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MONDAY OCTOBER 18, 2010

In this class, students will review Vocab Week 5 words from "The Crucible" and discuss the history and impact of the Carlisle Indian School. Office hours this week: Monday, Tuesday, Thursday.

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MONDAY OCTOBER 18, 2010

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  1. MONDAY OCTOBER 18, 2010 PLEASE … TAKE ALL BAGS OFF OF YOUR DESKS, TAKE OUT YOUR NOTEBOOKS AND TAKE OUT A WRITING UTENSIL.

  2. PSATs Tomorrow!

  3. Office hours this week: Monday Tuesday Thursday

  4. CLASS OBJECTIVE: STUDENTS WILL BE ABLE TO … • Identify and use correctly new words acquired through study of their different relationships to other words. • Relate a literary work to primary source documents of its literary period or historical setting. • Relate a literary work to the seminal ideas of its time.

  5. CLASS AGENDA: • Vocab Week 5 CRUCIBLE Words • Prefixes • Overarching Question • Carlisle Indian School Notes: Continued

  6. VOCAB WEEK 5 CRUCIBLE WORDS! Please put your words on page 27. And your homework on page 28. * I need 7 Volunteers! Please remember your numbers!

  7. 1. Grapple • Part of Speech: • Verb • Definition: • Struggle Scott Pilgrim is always grappling with Ramona Flowers’ Evil Exes.

  8. 2. Compensate • Part of Speech: • Verb • Definition: • To make a payment I made sure I was compensated for the hours I spent tutoring after school.

  9. 3. Perjury • Part of Speech: • Noun • Definition: • Voluntary violation of an oath The American people were upset and felt that Bill Clinton had committed perjury when testifying about his ‘relations’ with Monica Lewinsky.

  10. 4. Hypocrisy • Part of Speech: • Noun • Definition: • The practice of professing beliefs that one does not hold The hypocrisy in the ad was blatant and ridiculous; it went against everything it advertised!

  11. 5. Gaunt • Part of Speech: • Adjective • Definition: • Extremely thin As a result of a bad photoshopping job, the model appeared unnecessarily gaunt.

  12. 6. Apparition • Part of Speech: • Noun • Definition: • An unusual or unexpected sight; • A ghostly figure The apparition made me stop in my tracks; I was too afraid to continue.

  13. 7. Conviction • Part of Speech: • Noun • Definition: • Strong belief The conviction on the man’s face told me that there was no way I was going to change his mind about attacking; and that this was, in fact, Sparta.

  14. (Prefix) ANTI- Definition: Against Antiabortion: Against Abortion Antibiotics: Medicines that fight viruses Anticrime: Position against crime Antidisestablishmentarianism: Position that opposes the withdrawal of state recognition of an established church

  15. (Prefix) SUB- Definition: Below Subpar: Below Par Substandard: Below Standards Subeditor: Second Editor Subplot: Underlying Plot Submerge: To Put Under

  16. Vocab Words: pg. 27Vocab Homework: pg. 28

  17. Now to pick up where we left off … Please take out your Carlisle Indian School Notes.

  18. Carlisle Indian School Notes

  19. Overarching Question: What happens when one group of people tries to control the actions and being of another group?

  20. The Carlisle Indian School Carlisle Indian School: • Founded in 1879 by Lt. Richard • Henry Pratt. • The first off-reservation boarding school. • It was one of the main 19th century efforts by the US government to assimilate Native American children from 140 tribes in the area to the majority culture.

  21. The Carlisle Indian School In the late 18th century: • With increasing European immigration, settlers found it necessary to assimilate Native Americans into the culture. • George Washington and Henry Knox supported educating native children, in efforts to "civilize Native Americans into the European- American society. • Many saw Native Americans as equals but felt that their society was inferior.

  22. Lieutenant Richard Henry Pratt Pratt served during the Civil War • Responsibility was to command Native Americans who were enlisted to fight. During this time, Lt. Pratt made an effort to: • Better conditions for the Native Americans • Culturally assimilate them into European culture • Educate them

  23. Why? Pratt convinced the tribal leaders that the reason they were able to take Indian land was because they were uneducated. Many of the first students were sent voluntarily. Students were taught: Math English Art Music And eventually, they were taught about their own cultures

  24. Not everything was all Gravy… Soon, death tolls began to rise in the school. Students were: Getting sick (tuberculosis) Trying to escape Beaten for- Mourning, Speaking their native languages or Violating the harsh, military rules.

  25. “The boys and girls at Carlisle Indian School were trained to … serve as domestics and farm hands and to leave off all ideas or beliefs that came to them from their Native communities, including and particularly, their belief that they were entitled to land, life, liberty, and dignity.... separated from all that is familiar; stripped, shorn, robbed of their very self; and ultimately renamed.” -Ann Rinaldi, Historical fiction author on her research of the Carlisle Indian School.

  26. The Carlisle Closes. 1904: Carlisle was forced to step down He and government officials came to conflict about Pratt’s outspoken need to assimilate Native Americans By the time the school had closed, 12,000 students had passed through the doors of the Carlisle Indian School. Very few graduated from the full program and more than double had attempted to run away.

  27. Please pass your Carlisle Indian School Notes to the End of your table.

  28. Switching Gears … I am passing out SAT Writing Sample. Please put it your notebooks on page 29

  29. SAT Writing Sample: Prompt Time has a doomsday book, on whose pages he is continually recording illustrious names. But as often as a new name is written there, an old one disappears. Only a few stand in illuminated characters never to be effaced. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

  30. SAT Writing Sample: Prompt Time has a doomsday book, on whose pages he is continually recording illustrious names. But as often as a new name is written there, an old one disappears. Only a few stand in illuminated characters never to be effaced. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

  31. SAT Writing Sample: Prompt Time has a doomsday book, on whose pages he is continually recording illustrious names. But as often as a new name is written there, an old one disappears. Only a few stand in illuminated characters never to be effaced. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

  32. SAT Writing Sample: Prompt Time has a doomsday book, on whose pages he is continually recording illustrious names. But as often as a new name is written there, an old one disappears. Only a few stand in illuminated characters never to be effaced. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

  33. SAT Writing Sample: Prompt Time has a doomsday book, on whose pages he is continually recording illustrious names. But as often as a new name is written there, an old one disappears. Only a few stand in illuminated characters never to be effaced. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

  34. SAT Writing Sample: Prompt Time has a doomsday book, on whose pages he is continually recording illustrious names. But as often as a new name is written there, an old one disappears. Only a few stand in illuminated characters never to be effaced. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

  35. SAT Writing Sample: Prompt Time has a doomsday book, on whose pages he is continually recording illustrious names. But as often as a new name is written there, an old one disappears. Only a few stand in illuminated characters never to be effaced. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

  36. SAT Writing Sample: Prompt Time has a doomsday book, on whose pages he is continually recording illustrious names. But as often as a new name is written there, an old one disappears. Only a few stand in illuminated characters never to be effaced. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

  37. SAT Writing Sample: Assignment ASSIGNMENT: Are there some heroes who will be remembered forever? Or are all heroes doomed to be forgotten one day? Plan your response, and then write an essay to explain your views on this issue. Be sure to support your position with specific points and examples. (You may use personal examples or examples from your reading, observations, or, knowledge of subjects such as history, literature, science.)

  38. SAT Writing Sample: Assignment ASSIGNMENT: Are there some heroes who will be remembered forever? Or are all heroes doomed to be forgotten one day? Plan your response, and then write an essay to explain your views on this issue. Be sure to support your position with specific points and examples. (You may use personal examples or examples from your reading, observations, or, knowledge of subjects such as history, literature, science.)

  39. SAT Writing Tips.

  40. 1. Keep it Tidy

  41. 2. Size Does Matter

  42. 3. Indented Paragraphs Are Your Friend

  43. 4. For Example …

  44. 5. Use Big Words

  45. CLASS OBJECTIVE: STUDENTS WILL BE ABLE TO … * Did We Meet The Objectives For the Day? • Identify and use correctly new words acquired through study of their different relationships to other words. • Relate a literary work to primary source documents of its literary period or historical setting. • Relate a literary work to the seminal ideas of its time.

  46. Homework: Revise and edit the writing prompt you wrote last Friday. Attach a new sheet of paper to the prompt or write on the back. I will collect your writing prompts again tomorrow!

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