JOURNAL TOPIC: [today's tunes: "War" by Edwin Starr; "Give Peace A Chance" by The Plastic Ono Band]
[Minute
of Mindfulness: Focus on a conflict-- within yourself, between yourself
and someone else, or between other people-- and ask what it would take
to resolve it. *Or, as always, you can think about nothing.]
Ever
since we read yesterday (and talked about the Rotary scholarship essay)
I've been thinking about conflict. Whatever else we learned from the
exposition, the author definitely gave us the idea that some things
don't seem to go together. Like whoever Gatsby really is and the
"great" version the epigraph recommends to anyone wanting the attention
of a lover. And what about the narrator? He seems like he goes against
his family's tradition to move to New York, where he doesn't fit in
with the millionaires-- and he even got the idea when he came back
from... World War I. What do you think of these conflicts? Do you
think they will matter in the book? Do you think they matter in life?
Please explain your answer.
-OR-
Choose a character or a moment in the book and describe
it like you’re telling a friend about something that happened at lunch.
This will tell me what gets your attention, what affects your mood as a
reader, and what you remember. (Obviously, it will also tell me what
you’ve read and understand.) When it comes to the characters and their
words and actions, be as judgmental as you want.
AGENDA:
1. Journal
2. Keep reading (as a class, in groups, or by yourself) and taking notes
3. You should be posting to your blog EVERY DAY now as part of your
routine. You can do this during the last part of the period if that
makes it easier. Please post your notes (title: GATSBY pages xx-xx).
(Don’t type “xx” — use the pages you/we read that day.) You can also post
about any Big Question work you’re doing and anything else you want to
share with your readers.
- Home
- Dr. Preston's off-campus website
- Member Blogs
- AP Exam Prompts
- KNOW YOUR RIGHTS
- The Socratic Method
- Richard Cory
- Train Your Brain Like a Memory Champion
- The Right to Your Opinion
- The Laughing Heart
- Conscience of a Hacker
- Vocabulary
- Literature Analysis (Fiction)
- "I Never Learned to Read!"
- Politics & The English Language
- Proposed Weekly Calendar
- The Earth on Turtle's Back
- Résumé Template
- List of Course Blog Posts
- Young Goodman Brown
- Dream Within a Dream
- How We Read
- The Art of Hosting Good Conversations Online
- The Pedestrian
- References Template
- Fall Semester Application Portfolio
- Ethos Pathos Logos Kairos
- The Road Not Taken
- On Self-Reliance
- Cover Letter Template
- Common Interview Questions
- Basic Essay Structure
- The Great Gatsby
- coronavirus/COVID-19
- Fahrenheit 451
- 2020 AP EXAM
- Final Projects
- Catch-22
Tuesday, February 4, 2020
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
LAST POST FOR THE SCHOOL YEAR/ june 3 w online meeting #50
What a year. As often as I say it, I still feel like I don't say it often enough: Thank you. Thank you for your effort, your insig...
-
Our minds are naturally inclined toward associative and interdisciplinary thinking. We connect the dots in all sorts of ways, often when w...
-
What was interesting to you about the book? What part did you enjoy reading? What technique did the author use that made you sit back and...
-
Hi Everyone, SMHS administrators are making a big effort to help every student connect with teachers. To support this, they are asking eac...
No comments:
Post a Comment