Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Book talk and project due this week!

Hi all! We have a very busy week ahead of us, so get ready!

Thursday is the Book Talk. Remember to bring your independent reading book to show your small group members. Take a look at your book talk question list and book talk rubric. Here are the expectations:
1) Summarize the book (setting, characters, plot, action)
2) Read a passage that resonated with you and explain to your group why you chose the passage
3) Be prepared to answer any of the 20 possible book talk questions (see book talk rubric)

Friday your book project will be due. If you haven't started it would be wise for you to start now. See your book option list for project ideas and make sure to review the rubric to see what I'm looking for when grading. Make sure your project looks professional! If you prepare a Powerpoint make sure that the slides are not dense with text. They must incorporate graphics, animation, or exciting tools to draw in your audience.


Anne Frank task sheet due Monday, 4/29:


Name _______________________________________________ Per. ____

Anne Frank
Reading 3
 November 10, 1942 – June 13, 1943 (p. 62-103)

I. Vocabulary: Define all of the words. Use five or the words in original sentences.

irrevocable incessantly capitulated grouses
palpitations consolation cremated lozenges
compresses aggravating fortnight diligently
suffice         sauntered

II. Respond 
1.  What restrictions did Anne have to put up with in hiding? What did she find most difficult about being in hiding?
2.  How does Mr. Dussel adjust to life in the Secret Annexe?  How did the war affect the lives of people in the Secret Annexe?
3.  Anne writes on December 13, 1942, that she saw two Jews in the street below.  How did they know they were Jews?
4.  What does Anne say about the fate of the Jews and her own situation on November 19 and 20, 1942 and January 13, 1943?  Do her feelings change?
5.  On March 27, 1943, Anne quotes Hanns Rauter, a high-ranking Nazi, saying: “’All Jews must be out of the German-occupied countries before     July 1.  Between April 1 and May 1 the province of Utrecht [in the Netherlands] must be cleaned out.  Between May 1 and June 1 the provinces of North and South Holland.’”  What euphemism does Rauter use?  Does Anne see through the veil of language to the truth underneath?  How can you tell?
6.  What are your impressions of Anne at this point in the diary?
7.  Explain Anne’s statement that none of those in hiding had ever celebrated St. Nicholas Day before (December 7, 1942).

III. Reflect  
Choose one.
  • Anne quotes her mother as saying, “I can’t make you love me” (April 2, 1943).   Can love be forced?  What do you think this means?
  • Compare and contrast how Anne’s mother and Mr. Dussel would describe Anne.
IV. Project  Create a Venn diagram depicting how Anne’s life changed during her first year in hiding.  Consider food, living arrangements, school, socialization, health, and relationships with others

*If you are reading an alternate book, please see me for your tasks.



Monday, April 15, 2013


Below you will find this weeks' assignments for our reading of The Diary of Anne Frank. Please do not wait until Thursday night to complete these activities. Feel free to check out a book before you leave school.

*Please also remember that your book project is due April 25th. You have had two months to complete the book project. Please be prepared for our Book Talk on  4/25 and our project presentations on 4/26. Practice your presentation in front of your family so that you are prepared to speak in front of the class. 

Due date: Friday, April 19th
Graded by/returned date: Wednesday, April 24th

Name _____________________________________________________ Per. ____

Anne Frank
Reading 2
 July 12, 1942 – November 9, 1942 (pages 25-62)

  1. Vocabulary: Define all of these words. Use five of the words in original sentences. (20 points)

    discord         procured          haricot beans         eucalyptus
    duodenal ulcer clandestine barrage         het
    pedantic tumult         dispersed         coquetry
    supple         eiderdown


  1. Respond: Answer these questions using complete sentences. Remember to restate the question in your answer. (25 points)

1.  How does Anne and the other residents of the Secret Annexe spend their time during their first months in hiding?
2.  How does Anne describe the Van Daan Family?  Give some examples of the details that make her writing about people lively and interesting.
3.  Anne writes: “It’s extremely important to be able to write in code” (Oct. 1, 1942). Why was writing in code so important for her?  What code did Anne learn and how do you think it helped her?
4.  What does Anne report about Jews in Holland who were not able to go into hiding?  What does she mean when she says Hitler took away her “nationality” (Oct. 9, 1942)?
5.  What kind of help could people of the Netherlands offer the Jews?

  1. Reflect: Choose two. Your answers must be at least five sentences long. (20 points)
  • Describe a family member or a close friend as objectively as possible.  Then try writing an objective description of yourself.
  • Describe a “perfect” day.
  • Describe a time when you felt confined.
  • On Sept. 28, 1942, Anne writes: “You only really get to know people when you’ve had a jolly good row with them.  Then and only then can you judge their true characters!”  Give an example from your own experience that either supports or challenges Anne’s statement.
  • How does the example of what Danish people did show the power of sticking together?
  1. Project: Choose one and prepare a written response or a diagram. (35 points)

1.  Write a newspaper report on the events of the ill-fated S.S. St. Louis.
2.  Investigate and report where other members of Otto Frank’s family fled.  (For a starting place, see entry for June 20, 1942).
3.  Research and report on the immigration policies of the United States in the late 1930s.


V. Discussion and Resource Pages
“Discrimination Against the Jewish People”
“Laws Against the Jewish People”
“Terrible Things”
“First They Came for the Jews”
“Language at War”
“Complete Solution”
“Moment of Decision”
“About Language and War”



Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Welcome back! I missed you! This week we are focusing on how stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination shape who we are. We will analyze our own subconscious prejudices and study the psychological implications of stereotypes. In preparation for our next novel study, we will also access our prior knowledge about the Holocaust.

Monday:

Name: ___________________________ Period: ___________ Date: ________ TOC#__


Warm-up: Finish at least five of these sentences:
a) All athletes are ________________________________________________________.
b) People on welfare are all ________________________________________________.
c) Drugs are used by _____________________________________________________.
d) All homosexuals are ____________________________________________________.
e) All politicians are ______________________________________________________.
f) All male hairdressers are _________________________________________________.
g) All Jewish people are ___________________________________________________.
h) All rich people are _____________________________________________________.
i) All construction workers are ______________________________________________.
j) He's so smart, he must be _______________________________________________.
Factors: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Dangers: _________________________________________________________________________________________


I. Vocabulary preview
Directions: Write the word that matches the definition on the given line.


persecution
stereotype
Holocaust
ethnocentrism
discrimination
genocide:
geno = people
cide = murder
prejudice


1. Literally, "fire that causes destruction," has been used to designate the destruction of six million Jews by the Nazis during World War II - _________________________________


2. The belief that one's own ethnic, religious, or political group is superior to all others  - ____________________________


3. The oppression and/or harassment of people based on their race, religion, color, national origin, or other distinguishing characteristic - ____________________________


4. The use of deliberate, systematic measures (as killing, bodily or mental injury, unlivable conditions, prevention of births, forcible transfer of children of the group to another group) calculated to bring about the destruction of a racial, political or cultural group or to destroy the language, religion or culture of a group - ____________________________________


5. An unfavorable opinion (or attitude) formed against a person or group based on a stereotype - ________________________


6. A generalized image of a person or group, which does not acknowledge individual differences and which is often prejudicial to that person or group - __________________________________


7. The behavior or actions, usually negative, towards an individual or group of people, especially on the basis of sex/race/social class, etc. ________________________________


What is the difference between discrimination and prejudice?
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Give an example of discrimination:
Give an example of prejudice:

Tuesday:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTYn1WRCuoU

II. Video response:
1. What surprised you most about this video?



2. Explain the purpose and the intended audience of this news video.



3. Is it possible for a person to grow to adulthood without having at least some prejudice towards others?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASDzcvyatgw


III. # ________
Directions: Read the article “Introduction to the Holocaust.”

http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005143


III. Timeline
Directions: Summarize each of the subsections of the article.

Introduction to the Holocaust:



What was the Holocaust?:



Administration of the Final Solution:



The End of the Holocaust:



IV. Using our seven vocabulary words, describe the Holocaust. Write in complete sentences.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________


V. Holocaust Anti-Jewish Laws
Respond to the following questions in complete sentences.

1. How would you feel if you were subjected to these laws.


2. Choose one of your laws and infer the implication (consequence) of the law. Write in complete sentences.



3. Could laws like this be plausible in today’s world? Do you believe governments and world leaders have the power to enforce laws such as these or do you think they would be met with resistance?



VI. Respond to the following quote:
“Instead of being presented with stereotypes by age, sex, color, class, or religion, children must have the opportunity to learn that within each range, some people are loathsome and some are delightful.”
1. In your own words, summarize the message that Margaret Mead is trying to deliver in this quote.



2. What is your opinion of this quote? How does it connect to your life?