This week, we will say goodbye to the text of Macbeth, though we will have some work to do with it. I can't wait to read the ending tomorrow because I do find it one of the more exciting Act V's of Shakespeare's writing. I am also looking forward to our special event next week, for those of you who choose to come, to view the modernization of "Macbeth". I have heard so many great things about it!
Don't forget to be working on Lear. It is short and you do have a while before it is due (March 6), but we all know how fast February will probably fly by! As you work, you need to do two things. Number one, take good notes (and frequent ones) on post-its. (If you are using an e-reader, there is a note-taking function. If you aren't sure how to use yours, bring it in and I can help you. Putting post-its all over your screen won't really work. ;) ) Number, two, this is a book for which the toolbox cards will be completed. WORK ON THEM AS YOU GO, NOT WHEN YOU FINISH.
Monday, 1/30
Macbeth, Act V
Tuesday, 1/31
Macbeth, Act V
Macbeth Word Web
Wednesday, 2/1
Macbeth Multiple Choice work, Thesis statements
Thursday, 2/2
1st group - Defend old MC test
Work on new MC test
2nd group- Therapeutic Thursday
(Abby and Taylor)
Friday, 2/3
Lady Macbeth Then and Now
Group MC Activity
JOURNALS DUE
Monday, January 30, 2012
"Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow!"
Posted by A. Davis at 8:43 AM 0 comments
Monday, January 23, 2012
Double, Double, Toil, and Trouble...
This week we will really get into the heart of the story of Macbeth. I also want to say that I feel like you all are doing a pretty good job of "getting it" even before I explain passages. Do you find that this is one of the easier plays you have read? Do you think it's just having gotten more comfortable with Shakespeare that makes it easier? It is, after all, Shakespearean play number four or five (if you were in World Studies)...
Here is our schedule for the week.
Monday, 1/23
Grade aloud the multiple choice homework
Macbeth Act III, while tracing your word
Tuesday, 1/24
Macbeth Act III, tracing word
Wednesday, 1/25
Macbeth III (?) and IV
Thursday, 1/26
TT-Group 1
Work on multiple choice- Group 2
Friday, 1/27
Macbeth Act IV
Posted by A. Davis at 4:58 AM 1 comments
Macbeth Act II Activity
In previous years, I have done the following activity over Lady Macbeth after Act II of Macbeth. I thought you might want to do a piece of this activity on the blog as one of your optional comments. I could see some of you getting into this...
You can link here to read the lyrics to Alanis Morissette's song "Wake Up". What is the speaker's attitude in this song? Does this seem to be more like Macbeth or Lady Macbeth's viewpoint in Acts I and II? Look at the first two lines and line eight. What is the speaker expressing in these lines about the person to whom she is referring? Rewrite the song (or any portion of the song) as if Lady Macbeth is talking to Macbeth. Keep in mind the states of mind of both characters at this point in the play.
Below is an example:
You want power but only if it's morally taken.
You like to think but only if someone else thinks for you.
No reason that you should be in dismay
No excuse for you not to do the deed today
Cause it's easy to be scared
So much easier than being brave
And if your chance comes and passes by, it shall never come back to you
You like prophecies to be fulfilled but only if you don't play your part
You sulk... and you think...just go do it
There's an obvious attraction
To the choice that risks your chance to be king
There's an obvious coward that I
could not make you finish tonight
Cause it's easy to be scared
So much easier than being brave
And if your chance comes and passes by, it shall never come back to you
To you to you to you to you and to you alone...
There's no jewels, no crown, no bravery anymore
There's a little boy cowering in a corner
Which the sight he cannot bear
There's a bold and proud little girl
Going to commit the act
But it's easy to be scared
So much easier than being brave
And if your chance comes and passes by, it shall never come back to you
To you, to you
Go on kill him go on just do it
Go on kill him go on just do it
Go on get it done before someone sees you
Go on kill him go on just do it
Just do it.
Posted by A. Davis at 4:58 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
"Fair is Foul and Foul is Fair"
Happy MLK Day week! I have so many favorite quotes of his, but one of the best is "In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends." I think that's a good model to base your life on. There are so many times in life that the easier option by far, the safer option, even, is to remain silent. From the most basic example of one person picking on another or jokes that seem harmless but are actually very offensive to the extreme of a country slaughtering its own citizens or children being abused by those who should protect them, silence is not acceptable. Be that person, even if you are standing alone. We are reading Macbeth, and this play contains a very clear example of the effects of silence. We are not to the end, and so can't see the full ramifications yet (and I don't want to spoil it), but as with most murders of a king, it is not going to end well. Macbeth, as you saw on Friday, decided that he should not do it, that he should let nature take its course. Lady Macbeth manipulated and bullied him into it. When it mattered, Macbeth kept silent. He let her push and bully and insult and get her way, rather than speaking up for what he knew to be right, even if he too felt the temptation to kill. Learn from literature, learn from history, learn from heroes like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Speak up and speak out. Be a hero to those around you who need a voice or a hand or a heart...
[Sermon over.]
This week, we are going to be doing vocab and reading Macbeth. I love how the play develops and am anxious for you to read and discuss it. So far, I feel like you guys aren't feeling Macbeth that much, and that makes me sad. I think that having the Shakespearean plays SO spread out due to the modified schedule makes it harder. Anyway, here is this week's schedule:
Tuesday, 1/17
Unit 6 Vocabulary: abject, agnostic, complicity, derelict, diatribe, effigy, equity, inane, indictment, indubitable, intermittent, moot, motif, neophyte, perspicacity, plenary, surveillance, sylvan, testy, travesty
Macbeth Act II
Wednesday, 1/18
Macbeth Act II
Thursday, 1/19
Macbeth work-Group 1
TT- Group 2
Friday, 1/20
Vocabulary Unit 6 Quiz
STUDY
Posted by A. Davis at 4:57 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
I'm Baaaaaack!!!!!!!!!
I have decided to restart ye olde blog this semester with my AP and English IV classes. Here you will find schedules, awesome student work, and sometimes extra activities and thought-provoking information. I have told you already, but I am thrilled to death to have another semester with you all. 2nd period was such a bright spot in my day last semester and I expect that it will be the same this semester, though certainly shadowed with the knowledge that you are all LEAVING me in May. (If you will note, on the right side of the blog, there is a countdown clock to graduation. Please know that your joy is far greater than mine as this clock winds down...) :) Seriously, though, last semester of senior year... it has to feel great! I am proud of each and every one of you.
This week begins Unit 3, Complications of Culture. As you know from yesterday's seminar, the essential questions are:
How does one's perspective shape or alter truth?
In a culture where we are bombarded with other people and other things trying to define us, how do we make decisions for ourselves?
How is who we want to be as revealing as who we are and how we are perceived by others?
The major works for this unit will include Heart of Darkness, Macbeth, Sir Gawaine, Arthurian legends, and Metaphysical/Carpe Diem Poetry.
We are starting Macbeth this week, and I can't wait to teach it to you and hear your discussions. It is not as deep as Hamlet, in my opinion, but it is really very incredibly exciting and it contains one of Shakespeare's greatest villains and one of his few strong female characters (at least in the tragedies we read in our curriculum).
This week's schedule:
Monday- Introductory Seminar to Macbeth (ambition, situational ethics)
Tuesday- Persuasive Prompt (part of schoolwide initiative)
Wednesday- Act I
Thursday- TT for Group 1, Macbeth for Group 2
Friday- Act I
JOURNALS DUE
Posted by A. Davis at 6:10 AM 0 comments