Monday
Unit Learning goal:
Students will demonstrate an understand of one the main concept of the novel by producing a final project (PowerPoint, Film, Presentation) that incorporates a 1-page essay that explains how a main concept works in the novel and using specific examples to backs up the students ideas.
Main Concepts:
Does the American law guarantee justice for all?
How does personal experience contribute to prejudice?
How do our preconceptions influence our sense of justice?
Can a hero have both good and bad qualities?
Scale/Rubric relating to learning goal:
4 – The student can produce a project that explores and demonstrates in-depth understanding of a main concept in the novel and/or connects two of more of these concepts together.
3 – The student can produce a project that demonstrates an understanding of a main concept and how it works in the novel.
2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student can produce a project that demonstrates an understanding of a main concept and how it works in the novel.
1 – Even with help from the teacher the student is unable to produce a project that demonstrates an understanding of a main concept and how it works in the novel.
Objectives (smaller chunks of overall goal) and suggested time periods
Students will be able to
- Explain how the following themes work in the novel: The meaning of duty; How prejudice works in society; The meaning of courage
- Discuss the meaning of the following symbol: mockingbirds, the knot-hole, the mad dog
- Keep a reading journal – which includes character development, allusions, symbols, questions about the meaning of justice or how prejudice works
- Discuss how the author’s life and times influences the novel.
- Outline the plot and discuss why the author may how chosen to structure the novel how she did.
- Discuss how Scout grows during the novel and why the novel can be considered a Bildungsroman.
- Keep a detailed list of characters recording important details about them as the student reads (starting with chapter 1)
- Explain – why you never really understand a person until you… (Point of View Exercise)
- In a group write testimonies and recreate the courtroom scene from the novel
10) Keep a list of the various types of prejudices that occur in the novel
11) Discuss how setting is important to this novel.
12) Discuss how the Civil War references/allusions work in the overall meaning of the novel.
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