dol the trans-siberian orchestra to i sounds like harmoniously music? who will andy and him get...
TRANSCRIPT
DOL
The Trans-Siberian orchestra to I sounds like harmoniously music?
who will andy and him get dinner for this evening.
HOMEWORKRemember parts of speech are the names of each type of word. Syntax is grammar, which includes parts of speech, but analyzing syntax is more complex than identifying parts of speech.
HOMEWORK
Vocab Cards 6 Complete the right column of a 3-Column
analysis of Vultures by Chinua Achebe Read The House on Mango Street DUE 11/14
VOCAB QUIZ 5Good luck!
VOCAB QUIZ 5
#28 #23
VOCAB QUIZ 5
21.B22.J23.H24.E25.I26.F27.A28.D29.C30.G
11.J12.G13.F14.A15.I16.D17.H18.E19.C20.B
1. B2. H3. F4. I5. J6. G7. E8. D9. C10.A
METACOGNITION:3-COLUMN ANALYSIS
3 areas of focus when analyzing a poem: Column 1: What the poet says
Column 2: What the poet does
Column 3: What the poet implies
COLUMN 1: WHAT THE POET SAYS
Reading for literal meaning Speaker and point of view
Characters
Setting
Situation
Conflict
Do not make inferences at this stage!
COLUMN 1: WHAT THE POET SAYS
Reading for literal meaning Speaker and point of view
Who is the author? Are they in the poem? Theodore Roethke, man, poet, the little boy
Characters Who is in the poem? Papa, son, mother
COLUMN 1: WHAT THE POET SAYS
Reading for literal meaning Setting
Where is the poem?
In a house, in a kitchen, right before bedtime
Situation What are the characters doing?/What is happening to the
characters?
Father and son are dancing a waltz, mother is watching, then father takes the boy to bed
COLUMN 1: WHAT THE POET SAYS
Reading for literal meaning Conflict
What tension is resolved (or shown)?
Possible dangers of the waltz that the father and son are doing
COLUMN 2: WHAT THE POET DOES
What the poet does—reading for writing strategies Diction
Syntax
Mechanics
Imagery
Figurative Language
Tone/Mood
Meter
COLUMN 2: WHAT THE POET DOES
Analyze My Papa’s Waltz for syntax by identifying parts of speech.
Make lists of each type of word in your notebook: nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives
COLUMN 3: WHAT THE POET IMPLIES
Making inferences and drawing conclusions Draw conclusions about why the author uses certain strategies
based on the literal content.
Make assertions about what the ultimate effects or learnings are for the reader
What is this poem about? Why do you think what you think?
VULTURESBy Chinua Achebe
VULTURES
Vocab you may need Despondent (adj)—showing profound hopelessness or gloom
Harbingers (n)—messengers that go before something (often something negative)
Gorge (v)—to stuff with food
Telescopic (adj)—a face or the expression on a face
Charnel-house (n)—a place where the bodies or bones of the dead are deposited
Fumes (n)—odors or scents
Offspring (n)—something’s child
Providence (n)—fate or luck
Perpetuity (n)—eternity, an endless existence
VULTURES
…A German officer lodged in the Kahns' house
across the street from us. We were told he was a charming man,
calm, likable, and polite. Three days after he moved in, he
brought Mrs. Kahn a box of chocolates. The optimists were jubilant:
"Well? What did we tell you? You wouldn't believe us. There
they are, your Germans. What do you say now? Where is their famous cruelty?”
The Germans were already in our town, the Fascists were already
in power, the verdict was already out—and the Jews of Sighet were still smiling…
From Night by Elie Wiesel
VULTURES: WHAT THE POET SAYS
Take notes on the literal meaning of Vultures. Consider: Speaker and point of view
Characters
Setting
Situation
Conflict
Do not make inferences at this stage!
VULTURES: WHAT THE POET DOES
Analyze Vultures for syntax by identifying parts of speech and syntax features
Make lists of each type of word in your notebook: nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives
Make a list of syntax features in your notebook
VULTURES: WHAT THE POET IMPLIES
Homework: Draw conclusions about why the author uses certain strategies
based on the literal content.
Make assertions about what the ultimate effects or learnings are for the reader
What is this poem about?
Why do you think what you think?