7-3 & 7-4. come in quietly—hope you had a great 4 day break! sit in you’re new seat. take...

19
February 19, 2013 7-3 & 7-4

Upload: branden-sherman

Post on 17-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

February 19, 20137-3 & 7-4

Page 2: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

FIRST TIHNG YOU DO. . Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day

break!

Sit in you’re new seat.

Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place your groups in 1 stack and one person in your group will turn them into the inbox.

Please take out you ELA notebook, binder and something to write with.

Page 3: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

Fact Vs. Fiction

1. Poetry must rhyme.2. There are no rules to poetry3. Poetry is never difficult to read or

understand.4. All poems contain a deep meaning.5. Poems are always beautiful.6. The purpose of all poetry is to

express an emotion.

This will be collected.

Page 4: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS

How does figurative language enhance a story or poems overall

effect?

Page 5: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

WE MUST BE ABLE TO. . ELACC7RL4: Determine the meaning

of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the impact of rhymes and other repetitions of sounds (e.g., alliteration) on specific verse or stanza of a poem or section of a story or drama.

Page 6: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

WORK SESSION Fact vs. Fiction Questions-Collect Briefly Go over Writing Fair Hand out Poetry worksheet. Watch

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ySqyQAs1XtM Go over rhyme, repetition, alliteration, rhyme

scheme, rhyming couplet. (Metaphor, onomatopoeia, personification, simile and imagery should be reviews.)

Give notes worksheet for student to take notes on. Students will individually read the 3 poems &

complete the questions. Students may begin working on writing for writing

fair

Page 7: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

Review on Sensory Langauge

Simile: Comparing 2 unlike things USING the words LIKE or As

Metaphor: Comparing 2 unlike things that DOES NOT contain LIKE or AS

Personification: A description that gives human qualities to an animal, object or idea.

Page 8: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

Review on Sensory Langauge

Form: The way a poems likes are laid out on the page. (length of lines: placement of lines or grouping of lines into stanzas.

Stanza: A group of 2 or more lines that form a unit in a poem. Stanzas may have the same number of lines or different number of lines.

Free Verse: Lines in poems that often flow more freely that those with a strict pattern of rhyme. They may sound more like everyday speech.

Page 9: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

Sound Devices-The Special Effects of Poetry

Rhyme-The repetition of sounds at the end of words, as in ME and SEE

Repetition- The use of a word, phrase, or line more than once.

Alliteration- The repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words, such as the C in curved crook

Page 10: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

RhymeThey came to tell your faults to me,They named them over one by one;I laughed aloud when they were done,I knew them all so well before,--Oh, they were blind, too blind to seeYour faults had made me love you more.

”Faults” By Sara Teasdale--Notice how the rhyme in this poem helps

to create a mood that is playful and upbeat, even though the poem addresses a serious subject.

Page 11: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

Repetition The use of a word, phrase, or line

more than once.How thin and sharp is the moon

tonight!How thin and sharp and ghostly whiteIs the slim curved crook of the moontonight!--Notice the repeated phrases help to

emphasize the moon’s shape.

Page 12: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

Alliteration The repetition of constant sounds at the

beginning of words.How thin and sharp is the moon tonight!How thin and sharp and ghostly whiteIs the slim curved crook of the moontonight!--Notice the repeated phrases and the

alliteration in the last line (curved crook) help to emphasize the moon’s shape.

Page 13: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

Alliteration Examples

Companies that use alliterations:• Coca-Cola, Best Buy, Dunkin’ Donuts,

PayPal, Bed Bath & Beyond

Famous People that have alliterations in their name:• Mickey Mouse, Marilym Monroe, Donald

Duck, Ronald Regan, Spongebob Squarepants, Lois Lane

Page 14: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

Rhyme Scheme A patter of END rhymes in a poem. A rhyme scheme is noted by

assigning a letter of the alphabet, beginning with a, to each line.

Lines that rhyme are given the same letter.

For example, lets look back at slide 10 to see the abbcac rhyme scheme.

Page 15: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

Rhyming Couplet A rhyming couplet is a type of rhyme

scheme. It is a stanza that consists of two

rhyming lines. The first line in a poem that uses

rhyming couples would have an aa rhyme scheme.

Page 16: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

Read The Poem: “Scaffolding” By: Seamus Heaney

Pg. 129 in Interactive Reader Circle the words in the first three stanzas

that rhyme. Then note the rhyme scheme by lettering the lines with]s a’s, b’s and so on.

What is the name of this rhyme scheme?

Analyze: Put a check mark next to the stanzas that describe a building. Put an X by the stanzas that describe a relationship.

In your own words, tell how building a wall and establishing a relationship are similar.

Page 17: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

Read The Poem: “The World Is Not A Pleasant Place To Be”

By: Nikki Giovanni

Pg: 130 Interactive Reader What line contains an example of an

alliteration?

Underline words and phrases that are repeated in this poem.

In your own words, tell what message this repetition helps communicate.

Page 18: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

Read The Poem: “Annabel Lee” By: Edgar Allen Poe

Pg: 131 Interactive Reader Underline the words repeated in line 7 and

the words repeated in line 9. What important idea does the repetition of

these words emphasize? According to the speaker, what did the

angels do? Why? Why might it be important for the speaker

to believe this? Line 27-33 using letters mark the rhyme

scheme. What feeling is created by rhyme,

repetition, and rhythm of these lines?

Page 19: 7-3 & 7-4.  Come in Quietly—Hope you had a great 4 day break!  Sit in you’re new seat.  Take out your vocabulary frayer models that are due today.-place

CLOSING1st: Please turn in your poem packet2nd: Ticket Out The Door! Answer the following questions

before you leave the room. 1. What is an alliteration? Give an

example2. What is a simile? Give an example3. What is a metaphor? Give an

example4. What is personification? Give an

example