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HONORS ENGLISH 9 (Period 4) Assignments

Instructor
Mr. Michael C. Immken
Term
Spring 2016
Department
English
Description

The major purpose of this course is to analyze literature and expository text in greater depth and produce complex writing assignments. Students will continue to apply the knowledge and skills acquired in earlier grades with more refinement, depth, and sophistication with grade-appropriate material. The California Reading/Language Arts Framework states that students in the ninth grade are expected to read one and one-half million words annually on their own, including a good representation of classic and contemporary literature, magazines, newspapers, and online articles. Students will apply and refine their command of the writing process and writing conventions to produce narrative, persuasive, expository, and descriptive texts of at least 1,500 words each.

English 9AB is organized into three standards-based instructional components that focus on persuasion, exposition, and literary analysis, integrating skills of reading, writing, listening, and speaking. During the persuasion instructional component, students will read persuasive texts, with a focus on the credibility of an author’s argument, the relationship between generalizations and evidence, the comprehensiveness of evidence, the way in which the author’s intent affects the structure and tone of the text, and extend ideas through original analysis, evaluation, and elaboration. Students will also write persuasive essays and deliver persuasive presentations. In the exposition component, students will read expository texts, with a focus on synthesizing and extending ideas presented in primary and secondary sources, including works by a single author dealing with a single issue. In addition, students will write expository essays and deliver expository presentations. During the literary analysis component, students will read literary texts, with a focus on analyzing central themes in multiple works as well as analyzing themes in relation to issues of an historical period. Students will write responses to literature and deliver oral responses to literature.

English 9 AB meets the basic ninth-grade English requirement for graduation and fulfills the B requirement of the UC/CSU Subject Area Requirements.


Assignment Calendar

Upcoming Assignments RSS Feed

No upcoming assignments.

Past Assignments

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.49 (Choose one): "Fate will find a way." --Virgil; "The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step." --Lao Tzu
  • Read, discuss, and analyze Act 3-5
  • Start Leo version of film

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Assignment

  • HW DUE TODAY: Mercutio's Puns Handout--fill in the two meanings of "lie" and "grave" and finish each response

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Assignment

Composition 2.48: "Thousands have lived without love, none without water." --W.H. Auden
Read, view, analyze, and discuss Act 3, Scene 5 through the end of Act 5
 

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  • Composition 2.47: "Change your thoughts and you change your world." --Norman Vincent Peale
  • View Act 2-Act 3, Scene 2
  • Read up to Act 3, Scene 5, Line 65
  • Verona Yelp Lyrics
  • HW: Mercutio's Puns Short Response

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.46: "Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail." --Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • Read and discuss up to Act 3, Scene 1, Line 120
  • Shakespeare Notes: bawdy; mercurial; and, plot pyramid
  • Watch film to (3.1.96)--Tybalt vs. Mercutio

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Assignment

Composition 2.45: "Fools rush in where angels fear to tread." --Alexander Pope
Read and Discuss Act 2, Scene 2
Swear Not By the Moon Short Response

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  • Composition 2.44 (Choose one): "To conquer fear is the beginning of wisdom." --Bertrand Russell
  • "The only thing that will redeem mankind is cooperation." --Bertrand Russell
  • Shakespeare Notes: pun
  • Read and discuss Act 1, Scenes 4-5
  • View Act 1 and Act 2.1
  • Pair up and read Romeo and Juliet balcony scene

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Assignment

DUE TODAY: Act 3 Figurative Language Boxes

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.43: "Live as if you were to die tomorrow.  Learn as if you were to live forever." --Gandhi
  • Submit Act 3 Figurative Language Boxes
  • Read and discuss Act 1, Scene 1 and Act 1, Scene 4 as a class
  • View Romeo and Juliet film up until Romeo and Juliet speak for the first time
  • Classwork: Act 1, Scene 2 Short Response Group Question 2

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Assignment

HW DUE: Romeo and Juliet Act 2 Figurative Language Boxes
Learn the word posterity

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.42: "The fate of love is that it always seems too little or too much." --Amelia Barr
  • Submit Act 2 Figurative Language Boxes
  • View Act 1 of Romeo and Juliet (Stop before the feast)
  • Read and act out Act 1, Scenes 1-3
  • HW: Act 3 Figurative Language Boxes

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.41: "There is a road from the eye to the heart that does not go through the intellect." --G.K. Chesterton
  • Shakespeare Notes: Exit, Exeunt, ere, chaste, posterity
  • View the beginning of Romeo and Juliet film (stop after Prince's speech)
  • Continue reading and acting out Act 1, Scene 1, Lines 105-221 of Romeo and Juliet
  • HW: Act 2 Figurative Language Boxes (Due 5/16)

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.40: "Sometimes the heart sees what is invisible to the eye." --H. Jackson Brown, Jr.
  • Read and act out (1.1.1-104) of Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet

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  • Composition 2.39: "The magic of first love is our ignorance that it can ever end." --Benjamin Disraeli
  • Discuss Shakespeare and Sonnet Notes (Character Chart)
  • Sonnet 130 Argument
  • Begin Reading Act 1. Scene 1

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Assignment

Composition 2.38: "Justice delayed is justice denied." --William E Gladstone
Sonnet 130 Group Explication

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HW Due: Finish Prologue Translation Quadrants and Act 1 Figurative Language Boxes (Started in class on 4/28)

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.37: "Men are not prisoners of fate, but only prisoners of their own minds." --Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • Review sonnets 
  • Sonnet Quiz
  • Root Vocabulary Assignments (Ben- and Mal-)

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Assignment

HW: Connotation Worksheet from 4/26 Due 4/28

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Assignment

Composition 2.36: "Quick decisions are unsafe decisions." --Sophocles
Romeo and Juliet Act 1 Figurative Language Boxes
Prologue Notes (Translate)
Discuss the Prologue
HW: Finish Prologue Translation Quadrants and Act 1 Figurative Language Boxes (Due Monday, May 2)

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.35: "Gravitation is not responsible for people falling in love."  --Albert Einstein
  • Shakespeare Notes: sonnet; quatrain; couplet; rhyme scheme; iambic pentameter; soliloquy; foil
  • HW: Connotation Worksheet (47)--Due on Thursday, April 28

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.34: "It is not in the stars to hold our destiny but in ourselves." --William Shakespeare
  • Finish The House on Mango Street Essay

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  • Composition 2.33: "We know what we are, but know not what we may be." --William Shakespeare
  • Use all of the steps in the writing process to continue working on The House on Mango Street Essay

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  • Composition 2.32 (Choose one): "A life is not important except in the impact it has on mother lives." --Jackie Robinson or "In this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes." --Benjamin Franklin
  • Review the writing process and break down essay prompts
  • Continue working on The House on Mango Street Essay 

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.31: "Discipline is the bridge between goals and accomplishment." --Jim Rohn
  • Begin Writing In-Class Essay for The House on Mango Street

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  • Composition 2.30: "When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves." --Viktor Frankl
  • Discuss the writing process and practice writing introduction paragraphs that start with a quote (composition + thesis)
  • Write Cycles Essay introduction paragraph using Composition 2.23.

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.29: "Success consists of going from failure to failure without loss of enthusiasm." --Winston Churchill
  • Submit "Mango Says Goodbye Sometimes" Figurative Language Boxes
  • Continue writing in-class essay

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.28 "Nothing [in life] will work unless you do." --Maya Angelou
  • "Mango Says Goodbye" Figurative Language Boxes (Finish for HW)
  • Allusion Introduction and Character Body Paragraph (In-class mini-essay)

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.27 (Choose one): "We draw our strength from the very despair in which we have been forced to live." --Cesar Chavez or "You are never strong enough that you don't need help." --Cesar Chavez
  • Finish reading The House on Mango Street and maintain character chart
  • MLA Quiz

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  • Composition 2.26: "What would life be if we had no courage to attempt anything?" --Vincent Van Gogh
  • Go to Computer Lab and do Interim Assessment (SBAC)

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  • Composition 2.25: "Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear, not absence of fear." --Mark Twain
  • Read Cisneros's vignette "The Monkey Garden"
  • Discuss allusion
  • Work in groups to discuss the parallels between "The Monkey Garden" and the biblical story of Adam and Eve

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Assignment

Due today: Sally Cartoon Vocabulary Boxes

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.24: "It's not what you look at that matters, it's what you see." --Henry David Thoreau
  • Review MLA formatting
  • Continue working on Comparison Essay

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.23: "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." --Albert Einstein
  • Essay Notes--Review introduction paragraphs
  • Continue writing in-class essay
  • HW: Sally Cartoon Vocabulary Boxes

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Assignment

  • Second draft of creative writing assignment (vignette) and figurative language boxes are due!

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.22: "A real friend is one who walks in when the rest of the world walks out." --Walter Winchell
  • Submit Creative Writing Figurative Language Boxes
  • Revise your vignette based on feedback from figurative language boxes
  • Finish reading The House on Mango Street and maintain character chart
  • Begin In-Class Essay

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Assignment

 First Draft of Creative Writing Assignment

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Assignment

Composition 2.21: "You cannot have a positive life and a negative mind." --Joyce Meyer
Submit Rough Drafts of creative writing assignment
Revise rough drafts
Work on Creative Writing Figurative Language Assignment (Finish for HW)
HW: Second draft of vignette due on Friday, March 11th

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Assignment

  • DUE TODAY: Alicia Vocabulary Boxes (Started in class on 3/3)

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.20: "People who cannot invent and reinvent themselves must be content with...fitting in instead of standing out." --Warren Bennis
  • Discuss and begin brainstorming Creative Writing Assignment (First Draft Due on Wednesday, March 9th)
  • "Minerva Writes Poems" vs. Jane Says Group Writing Assignment

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Assignment

HW: First Draft of Creative Writing Assignment (Due 3/9)

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.19: "Life is 10% what happens to you and 90% how you react to it." --Charles Swindoll
  • Review and discuss "The Earl of Tennessee" Inference Assignment
  • Re-read "No Speak English," "Rafaela Who Drinks Coconut & Papaya Juice on Tuesdays," and "Sally" and discuss allusions, beauty, gender inequity, and objectification
  • Begin working on Alicia Vocabulary Boxes
  • HW: Alicia Vocabulary Boxes (Started in class on 3/3)

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.18: "Strength does not come from physical capacity.  It comes from an indomitable will." --Gandhi
  • Write "Four Skinny Trees" Introduction Paragraph with definition of symbol
  • Finish and submit "Four Skinny Trees" Symbol Assignment
  • "The Earl of Tennessee" Inference Assignment

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.17 (Select one): "Our strength grows out of our weaknesses." --Ralph Waldo Emerson or "That which does not kill us makes us stronger." --Friedrich Nietzsche
  • Read The House on Mango Street (62-75) and maintain character chart
  • "Four Skinny Trees" Symbol Assignment Group

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Assignment

  • Mango Vocabulary Boxes # 1: selfless; mentor; ambitious (Started in class on 2/22)

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.16: "What you are will show in what you do." --Thomas Edison
  • Read The House on Mango Street (62-73) and maintain character chart
  • "Hips" Group Short Response Question 2--citing lines of poetry

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Assignment

Composition 2.15: "Your worth consists in what you are and not [in] what you have." --Thomas Edison
Read Cisneros's vignettes "The First Job" - "Born Bad" and maintain character chart
Review MLA guidelines on how to cite lines of poetry
Mango Vocabulary Boxes # 1: selfless; mentor; ambitious (Finish for HW)

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.14: "It is far better to be alone, than to be in bad company." --George Washington
  • Essay Notes
  • Write introduction paragraph for "Hips" Essay
  • Begin prewriting for essay

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.13: "Things may come to those who wait, but only the things left by those who hustle." --Abraham Lincoln
  • Assemble in groups and finish the "Hips" Circle Graphic Organizer Assignment
  • Think of categories to divide the circular objects into

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Assignment

  • Finish Mango Figurative Language Boxes (43-52)
  • Finish Dependent Clauses/Sentence Fragment Worksheet

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  • Composition 2.12: Choose one of the Frederick Douglass quotes
  • Read and discuss Cisneros's "Chanclas" and "Hips" and maintain character chart
  • Group assignment on circular imagery in Cisneros's vignette "Hips"

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Assignment

Composition 2.11: "All our dreams can come true, if we have the courage to pursue them." --Walt Disney
Read The House on Mango Street and maintain character chart (43-52)
Mango Figurative Language Boxes (43-52): Find three quotes of your own
Using Dependent Clause/Sentence Fragments Worksheet

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Assignment

  • Read, highlight, and annotate the Grimm brothers' version of "Cinderella"
  • Look up the myth of Pandora's Box

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  • Mango Figurative Language Boxes (10-42)--Focus on the role that beauty plays in our society with respect to our gender
  • Notes: allusion

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  • Discuss such topics in The House on Mango Street: racism, sexism, stereotypes, inequity, beauty, and double standards
  • Discuss theme and spatial organization
  • Read Disney's "Cinderella" for a comparison to the Grimm brothers' folktale "Cinderella"
  • HW: Read the Grimm brothers' version of "Cinderella" and research Pandora's Box

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Assignment

  • Composition 2.8: "Continuous effort--not strength or intelligence--is the key to unlocking our potential." --Winston Churchill
  • Read The House on Mango Street (3-52) and maintain character chart
  • Mango Figurative Language Boxes (Started in class--Due 2/3)

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  • Mango Blank Figurative Language Boxes (Started in class): Choose your own quotes from (3-25), identify the figure of speech, draw and color

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  • Composition 2.7 (Choose one): “Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it.” --Confucius or “Beauty is temporary, but your mind lasts you a lifetime.”--Alicia Machado
  • Read The House on Mango Street (3-42) and maintain character chart
  • Mango Short Response # 3 Group

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Assignment

"Hairs" Figurative Language Boxes (Labeled and colored)

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Composition 2.5: "Home is not where you live, but where they understand you." --Christian Morgenstern
Review and discuss Cisneros's vignettes "Boys & Girls" and "My Name"
Mango Short Response # 2

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Assignment

Composition 2.4: Do the one that is leftover from the choices for 2.3
Review and revise Mango Short Response # 1
Read The House on Mango Street (6-11)
HW: "Hairs" Figurative Language Boxes (Label and Color) Due 1/22

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Assignment

Composition 2.3 (select one): "We must accept finite disappointment, but never lose infinite hope." --Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. or "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." --Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Mango Group Discussion 1-5
Mango Short Response # 1

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Assignment

Composition 2.2: "No man is an island...every man is a piece of the continent." --John Donne
Mango Reading Notes: works cited page; vignette; titles; characters
Read "The House on mango Street" (3-5)
Mango Group Discussion and Response

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Assignment

Composition 2.1: "Hope is a pleasant acquaintance, but an unsafe friend." --Thomas Chandler Haliburton