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Warm Up: Passage Analysis

Warm Up: Passage Analysis.

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Warm Up: Passage Analysis

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  1. Warm Up: Passage Analysis Emily Dickinson spent most of her life in the small town of Amherst, Massachusetts. As a young woman she socialized with friends and attended college at Mount Holyoke, but later in life she became a recluse. In fact, in the last decades of her life, she never left home except to visit her doctor in Boston. Dickinson published only a handful of poems during her lifetime. After she died, her relatives found more poems jotted down on scraps of paper, neatly bundled and tied together with ribbons. Today, Dickinson’s poems appear in virtually every American poetry anthology, and she is widely regarded as a great poet. As you read, ask yourself: “What is the main idea?” and “What is a recluse?”

  2. Select the most correct response Based on the passage, a recluse is A someone who is generous with his or her possessions B someone with very little money who has trouble making ends meet C someone who is friendly and outgoing D someone who rarely, if ever, socializes Which sentence best states the main idea of this passage? A Emily Dickinson was a celebrated poet in her lifetime but is largely forgotten today. B Emily Dickinson was a celebrated poet in her lifetime and remains famous today. C Emily Dickinson neatly bundled the scraps of paper on which she wrote her poems. D Emily Dickinson was not well known in her lifetime but now is one of America’s most famous poets.

  3. Small Group Read-Around • In groups of four, take turns reading each of your personal narratives. Listen for what is working in other people’s stories—STEAL IT for your own story! If you are uncomfortable sharing your story in a small group, I will be happy to read it with you. • You will probably find a few places where your story needs some more work, mark those places after you read to remind yourself to revisit them. • Give specific positive feedback to every person in your group i.e. “I really liked the section where you…..”

  4. Homework • Read to 116 • Bring your highlighted 2nd draft to show to Ms. Hensley next class. USE THE NARRATIVE CRITERIA SHEET FOR HIGHLIGHTING

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