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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

ENGLISH – 2nd trimester – Day 46 

  1. Before I collect your homework, at your table, exchange homework questions with each other and take their 15-question tests.
  2. Before returning the test to the owner, place a STAR next to the BEST QUESTIONS.
    1. Collect homework: 15 questions and answer key (about the information on pages 1012-1013; 1025-1036 in textbook)
  3. Complete drawing assignment - COLLECTED FOR A GRADE:
    Pretend you are drawing cheat notes for a friend. Your picture must have enough detail on it so that simply by looking at it someone else could identify who and what it represents.
    1.       Homer (pg. 1036)
    2.       Muse (pg. 1037)
    3.       “man skilled in all ways of contending” (Odysseus) (lines 2-5)
    4.       Lord Helios lines 12-15
    5.       Calypso (lines 47-53)
    6.       Poseidon (lines 29-32)
    7.       Telemachus (pg. 1038)
    8.       Athena
    9.       Penelope
    10.   Hermes (lines 33 – 47)
    11.   Draw a picture that shows, specifically, how Calypso tries to convince Odysseus to stay? What does she offer him? (pg. 1042)
    12.   Draw a picture of why Odysseus cries? (pg. 1043)
    13.   Using the description on page 1043 (lines 130-137), draw a picture of where Odysseus lives and the surrounding areas.
    14.   ** Draw a picture of what happened on Ismaros and the Cicones (pg. 1045 lines 149-175)
    15.   Lotus Eaters – pg. 1046 lines 197-201
  4. Practice your 10-line speech from Romeo & Juliet for Friday’s recital
ENGLISH homework: 

Work on Romeo & Juliet projects (including 10-line memorization piece) – DUE Friday, February 15 – focus on the following rubric:
·         The story = 20 points (thorough, appropriate interpretation of important story elements, proper length)
·         Creativity = 10 points (ideas are unique and enjoyable)
·         Effort = 10 points (project is thoughtful and well-prepared; shows considerable effort; looks complete)
·         Recital = 10 points (TYPED COPY and considerable effort shown in memorization of 10 lines of Romeo & Juliet)
·         You may NOT memorize from these 2 speeches: “Two households…” or “But soft, what light…”
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PLAYWRITING – Day 46 

WARMUP: TO BE COLLECTED: Write 1 paragraph for each of the following (3 paragraphs total): 

Describe the kind of people that have:
A.    the greatest needs in life
B.     the greatest potential for action
C.     the biggest problems
                                                                                                                                      i.      tell why… 

Playwright Marsha Norman says that the most interesting characters are those who “take control” of their own lives.” In most plays, that control is hard-won. It is the result of a struggle.
According to Jeffery Hatcher’s book The Art & Craft of Playwriting,
  • Interest in engendered by what a character does.
  • The most interesting character in a play is the person with
    • the greatest needs
    • the biggest problems
    • the greatest potential for action
  • Your aim is to create characters an audience wants to spend time with: heroes, villains, and every complicated variation of human nature in between – people your audience will want to join on a journey, root for, gasp at, pity and boo.
    • Passive, whiny characters are never interesting.
1.      Imagine the most interesting, believable scene you can where a teenager must get the car keys from a parent when he/she knows the answer is no.

2.      Start at the end and work backwards.
o   What would be a captivating visual on stage right before the curtain falls?

3.      Now work backwards. 10 steps. NO DIALOGUE.
o   Ask yourself (10 times), “What happened right before this moment that made this moment happen?”

4.      Write the most interesting, believable scene you can where a teenager must get the car keys from a parent when we know the answer is no. No whining. They may not literally ask for the key in the first 10 lines.  
PLAYWRITING homework:

DUE FRIDAY (not tomorrow):
Type #4 (above)…and staple to your 3 handwritten paragraphs and your 10 handwritten steps.
 

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