Wednesday, January 20, 2016

The Hero's Journey: Group Assignment



 “The Return of the Hero”


Assignment:
Working and collaborating as a group, you will create your own hero’s journey, using the structure of the monomyth as your template.

Pass out: “Group Effort Task Sheet”, “The Return of the Hero Graphics”,“The Return of the Hero Planning Sheet”

Break into groups! 
Brainstorm the theme, the setting, the characters (the protagonist and the antagonist), and the conflict! Write down your ideas! Be sure to use your notes, and the handouts you were given! 

Your Hero’s Journey should include the following:

 The Ordinary World
Protagonist
The Mentor
The Conflict
The Call to Adventure
The Threshold Guardians

The Special World
The Approach
The Cave
The Forest
The Belly of the Beast
The Betrayal
The Sacrifice
The Hunt
The Chase


The Return of the Hero
The Death
The Resurrection
The Elixir


Tuesday, January 19, 2016

January 19, 2016 - January 22, 2016 Weekly Schedule; Return of the Hero Group Assignment


















Tuesday, January 19th:
BIC
Sustained Silent Reading:
Remember to do your reading log: a summary, a commentary, and a prediction!
Due no later than March 25th!

“The Return of the Hero”
Passed out: “Group Effort Task Sheet”, “The Return of the Hero Graphics”,“The Return of the Hero Planning Sheet”

Break into groups! 
Brainstorm the theme, the setting, the characters (the protagonist and the antagonist), and the conflict! Write down your ideas! Be sure to use your notes, and the handouts you were given! 

Regina
Arath
Taylor
Natalie

Salome
Ki
Jennifer
Jelani
Michael

Anselmo
Stephanie
Jayla
Angie

Christian
Dalicia
Jonathan
Jasmine


Tomorrow, collect their Star Wars: The Hero’s Journey notes!

3rd Period: 

Passed out the “The Hero’s Journey Graphics”, “The Hero’s Journey Process Check List”, and “The Hero’s Journey Evaluation”
Went over all the handouts
Break into groups and begin working
Walked around and had conference with each group

Writing Groups:

Cooper
Nicole
Johan
Isabel

Timerica
Jonathan Alvarez
Arturo
Emily

Kristina
Mutasim
Tyron
Sharon

Amanda
Reyna
Jaynice
Josselyn

Tyler
Arisbeth
Yulma
Kimberly Lemus


Caterin
Lynn
Ashley
Paola

Procedure:

Everyone pitches ideas
Everyone writes down ideas
Initially, everyone must decide on the following:
Theme
Setting
Characters
Enemies
Conflict
Resolution
First Act or The “Ordinary World”
Setting
The Call to Action
The Refusal
The Acceptance
The Arrival of the Mentor
The Threshold Guardians

Wednesday, January 20th: 


BIC
Sustained Silent Reading
Reading Log!

1st Period:
Break into groups and continue working on “The Hero’s Journey”

Period 3:
Silent Sustained Reading
Reading Logs!

Break into groups and continue working on “The Hero’s Journey”

At this point you should have created the following:
the setting, the characters, the protagonist, the antagonist, the mentor, and the conflict.
I will have conferences with individual groups today.

Conferences:
 Timerica, Jonathan A., Emily, Arturo:
The Ordinary World:
The setting: Hell
Characters: Lileth, Satan,
Antagonist: Potrayis,
Conflict: Lileth’s job is to execute possessed souls and then to escort them to Hell.
Potrayis’ job is to escort them to Hell, but he snapped and let the souls escape to Earth. Satan, Lileth’s father has called upon her to bring the souls back to Hell.
Timerica is primarily doing the work.

Conference:
Ashley, Caterin, Lyn, Paulo
The Ordinary World:
The setting: North Pole
Characters: Reindeer, Mrs. Santa Claus, Mr. Claus, Elves
Protagonists: Elves
Antagonist: Santa
Conflict: To retaliate against Santa for hogging all the attention, while the Elves do all the work, the Elves send the toys to China. However, Mrs. Santa needs the toys and the Elves to return to the North Pole so the children of the world can get their toys so that she can have her baby.
Mentor: the reindeer
The reindeer tell the Elves that they have to deliver the presents so that they understand how hard Santa works.
Discussed requirements:

The ordinary home so it needs to start in the North Pole

Thursday, January 21st: 


Silent Sustained Reading
Please remember to make an entry in your reading log.
Please include the date, the page numbers, a brief summary, a comment, and a prediction.
The last day of turning in your second AR book is Friday, March 18th.

8:20 a.m.
Break into groups to work on your “Hero’s Journey” story
I will be meeting with individual groups

1st Period:

Conference with:
Jelani, Ki, Salome, Jennifer, Michael
Himbe is a young man with super powers on Planet Earth – India, to be exact. His father is English. His mother was into spiritual things – a priestess who died giving birth to him but who passed her powers on to her son.  Himbe’s father was shot in the head by enemies.  Himbe has nightmares about his father’s death. He talks to his parents through dreams. Himbe is in India as a child. His British foster parents, who knew Hembe’s parents, find him wandering in the alley as a two year old in India and they take him back with them to England.  Hembe doesn’t know he is adopted. Hembe is a regular kid living his regular kid life in England.  There are no other siblings. Nobody suspects his super powers. Hembe is a lonely kid without a lot of friends. Hembe has a special mark on his body.
Hembe’s enemies are the ones who shot his father and they are now looking for him, but they don’t know he is in England.

3rd Period:
Silent Sustained Reading
Reading Logs

Conference with:
Arisbeth, Kimberly
The Ordinary World
Setting: Hollywood High School
Protagonist: Tyler
Antagonist: Kimberly
Conflict: Both are auditioning for the same role.
Mentor: Arisbeth helps Tyler with the audition
Threshold Guardian: Yulma is Kimberly’s friend and tells him that the audition has been canceled.
After Kimberly tries to sabotage Tyler’s audition, he gets cast.
The Special World: Rehearsals and performance
Kimberly continues to sabotage Tyler’s rehearsals but he rises above it, and gives a brilliant performance, which is met by tremendous applause and a contract with an agent.
Return of the Hero: Tyler talks to his cast mates after the show and thanks Kimberly for helping him improve as a performer.

Conference with: 
 Reyna
Jay-nice
Amanda
Josselyn
The Ordinary World:
Setting: New York
Protagonist: a 17 year old girl named Khaleesi  who has skills! She knows how to fight, how to hunt, how to navigate
Conflict: Decides to go into the forest to reconnect herself with nature.  She is annoyed with her family because they do not want her to do the things she wants to do – hunting, fighting, etc.
Antagonist: An old man who does not want her to go into his territory, which is a forest. He is a misogynist!
Mentor: A spirit who speaks to her from the dead – perhaps her beloved grandmother.

1st Period: 


Friday, January 22nd:
BIC:
Silent Sustained Reading
Reading Log:
Please write the pages, a brief summary (remember to use nouns and avoid overusing pronouns), a comment (what do you think about what is going on in the book) and a prediction.

Break into groups and continue working on your story using “The Hero’s Journey” as a guide. You should now be working on the “Special World” or the second act of your story.  The entire story should be finished by Tuesday and we will begin presenting on Wednesday, January 27th.

Conference:
Anselmo Ko, Jayla, Angie, Stephanie:
The setting: the school
Protagonist: Jayla
Antagonist: Aliens
Conflict: Aliens want to abduct the four students and they want the students to battle each other (like The Hunger Games) in a forest.
Mentor: Angie
Angie wants the students to band together to fight the aliens rather than each other.
Call to Adventure:
Aliens arrive with a human leader. The human leader tells them that they have chosen four of the strongest students to battle to the death for the entertainment of the aliens.
The Special World is the forest on an alien planet.  The aliens have very fast transport ships which take only two hours to zoom across the universe.
The Sacred Grove: the forest which is populated by unicorns, and alien beasts. The Forest has a force field which has oxygen in it but also keeps the humans from escaping.
The human leader wears an oxygen tank so he can breathe. The students sabotage the tank, killing the human.
Angie mentors the students by telling them they need to band together to fight the aliens. The human leader wears an oxygen tank so he can breathe. The students sabotage the tank, killing the human.
Angie mentors the students by telling them they need to band together to fight the aliens.
The Aliens give them weapons to fight. 
In the Belly of the Beast: The students run away into a cave which is actually the belly of a giant slug.  They notice there is a peculiar smell and slime is dripping from the ceiling. Angie tells them to use the saber to cut a hole through the slug’s belly and escape.
The oxygen in the tanks are actually making the students crazy. Jayla takes off the mask and realizes she can breath the alien planet’s air.
The students are really hungry. Jayla sees a fruit and eats it, despite the other students screaming at her not to.

The students need to finish the story, which should include finishing the “Special World” (the students being chased by the aliens, getting to the ship, figuring out how to pilot the ship) and “The Return of the Hero” (landing back on earth and telling the earthlings about their experiences and what they learned – “Bringing the Elixir”).

Angie, Anselmo, Jayla, Stephanie’s group:
What they have to finish:
The Special World:
The students being chased by the aliens
The students reaching the ship
The students figuring out how to pilot the ship
The students’ flight back to Earth

The Hero’s Return:
The students landing on the earth
The students are changed by their experiences and share their new knowledge with the people of the world. 

The above must be finished by Monday. The entire story must be finished, including dialogue, by Tuesday. We will begin presenting on Wednesday, January 27th.

3rd Period:
Silent Sustained Reading
Reading Log:
Please write the pages, a brief summary (remember to use nouns and avoid overusing pronouns), a comment (what do you think about what is going on in the book) and a prediction.

Monday, February 1st:
Library to retake the Stars Test!

Break into groups and continue working on your story using “The Hero’s Journey” as a guide. You should now be working on the “Special World” or the second act of your story.  The entire story should be finished by Tuesday and we will begin presenting on Wednesday, January 27th. The story must include prose and dialogue.

Conference:
Kristina, Mutasim, Yubendi, Tyron
The Setting: Downtown LA
Protagonist: a scientist named Daniel; he is 5’6’’
Conflict: a cure for cancer which turns out to be a deadly virus named “A” Virus
Antagonist: Daniel’s friend, Michael, is Chinese out to destroy the U.S.
Daniel’s mother is the mentor and was a professor at Stanford in medicine. She has cancer and the “A” virus
Daniel graduated from college with a ph.d in medicine. His mom starts getting sick. They go to the hospital and find out that she has cancer, but there is no cure. And she has one month to live. Michael decides to work with Daniel to find a cure. The cure works on rats. They decide to sell it on the black market w/out FDA approval.
People use  it and begin to hallucinate, and get very sick, and die.
Special World: North Dakota – because it is the cleanest place in the U.S.
Michael, Daniel, and Daniel’s mother go to North Dakota because the virus hasn’t reached North Dakota, yet.
The C.I.A.  goes to North Dakota to find Michael, Daniel, and Daniel’s mother, Rosie.
The Sacred Grove or a forest:
Michael, Daniel, Rosie hide from the C.I.A. in a huge cavern where they build a huge laboratory inside.
Daniel realizes that he has the A virus so he uses the new antidote on himself.

They now need to do the following
Into the Belly of the Beast
The Hunt/Chase











Monday, January 18, 2016

Helpful Graphics for The Hero's Journey

The Hero's Journey: Group Assignment



The Planning Stage of The Hero's Journey

Procedure:

Everyone pitches ideas
Everyone writes down ideas
Initially, everyone must decide on the following:
Theme
Setting
Characters
Enemies
Conflict
Resolution

The First Act of The Hero's Journey: It Must Include the Following:
First Act or The “Ordinary World”
Setting
The Call to Action
The Refusal
The Acceptance
The Arrival of the Mentor
The Threshold Guardians

The Special World: The Second Act 
Crossing the Threshold 
Test, Allies, and Enemies
Approach
Ordeal
Reward

The Return of the Hero: The Third Act
The Road Back 
The Resurrection 
The Return with the Elixir (Elixir means knowledge of some sort)


Group Work: Tasks Accomplished and Grading Graphs

Your name:








Tasks You Accomplished:
Grade:
Name of Group Member:








Tasks S/He Accomplished:
Grade:
Name of Group Member:








Tasks S/He Accomplished:
Grade:
Name of Group Member:








Tasks S/He Accomplished:
Grade:
Name of Group Member:








Tasks S/He Accomplished:
Grade:


Monday, January 11, 2016

January 11, 2016 - January 15, 2016 Weekly Agenda for 9th Grade English

Monday, January 11th:

1st Period: 

BIC: passed out class schedules
Tomorrow, the reading logs, and the AR tests are due for the Winter Break class assignment.
The Hero’s Journey:

Star Wars Video
Up to "The Magic Talisman"

3rd Period:

Signed students in

Reminded people that the first AR assignment is due tomorrow. For new students, the AR assignment is due February 12th. 
The Hero's Journey
Up to "The Heralds'

Tuesday, January 12th: 

BIC: 

Silent Sustained Reading
First AR reading log and AR test are due today

1st Period: 

Passed out "The Hero's Journey" Outline
Showed "Star Wars Power Point up to "The Bad Motivator"
Reviewed: The Ordinary World, The Call of Adventure, The Refusal, Meeting with the Mentor, Crossing the Threshold

3rd Period: 

Passed out "The Hero's Journey" Outline
Showed "Star Wars Power Point up to "The Bad Motivator"
Reviewed: The Ordinary World, The Call of Adventure, The Refusal, Meeting with the Mentor, Crossing the Threshold

Wednesday, January 13th: 

BIC: 
Silent Sustained Reading 
Reading Log 

1st Period: 

Passed out and went over the 9th Grade English Syllabus
Showed the power point for “Star Wars: The Hero’s Journey”
Note Taking

3rd Period;

Passed out and went over the 9th Grade English Syllabus
Showed the power point for Star Wars: The Hero's Journey"
Note taking

Thursday, January 14th:

BIC
Silent Sustained Reading


Remember: For the Accelerated Reading Assignments, you must read an AR book (the book's binding has a sticker designating that it is an AR book) keep a reading log, and then take and pass the AR test.

You must read three (3) AR books.
The due dates for each one is:
Tuesday, January 12th
Friday, March 25th
Friday, May 6th
You may turn in the reading logs, and the tests at any time before the due dates.
If you select a non AR book, you can only do the reading log. There is not a test for a non AR book.
YOU WILL NOT GET AR CREDIT FOR A NON AR BOOK.
The non AR book can only be for extra credit.

First Period and Third Period:

Notes on "Star Wars: The Hero's Journey"

After the hero has experienced frightening ordeals, he or she then undergoes a death experience which causes her to transcend her former weaknesses. The death or near death of the hero, either a physical death or a metaphorical death,  causes him or her to enter a new life, stronger and wiser than before. 

The hero must leave the Special World with his treasure (the golden goblet from the dragon Smaugs’ lair in The Hobbit, for example) and return to the ordinary world. The journey back is fraught with danger and usually includes a chase to elude evil and to return to safety.

The hero returns home, back to the Ordinary World; however, due to the amazing experiences, trials, ordeals that he or she has undergone, the hero or heroine is a changed person – deeper, wiser, more mature, more aware.

The website that this information was taken from is www.starwarsintheclassroom.com

Assignment:

Break into a group of four, and using the format of the Hero’s Journey, create a story, complete with prose, dialogue, a hero/heroine, allies, enemies, and a goal – what is the hero or heroine fighting for or fighting against?  The main character must follow the path of the hero or heroine.  Examples you may follow are Star Wars, The Hobbit, Harry Potter, The Hunger Games, etc.

Divide up the story in to the following:
The Ordinary World
1.     The ordinary world
2.     The Call to Adventure
3.     The Refusal of the Call to Adventure
4.     The Meeting of the Mentor
5.     Crossing the Threshold
 The Special World
1.      Tests, Allies, and Enemies
2.      The Approach
3.      The Ordeal – does not have to include all of these
a.     Trials
                                                        i.     The Belly of the Beast
                                                       ii.     The Enchanted Forest
                                                     iii.     The Descent into the Cave
b.     Victory

Return of the Hero
1.     The Chase
2.     The Death
3.     Resurrection

Friday, January 15th: 

BIC
Silent Sustained Reading
You should be reading your second AR book now.
Please remember to do your reading log after reading.
The reading log should be a brief summary of what you have read, plus your comment (what do you think about what you have just read), and a prediction.
Please be sure to identify the characters by their names. Do not over use pronouns (he, she, they, ect. Identify who he, she, and they are.)
The last date you can turn in the second AR book is Friday, March 25th. Please do not wait until March 25th to turn it in.

1st Period:

“The Hero’s Journey”
The Special World:
In the Belly of the Whale
The Sacred Grove

(Skimmed over: The Mystical Marriage, Sacrifice, Betrayal, Confrontation and Denial.  The above elements of the Hero’s Journey in the Special World can be found on the website: www.starwarsintheclassroom, or one can google “The Hero’s Journey” and the first entry will be that website.

Got up to the third act of the Hero’s Journey, “The Return of the Hero”.

3rd: 


Silent Sustained Reading
Reading Log

The Hero’s Journey:
Went  over The Sacred Grove in detail
(Skimmed over: The Mystical Marriage, Sacrifice, Betrayal, Confrontation and Denial.  The above elements of the Hero’s Journey in the Special World can be found on the website: www.starwarsintheclassroom, or one can google “The Hero’s Journey” and the first entry will be that website.

The Hero’s Return:
The Chase
Victory
Death

Transformation


Writing Groups:

Cooper
Nicole
Johan
Isabel

Timerica
Jonathan Alvarez
Arturo
Emily

Kristina
Mutasim
Tyron
Sharon

Amanda
Reyna
Jaynice
Josselyn

Tyler
Arisbeth
Yulma
Kimberly Lemus


Caterin
Lynn
Ashley
Paola

Procedure:

Everyone pitches ideas
Everyone writes down ideas
Initially, everyone must decide on the following:
Theme
Setting
Characters
Enemies
Conflict
Resolution
First Act or The “Ordinary World”
Setting
The Call to Action
The Refusal
The Acceptance
The Arrival of the Mentor
The Threshold Guardians















     






Monday, December 14, 2015

December 14, 2015 - December 18, 2015 Weekly Agenda

Monday, December 14th: 

BIC:
8:00 - 8:15
8:15 - 9:11

1st Period: 

In the library to set up LAUSD student mail

3rd Period: 

In the library to set up LAUSD student mail

Tuesday, December 15th: 

BIC: 8:00 - 8:15
8:15 - 10:13

1st Period: 

Finals
Test over the first two books of THE ODYSSEY
"A Son Searches for His Father" 
Due: 
the reading log for THE ODYSSEY

3rd Period: 

23 Minutes in length
Review for test 
Work on AR test and AR reading log 
Work on the reading log for THE ODYSSEY

Wednesday, December 16th: 

BIC:
8:00 - 8:15

3rd Period:

Finals
Test over the first four books of THE ODYSSEY
"A Son Searches for His Father"
Due: 
The reading log for THE ODYSSEY




Monday, December 07, 2015

December 7, 2015 - December 11, 2015 Weekly Agenda for 9th Grade English

Monday, December 7th:


1st Period: 

BIC:

8:00 – 8:15
SILENT SUSTAINED READING
READING LOG
Your third and final reading log and AR test is due on Friday, December 11th.

Vocabulary:
Atlas handout
Vocabulary worksheet

Odysseus: the name of the hero or protagonist of the epic poem, The Odyssey, which means a great journey filled with many dangers and adventures.
Melancholy:  a great and profound sadness.

THE ODYSSEY
THE ODYSSEY starts not with Odysseus’ story but with his son’s story – and his wife’s story.

Read page 880
“Odysseus: A Hero in Trouble”
“The Ancient World and Ours”
“A Search for Their Places in the World" 


3rd Period: 

Silent Sustained Reading
Reading Log
Your third and final reading log and AR test is due on Friday, December 11th. 

Vocabulary: 
Atlas handout
Vocabulary worksheet





Tuesday, December 8th:



BIC:
8:00 – 8:15
Silent Sustained Reading
Your reading log and AR test for your third book is due on Friday, December 11th.

Vocabulary:
Calypso
Vocabulary story and worksheet
Discussion of the Mediterranean, where Calypso’s island is, and the Caribbean, where calypso music is from.

Passed out THE ODYSSEY, “Part One: A Son Seeks a Father”
Read up to page 723]

What is the definition of theme?
Dalicia – the purpose of the story
Arath – the message
Jasmine – the subject

The theme is the message or world view that the author wishes to convey through the story. It is a universal message that can apply to us all, regardless of age, race, country, or gender.

Theme is always a sentence. People confuse theme with subject. People will say the theme of Romeo and Juliet is about love. That is the subject, not the theme. The theme is a statement which expresses a universal truth. For example, a possible theme for R+J is the foolishness of adults can destroy the young, or careless reckless love will destroy itself.

One can find the theme by giving the protagonist or the antagonist an adjective describing the central characteristic:

Lord Capulet – old, father, foolish, rash, stubborn, violent

Next, look for a strong action verb that captures an action that the protagonist does: holds onto grudges, doesn’t listen to their children, does not have their child’s best interest at heart, violent, impulsive, rash,

Foolish violent parents who make rash decisions –

Finally, what happens at the end of the story as the result of the parents’ actions? Juliet is forced into making a series of risky and ultimately lethal decisions, which leads to her suicide.

Their child is destroyed.

One of the possible themes of ROMEO and JULIET is violent, rash parents who do not listen to the needs of their children will ultimately destroy them.

Bear in mind that there may be many possible themes for a story, a novel, a play, or a movie. 

Book One: “Athena advises Telemachus”

One of the many things gods and goddesses can do is disguise themselves. Athena disguises herself as an old man named Mentor and goes to Telemachus to offer advice. We use this term, mentor, for someone who offers guidance and advice.

Domains: kingdoms, areas over which one has power or dominion.

Suitors: a man who seeks marriage with another person

Din: loud noise

Notice how Telemachus immediately goes over to a distinguished visitor (Athena disguised as a man, Mentor) and offers “him” food and drink before asking him his name. In Greek society, the ties between host and guest were sacred, and for a host to abuse a guest or a guest to be rude to a host was thought to be offensive to the Greek gods.

Period 3:


Silent Sustained Reading – 10 minutes
Work on your reading log and/or AR Test
Your third and final book is due this Friday, December 11th.

Vocabulary:
Calypso
Vocabulary Handout

The theme is the message or world view that the author wishes to convey through the story. It is a universal message that can apply to us all, regardless of age, race, country, or gender.

Theme is always a sentence. People confuse theme with subject. People will say the theme of Romeo and Juliet is about love. That is the subject, not the theme. The theme is a statement which expresses a universal truth. For example, a possible theme for R+J is the foolishness of adults can destroy the young, or careless reckless love will destroy itself.

One can find the theme by giving the protagonist or the antagonist an adjective describing the central characteristic:

Lord Capulet – old, father, foolish, rash, stubborn, violent

Next, look for a strong action verb that captures an action that the protagonist does: holds onto grudges, doesn’t listen to their children, does not have their child’s best interest at heart, violent, impulsive, rash,

Foolish violent parents who make rash decisions –

Finally, what happens at the end of the story as the result of the parents’ actions? Juliet is forced into making a series of risky and ultimately lethal decisions, which leads to her suicide.

Their child is destroyed.

One of the possible themes of ROMEO and JULIET is violent, rash parents who do not listen to the needs of their children will ultimately destroy them.

Bear in mind that there may be many possible themes for a story, a novel, a play, or a movie. 

Book One: “Athena advises Telemachus”

One of the many things gods and goddesses can do is disguise themselves. Athena disguises herself as an old man named Mentor and goes to Telemachus to offer advice. We use this term, mentor, for someone who offers guidance and advice.

Domains: kingdoms, areas over which one has power or dominion.

Suitors: a man who seeks marriage with another person

Irked: to be annoyed

Din: loud noise

Simile:
“and drove these men like dead leaves….”

Notice how Telemachus immediately goes over to a distinguished visitor (Athena disguised as a man, Mentor) and offers “him” food and drink before asking him his errand. In Greek society, the ties between host and guest were sacred, and for a host to abuse a guest or a guest to be rude to a host was thought to be offensive to the Greek gods.
1.     Who was in the dining room with Telemachus?
2.     What were they doing?
3.     What guest suddenly arrived?
4.     What was the true identity of the guest?
5.     What was Telemachus daydreaming about while he was sitting in the banquet room?
6.     What was he wishing for?
Review of what we read today. Read up to page 723.


Wednesday, December 9th: 


8:00 – 8:15
BIC
Silent Sustained Reading
Remember: the third and final reading log and AR test will be due on Friday, December 11th.
Vocabulary Worksheet: Mentor
Review of Yesterday’s Reading:
One of the many things gods and goddesses can do is disguise themselves. Athena disguises herself as an old man named Mentor and goes to Telemachus to offer advice. We use this term, mentor, for someone who offers guidance and advice.

Domains: kingdoms, areas over which one has power or dominion.

Suitors: a man who seeks marriage with another person, one who courts another for the purpose of dating.

Irked: to be annoyed
Irksome: something which is annoying.
Taylor finds homework irksome.

Din: loud noise

Simile: a comparison of two unlike things using like or as.
“and drove these men like dead leaves….”

Notice how Telemachus immediately goes over to a distinguished visitor (Athena disguised as a man, Mentor) and offers “him” food and drink before asking him his errand. In Greek society, the ties between host and guest were sacred, and for a host to abuse a guest or a guest to be rude to a host was thought to be offensive to the Greek gods.

Reread page 723, from line 18 to 44, and then answer the following questions:
1.     Who was in the dining room with Telemachus? Suitors
2.     What were they doing?
3.     What guest suddenly arrived?
4.     What was the true identity of the guest?
5.     What was Telemachus daydreaming about while he was sitting in the banquet room?
6.     What was he wishing for?

Read from page 723; THE ODYSSEY
Vocabulary:
Upstarts: rude, impudent people who disrespect people of higher authority.
Engage: to confront an aggressive person in a fight or in combat.
Disperse: to scatter or to go in separate ways.
Sound craft: a boat that is water tight and will not sink.
Sage: a wise person
Contenders: people who are involved in a contest to win a prize.
Guile: (pronounced gile – long I – yul) trickery, ruse, deception

What did Athena tell Telemachus to do?
1.    Call an assembly to tell the suitors they must leave his home.
2.    Gather a boat and crew of twenty together to find out news about Odysseus.
3.    He should go to Nestor and Menelaus to find out news about his father.
What should Telemachus do if he finds out his father, Odysseus, is alive?
1.    Telemachus can return home
2.    Telemachus can hold out and wait another year for his father’s return.
What should Telemachus do if he finds out his father, Odysseus, is dead?
1.    Telemachus should return to Ithaca and raise a mound for his father and burn his gear (armor, spears, shield, boots, etc.) to honor his memory.
2.    Then marry his mother, Penelope, to another man.
3.    Then figure out the best way to punish the suitors, either through guile (trickery) or outright combat.

Students shared what they learned: 

Taylor - what Athena told Telemachus the course of action he must take
Dalicia - in patriarchal societies the closest male relatives, even young sons, can tell a woman what to do.
Jelani - Athena disguises herself as a mentor to advise humans. 


Thursday, December 10th:


1st Period:
SILENT SUSTAINED READING
YOUR THIRD AND FINAL BOOK WILL BE DUE THIS FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11TH.

VOCABULARY GAME:
Pair up; find definitions for the words written on the board and write them down. The first team that gets the most  correct wins!

Winners:
Jennifer, Stephanie
Ki, Jelani, Arath
Angie, Natali

Read page 724; Book Two: “Telemachus Confronts the Suitors”

Sword – pronounced without the “w” sound; pronounced like sord.

Vocabulary:

Achaeans: another name for Greeks
Rawhide: leather with hair of the cow still on it

Metaphor/Personification:  (Dalicia)
Giving human qualities to inanimate objects.
“When primal Dawn spread on the eastern sky
Her fingers of pink light.” (Does the dawn have fingers?)

Aurora: the Greek name of the goddess for Dawn

Criers: messengers who were sent by the king to call out important information to the people.

Reread the passages numbered 78 – 115
Write a brief summary of what you have read.
Use the following questions to help you understand what you have read.

1.     Why did Telemachus call the suitors together?
2.     How did Athena help him?
3.     Who was Antinous?
4.     What trickery or deceit did Antinous accuse Penelope of doing?
5.     How did the suitors find out about the trickery or deceit?
6.     What did Antinous demand that Telemachus tell his mother to do?


Period 3:

Vocabulary:
Vulcan and Volcanoes
Answer the questions on your vocabulary handout

VOCABULARY GAME:
Pair up; find definitions for the words written on the board and write them down. The first team that gets the most  correct wins!

Vocabulary:
 Achaeans: another name for Greeks
Rawhide: leather with hair of the cow still on it

Metaphor/Personification:  (Dalicia)
Giving human qualities to inanimate objects.
“When primal Dawn spread on the eastern sky
Her fingers of pink light.” (Does the dawn have fingers?)

Aurora: the Greek name of the goddess for Dawn

Criers: messengers who were sent by the king to call out important information to the people.

Reread the passages numbered 78 – 115
Write a brief summary of what you have read.
Use the following questions to help you understand what you have read.

1.     Why did Telemachus call the suitors together?
2.     How did Athena help him?
3.     Who was Antinous?
4.     What trickery or deceit did Antinous accuse Penelope of doing?
5.     How did the suitors find out about the trickery or deceit?
6.     What did Antinous demand that Telemachus tell his mother to do?

 Read pages 726 – 727
What are the four things Telemachus does after the suitors disperse?

Friday, December 11th:

Friday, December 11th:
For first period, Tuesday, December 15th is the final.
For third period, Wednesday, December 16th is the final.
On the final, you must turn in your reading log for THE ODYESSY. The reading log consists of a summary of what we’ve read, plus vocabulary, and questions and answers.

The final will be a short quiz over what we have read, which is Book 1 and Book 2. The final will include vocabulary, passages from the books, which you will paraphrase, and questions over the passages, which you will have to answer. The final will also include questions about the characters and the story.  The final will include the following:

Passages to summarize or paraphrase
Questions over the passages
Questions over the story
Questions over the characters
Questions over vocabulary

Your final AR test and reading logs will be accepted up to 3:06 on Wednesday, December 16th.  After Wednesday, December 16th, no late work will be accepted.

Period 1:
Silent Sustained Reading

Period 3:
Review Book 2:

What did Telemachus do after he dispersed the assembly of suitors?
How did Athena help Telemachus?
What did Telemachus beg Eurycleia not to do until some days have passed?
Friday, December 11th:
3rd Period: (Continued)

Read Book 3 and Book 4:

Book 3: The Visit to Nestor

Vocabulary:
Charioteer: a driver of a chariot.

Disembark: to get off the boat

Doom: the end, absolute destruction

Broach: to raise a sensitive topic for discussion

Gray-eyed Athena: gray eyes were thought to be a symbol of wisdom.

Interrogate: to question closely

Prudently: wisely, showing caution and good judgment.

Host: can also mean a huge multitude of people.

Dissemble: to conceal

Metaphor:
“…the storehouse of his mind”

Personification:
“Where the great Earth hides your father…”

 How is Nestor’s home different from Odysseus’s home?
Give three examples.

What does this say about Odysseus’ home?

What does Nestor notice about Telemachus?

Who is the next old soldier Telemachus goes to ask about his father?

Who is the old soldier’s wife?

What does she immediately notice about the young man that her husband does not see?

What does the old soldier remember about Odysseus on the battle fields of Troy?


PLEASE NOTE THAT THE ABOVE QUESTIONS MAY BE ON THE FINAL!