagiarism, are all against school rules, and will result in an automatic zero
for the assignment. This includes copying another student’s work and passing it
off as your own, allowing another student to pass off your work as their own,
having someone else complete an assignment, and finding work from the internet
and passing it off as your own.
Class
Expectations
Students are expected to bring their notebook,
computer, pencil, homework and current reading book to each class. Students are
expected to stay in a seat unless given permission to move in the classroom,
and through our discussions of literature students are to listen and share in a
respectful manner. Students are expected to share ideas and participate to
ensure the class is modeled after student ideas.
Technology
As
stated in the FAME handbook, cell phones are not permitted to be on or used
during the school day. If you are caught using your cell phone, you will be
asked to leave. Your laptop computers should be used for school purposes ONLY
during class. Social media, cameras, and video are not permitted during class
unless approved for academic purposes.
Final Assessment
Students
will be receiving instructions for their monologue/wax museum project
early
this summer, so they can begin to plan accordingly. In short, students
will be
picking a character or author we have studied this summer, dressing up
like
that character/author, and writing, memorizing, and performing a
monologue as
that character/author. We will work on the actual monologues in weeks 5
and 6,
and the plan is for students to create a wax museum on Family Day at the
end of
the summer. More information to come. The recitation of the monologues
will be
informal (in front of small groups, not large crowds). Also note that
this is not an acting challenge. Students will be graded on the
content/written monologue, not how they acted the role, however students
must speak clearly and audibly. This project is being used to fulfill
the speaking/listening standards for English Language Arts in
Pennsylvania.
How to reach the teacher:
E-mail: fameacademy.literacy@gmail.com
Blog Addresses for course
updates (updated daily)
Rising
7: famekrup7.blogspot.com
Rising
8: famekrup8.blogspot.com
Rising
9: famekrup9.blogspot.com
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