Sunday, September 18, 2016

September 19, 2016 - September 23, 2016 9th Grade English; "The Most Dangerous Game"














Monday, September 19th
"The Most Dangerous Game" vocabulary packet
Begin reading "The Most Dangerous Game"


Silent Sustained Reading:
Please bring your AR book to class every day this week.
You will have the opportunity to read your AR book for a few minutes in class each day.

How to Do Your Reading Log:

Your name – upper right hand corner
Class period – upper right corner underneath name

Title of the book and author on the first line of the paper.
To the left, please write the page numbers you read, from where you started to where you stopped during each reading session.

A brief synopsis (summary) of what you read.
Plus a brief comment.
A prediction

Example of How to Do the AR Reading Log: 

Lord Loss by Darren Shan

Shianne:
Pages 1 – 10: Grubbs is a young student who got caught smoking cigarettes at school. He is now in the principal’s office with his mother. His mother is yelling at the principal for allowing this to happen. Grubbs goes with his mother who continues yelling at him, and he knows he’s really in trouble, when she says, “Just wait until your father comes home!”
Comment: Oh, he’s in trouble, now! I honestly think cigarettes are far worse than pot.
Prediction: I think he’s going to get grounded.

There should be a minimum of five entries per AR book.

The final day to turn in your reading log and the AR test for your current AR book is Monday, October 17th.

Read “The Most Dangerous Game”, pages 4 – 5. Stopped at the paragraph break in the right column of page 5.



Tuesday, September 20th: 
Silent Sustained Reading
Reading log of what you have just read in your AR book. Refer above to how to do your reading logs. 
Continue reading "The Most Dangerous Game"
Discussion of exposition
Theme



Wednesday, September 21st: 

"The Most Dangerous Game"

Pages 5, 6, 7
Pair up, look for the following information and write in your new reading log the following information:
The description of the setting
What is the mood of the story. Look for words that set up the mood.
1.     “The old charts call it Ship-Trap Island.” (page 5)
2.     “Sailors have a curious dread of the place….Some superstition.” (page 5)
Carolina and Jennifer:
Page 6
“Even cannibals wouldn’t live in such a godforsaken place.”
Onyx and Rachel:
Page 5
“…dank tropical night was palpable as it pressed its thick warm blackness in upon the yacht.”
Shianne and Odalys:
Page 6
“There was no breeze. The sea was as flat as a plate glass window."

Sofia and Gina:
Page 6
“This place has an evil name among sea-faring men.”

Jasmin and Pauline:
Page 6:
“Even that tough minded old Swede  who’d go up to the devil himself and ask him for a light...had a strange look in his eyes....”

Page 6: 
Maricarmen and Maiya
"This place has a reputation. A bad one.”

Samantha and Malia
Page 6:
“Sometimes I think evil is a tangible thing – with wave lengths, just as sound and light has.”

Kimberly and Mercedes:
Page 6
“An evil place can, so to speak, broadcast evil…”

Onyx and Rachel
Page 6
“…the muffled throb of the engine that drove the yacht swiftly through the darkness.”

Danny
Page 6
“Don’t you feel anything? – As if the air about us was actually poisonous?”

Julio:
Page 6
“What I felt was a sort of mental chill.”

Carolina and Jennifer
Page 6
It was so dark that he thought he could sleep without closing his eyes. "...the night would be my eyelids.”

Vocabulary:
Palpable: capable of being touched
Tangible: Real, material, touchable
Leering: To grin in a mocking, disrespectful way
Chateau: a country home
Palatial: having the qualities of a palace; large and splendid.
Gargoyle: A statue of a goblin or a demon placed on old churches, buildings, and mansion to scare away evil spirits.

Rainsford knocks on the door of the chateau. When the door opens a huge man is standing there holding a revolver straight at Rainsford’s chest.
What happens next?


Thursday, September 22nd: 
Silent Sustained Reading
Reading logs:
Summary, comment, prediction

“The Most Dangerous Game”
Readers:
Kate
Mercedes

Vocabulary:
Czar: a Russian word for king
Baron: it is a degree of royal rank. Just below a duke.

Summary:
Just as Ivan is about to pull the trigger to kill Rainsford, he suddenly stops and salutes. A very unusual man is descending the staircase in formal evening wear. His name is General Zaroff.

Zaroff tells Rainsford that Ivan is a Cossack - "A strong fellow but deaf and dumb (mute)."

Foreshadowing:
Samantha: something which references an event that is going to happen later in the story.

Zaroff  and Ivan are Cossacks, a group of people known for their fierceness on the battlefield, their skill as horsemen and their cruelty.  Zaroff invites Rainsford to dinner where he tells him he has grown bored with hunting.

Zaroff is very rich. The guest bedroom has a bed of “baronial splendor” – or worthy of a baron.  The suit laid out for Rainsford to wear is made by a tailor who makes clothes only for kings and princes. The table in the dining hall is long enough to seat forty men.  And the walls of the great dining hall are lined with animal heads……

Prediction: What do you think is going to happen next? 


Friday, September 23rd:

Silent Sustained Reading
Read log after reading: summary, comment, prediction

Read “The Most Dangerous Game”
Page 10
Right hand column, fourth paragraph; begin with “The general smiled.”

Vocabulary:

Surmounted: to overcome

Quarry: prey
Crimea: a peninsula south of Russian which juts into the Black Sea 
Caucasus: mountain range between southeastern Europe and western Asia.
Prolonged: extended 
Debacle: complete and total disaster; a failed mission 
The debacle Zaroff is referring to is the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917 in which the Czar, his government, and the ruling aristocracy were overthrown by people who set up a communist system of government which would redistribute the wealth to peasants. 
The War: World War 1, 1914 - 1918, was centered in Europe, and at the time one of the bloodiest wars in history. 
Monte Carlo: a gambling resort in the tiny country of Monaco on the Mediterranean Sea. 
The Ganges: a river in northern India and Bangladesh, thought to be sacred.
Imprudent: Unwise 
Condone: to allow an activity of dubious morality by saying nothing or doing nothing, thereby allowing it to occur.  
Quizically: mild amusement 
Naive: innocent; not knowing or understanding the ways of the world; looking at the world from the perspective of a child

Who does the general hunt?
Humans
What is General Zaroff’s attitude towards the men he hunts?
Carolina, “A thoroughbred or a thoroughbred dog is worth than these men.”
Samantha, “Scum of the earth.”
Jasmin, “Mongrels!”
How does he get these men on the island?
Onyx and Carolina:
He tricks them by making them think that there is a lighthouse where there is actually rocks.
Read from page 10 – 16; stopped on the right column, second paragraph – “He hummed a snatch of song from the Folies-Bergere.

Write a brief summary of what we have read, a comment, and a prediction.







Projecting into the future: 
"The Most Dangerous Game" packet will be due
"The Most Dangerous Game" test
Break into groups of four to construct "The Most Dangerous Game" board game

Projecting into the future:
"Can Animals Think?"
Write a persuasive essay on "Can Animals Think?"