March 23 and on--

Check Google classroom-- Long distance learning begins!

Monday, April 16, 2018

ENGLISH 7
Let’s read a poem The Crocodile by Lewis Carroll
AND some of Nonsense Alphabet by Edward Lear.
Finish it on your own!
Worktime, Poetry. Listening to Mozart to study byt.


HW: Weds: All rough drafts --That means 20 poems.
Fri: Poetry Booklet and ready to present
ENGLISH 8
QW: How would you characterize Death as he appears
in the novel? Write five adjectives that show this and give an
 example of his comment in the book that is evidence.

Check in/discuss Parts 8 & 9.
Speech pep talk.


HW: Tuesday FD speech and ready to present. Rubric, too.
Weds -- Read Part 10 and Epilogue. Complete WS.
Possible quiz on Parts 6-9


Fri Final Test and/or Essay The Book Thief

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

Annie

Annie
National Dog Day

Contacts

msilver@twinhillsusd.org

About Me

Sebastopol, CA
After many years as a newspaper reporter and writer, a job that I was lucky enough to love, I got my English teaching credential, hoping to pass on to kids how to find their unique voice and clearly communicate what they think and feel. Public school educated in Philadelphia, college in New York City (Barnard College), transferred to and graduated from UC Berkeley in English and received a master's degree in journalism from Columbia University. Yay, my son, my student in 8th grade, is now a Cal alumni, too, a 2017 graduate with a degree in computer science, now working at Google (You Tube) as a product manager. William Faulkner is one of my favorite writers, as well as Anne Lamott, Langston Hughes and many of the nighttime, satirical comedy shows. On my top bookshelf sit Nobel Prize winning writers Toni Morrison and Orhan Pamuk, along with friends who have won Pulitzer Prizes in journalism, who started writing in junior high or in writing groups in Sonoma County. Go public education in California!

"Growing Up Digital, Wired for Distraction"

The digital revolution and teens, from the New York Times--
"Sean's favorite medium is video games...he sometimes wishes that his parents would force him to quit playing and study..."