Monday, December 12, 2016

Macbeth 5.1

Do now: “Not the perfect characters but the imperfect and evil characters make the deepest appeal; make, indeed, any kind of effective appeal to our imagination and to our moral sense.” Why do you think we often study evil or imperfect characters in English class?  Why do you think we are examining Macbeth and Lady Macbeth?

Objectives:
  • Read text aloud to help unpack meaning
  • analyze Macbeth’s change in character
  • annotate a passage in order to unpack meaning

Agenda:
  1. do now
  2. Act 3.1
  3. Close reading of Macbeth’s Act 3.1 soliloquy
    1. paraphrase by sentence (not by line)
    2. review the two previous speeches in the document: how has Macbeth’s character changed?  Identify textual evidence in the 3.1 soliloquy that demonstrates his changed character
  4. Imagery hunting
  5. Summarizer


HW: Finish annotating Macbeth’s 3.1 soliloquy.  Read Act 3 scenes 2 and 3

Friday, December 9, 2016

Macbeth 4.4

Macbeth 4.4
Do now: In table groups: Discuss Macduff’s line: “Confusion now hath made his masterpiece:/ Most sacrilegious murder hath broke ope/ The Lord’s anointed temple and stole thence/ The life o’th’building” (Act 2.3.76-9). What is being personified?  Paraphrase.

Objectives:
  • analyze figurative language in Act 2.3
  • examine Shakespeare’s use of the Ancient Greek drama technique of a chorus in Act 2.4
  • work effectively in book club groups
  • effectively track an image in the play

Agenda:
  1. do now
  2. table groups: discuss the importance of the following quotes (identify figurative language!) (5-7 minutes)
    1. “Had I but died an hour before this chance,/ I had lived a blessed time, for form this instant,/ There’s nothing serious in mortality” (2.3.107-9).
    2. “Where we are,/ There’s daggers in men’s smiles; the nea’er in blood,/ The nearer bloody” (2.3. 164-66).
3. Class: re-read Act 2.4
  1. why does Shakespeare include a random character (Old man)?
  2. what information do we learn from this short scene?  Anything new?  Why do you think Shakespeare includes this scene?
4. Book Club Groups- 1 mod
5. Imagery Groups- 1 mod
6. Summarizer


HW: Read Act 3.1

Thursday, December 8, 2016

Macbeth 4.2

Macbeth 4.2
Do now: Take out your Renaissance note taking sheet

Objectives:
  • identify the hierarchy of the Great Chain of Being
  • examine Shakespeare’s use of satire in the Porter’s scene


Agenda:
  1. do now
  2. ORB (GREEN ONLY)
  3. The Great Chain of Being Google Slides- discuss as class (5-10 minutes)
    1. in table groups: Why does Shakespeare focus on this? Consider: Macbeth was written for (and performed in front of) King James I.  (3-5 minutes)
  4. In table groups (10-15 minutes):
    1. re-read the Porter’s speech
    2. define satire (you can google it)
    3. list different people who could be “knocking”
    4. draw conclusions: what satirical commentary could the porter be giving about the types of people “knocking”?
    5. Why does Shakespeare include this speech? (consider concrete options as well as deeper-level suggestions)
  5. Summarizer

HW:



BLUE
GREEN
Tuesday
Read Act 2.3 and complete ONE imagery log entry
Read Act 2 scenes 1 and 2
Wednesday
Bring a printed copy of your TFA to class
Bring a printed copy of your TFA to class
Thursday
DROP
Read Act 2.3 and complete ONE imagery log entry
Friday
Read Act 2.4 and complete journal #4
Read Act 2.4 and complete journal #4

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

FOCUSED REVISIONS/ EMBEDDING DAY

FOCUSED REVISIONS/ EMBEDDING DAY
Do now: Take out your TFA essay

Objectives:
  • Use focused revision activities to help improve writing
  • Embed quotes to develop more concise, sophisticated analysis

Agenda:
  1. Do now
  2. ORB (BLUE ONLY)
  3. Why embed?  Look at sample.
  4. Take ONE body paragraph:
    1. Highlight quote in pink
    2. Highlight analysis in yellow
    3. CIRCLE the significant words from quote
    4. One back of paper, revise the quote/analysis to embed quote into analysis
  5. Passive Voice and Zombies
  6. Revise other body paragraphs
  7. Writing conference form
  8. Summarizer


HW: Writing conference sign-ups will be on my classroom door THURSDAY at 7:15AM. 3 students can sign up per free mod.Read Act 2.4 and complete journal #4 for FRIDAY.

Monday, December 5, 2016

Macbeth 4.1

Macbeth 4.1

Do now: Discuss the meaning of the quote with your group. Macbeth: “False face must hide what the false heart doth know.” (2-3 min)

Objectives:
  • analyze the dagger soliloquy for allusion (Hecate, Murder, wolves, King Tarquin)
  • examine how Macbeth’s imagination triggers mental torment
  • Identify biblical allusions in Macbeth

Agenda:
  1. do now
  2. Dagger soliloquy: Focused annotations (15 minutes):
    1. allusions to Hecate, Murder (personified), wolf, King Tarquin-- what effect does this produce?
    2. What textual evidence alerts us to the fact that Macbeth knows this is an illusion?  Why does he allow it to affect him so much?
    3. What shatters his illusion? How could this be significant?
  3. Table groups: “Whence is that knocking?”  (15 minutes)
    1. What is the mental state of both Lady Mac and Macbeth after the murder?
    2. What is the importance of the following: “Still it cried ‘Sleep no more!’ to all the house/ ‘Glamis hath murder’d sleep, and therefore Cawdor/ Shall sleep no more; Macbeth shall sleep no more.”
4. Biblical allusions: Read through the example for Act 2 scenes 1 and 2.  In socrative: why do you think Shakespeare includes these allusions? What effect does it produce?  (note: most of Shakespeare’s audience would recognize these allusions) (10 minutes)
5. TFA essays: Powerpoint overview, handback rubrics.  Discuss revision process!
5. Summarizer


HW:


BLUE
GREEN
Tuesday
Read Act 2.3 and complete ONE imagery log entry
Read Act 2 scenes 1 and 2
Wednesday
Bring a printed copy of your TFA to class
Bring a printed copy of your TFA to class
Thursday
DROP
Read Act 2.3 and complete ONE imagery log entry
Friday
Read Act 2.4 and complete journal #4
Read Act 2.4 and complete journal #4

Friday, December 2, 2016

Macbeth 3.4


Do now: Submit your top three choices for Imagery Groups (there are three separate questions!)

Objectives:
  • demonstrate mastery of understanding plot and character develop of Act One
  • work effectively as a group to identify an assigned literary device

Agenda:
  1. do now
  2. Put desks into rows
  3. Act One quiz
  4. Summarizer


HW: Read Act 2.1 and Act 2.2

Thursday, December 1, 2016

Macbeth 3.3 BLUE: Wednesday GREEN: Thursday

Do now: Download the "Santiago Imagery Log Directions" document to notability.  Read through the directions.


Objective:
  • identify the required elements of the imagery log assignment
  • list their choices of image to trace in the play
  • actively watch a filmed performance of Macbeth and analyze the director’s choices
  • identify Shakespeare’s use of juxtaposition in Act one

Agenda:
  1. do now
  2. Review the imagery log assignment
  3. ORB
  4. Review the format of the Act One quiz (which will be on FRIDAY)
  5. Begin journal assignment #3
    6. Watch film
    7. Summarizer

HW: You will submit your top 3 choices for image groups on FRIDAY. FOR FRIDAY: Act One quiz