Saturday, June 15, 2013

Have a great summer!

Hi Everyone (in all my classes), 

It's been way too long since I saw all of you, so I just wanted to take a minute to wish everyone a successful end of year, and a happy and safe summer.





Here is the thing - life spins on a dime. 
One minute you are safe and happy, the next minute you are terrified, and in shock, and pleading with the universe to let the love of your life survive, pleading for him to have more time.
So, if you are willing to hear me, and can learn anything from me, learn this:

Life is now. 
Look around you, look at the people, look at the light, look at the dark, see it all and savour it, eat it up, this is what you get, right now, and it is beautiful.
Even when it hurts, even when you think you are going to throw up you are so unhappy,
life is now, and life is beautiful. 



Life is now, and life is beautiful. 


(And, for those of you who have been wondering, we're doing okay. We live one minute at a time, but we really hope that one year from now my husband will be all better.)

Best.
Tara Colborne

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Sample Thesis for Compare and Contrast

Rough Draft Due - WEDNESDAY
Final Draft Due - FRIDAY

Both the song, "Body in Box," by Dallas Green, and the poem, "Do Not Go Gently," by Dylan Thomas, explore the great sadness of the end of a person's life; where Green's lyrics plead with listeners to focus on living a good life, and pay no mind to his death whatsoever, Thomas' lyrical poem pleads with his father to put all his attention to fighting death.

Monday, May 27, 2013

The Romantics and the importance of place...


1) Poetry Response #2 due.

2) Comma/Semi-colon Worksheet - also due. Mark your own...

3) A Meditation on a Place

4) The Romantics

Most importantly, Romanticism saw a shift from faith in reason to faith in the senses, feelings, and imagination

  • a shift from interest in urban society to an interest in the rural and natural; 
  • a shift from public, impersonal poetry to subjective poetry; and from concern with the scientific and mundane to interest in the mysterious and infinite. 
  • mainly they cared about the individual, intuition, and imagination.


1. Imagination and emotion are more important than reason and formal rules;
imagination is a gateway to transcendent experience and truth.
2. Along the same lines, intuition and a reliance on “natural” feelings as a guide to 
conduct are valued over controlled, rationality.
3. Romantic literature tends to emphasize a love of nature, and a valuing of the common, "natural" man; Romantics idealize country life and believe that many of the ills of society are a result of urbanization.
  
     

4. Romantics were attracted to rebellion and revolution, especially concerned with 
human rights, individualism, freedom from oppression;
5. There was emphasis on introspection, psychology, melancholy, and sadness. Their
art often dealt with death, transience and mankind’s feelings about these things. 
The artist was an extremely individualistic creator whose creative spirit was 
more important than strict adherence to formal rules and traditional procedures.

5) Tintern Abbey (Iron Maiden even filmed a video there: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xSZbbTjM0Es)

- Or, Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey, on Revisiting the Banks of the Wye during a Tour. July 131798...
- slides
- Questions

Tomorrow: Poem Types, and a sample test...


Friday, May 24, 2013

Sonnet Challenge!

(Did your group submit some evidence of your rebellion poem work yesterday?)

1) Introduction to the two most popular sonnet forms


Italian/Petrarchan
English/Shakespearean
Syllables per line
10
10
Rhyme Scheme
abbaabba  cdecde
(or c d d c d d, c d d e c e, or c d d c c d or...)
Abab cdcd efef gg
General Shape
First 8 lines present a problem.
(Main Idea)

Last six lines solve it. Often ironic. (Conclusion)
First three sets consider a topic with a similar image. (Main idea)

The final couplet holds a paradox. (Conclusion)

2) Examples - and some work...Handout.
Anthem for Doomed Youth http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZlDoon91vZk
How Do I Love Thee? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vog4hMSprls

If you want to read more sonnets, some of the most famous traditional ones are here:
http://www.readwritethink.org/files/resources/lesson_images/lesson830/sonnet-links.html

3) Now, WE are going to write a sonnet together!

Topic: Love
What type? Vote?

Rule #1: The sonnet must be completed in one class period.

Rule #2: Everyone must try to make a contribution to the sonnet we will write.

Rule #3: The sonnet must be 14 lines long.

Rule #4: The sonnet must have no more and no less than 10 syllables per line.

Rule #5: The sonnet must be of either the English or Italian forms.

Rule #6: The sonnet must deal with the subject of love.

Rule #7: If the sonnet is going to be in the English form, the logical progression of thought should be as follows: the first 12 lines develop the main idea, and the last 2 lines (a rhymed couplet) give the conclusion.

If we select the Italian form, the pattern should be thus: The first 8 lines develop the main idea, and the last 6 lines give the conclusion.

Rule #8: Once something has been written on the sonnet, it cannot be changed (except for spelling).

4) Homework: Reading your novel... and the comma and semi-colon review sheet.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Ready to Rebel?

1) Silent Reading

  • Next week you should be about 60-70% of the way through...

2) Poetry Unit Updates

  • What a Young Man/Woman Wants Poem is overdue.
  • Response to Sad Daughter/Waiting Room is due Friday. See example below.
  • I will give you Kite Runner test back tomorrow...

3) Are you a rebel? A badass? Poets are... (remember our positive rebel")
  • What are the traits of rebels?
  • Or, finish this sentence.You know you are a rebel if you...
4) Group Study - 5 rebellion poems



Friday, May 17, 2013

Waiting Room Example Response

[Catchy Opening] Sometimes when children speak, they cut straight to truths that most adults cannot or will not tackle. [Thesis Statement] In the confessional poem, "In the Waiting Room," by Elizabeth Bishop, her precocious seven year-old self suddenly becomes aware of her existence, and she is puzzled and overwhelmed with questions.  Why should I be my aunt, or me, or anyone? What similarities made us all just one? Why should you be one? In that moment in the waiting room, we witness a child coming to terms with the "black wave" of confounding awareness, modelling for all readers the necessity of facing the big question of life - what is the point? [Body of ideas/quotes/argument] In the beginning of the poem, the speaker simply describes the ordinary and mundane details of the waiting room. And those "overcoats, lamps and magazines" are familiar to readers; we immerse in a comfortable and familiar environment. But, like our speaker, we are in for a traumatic surprise - the young speaker is about to fall into an existential void, one that adults understand, but avoid dealing with. The source of the crisis is comical, a National Geographic magazine filled with "Long pig[s]," "babies with pointed heads," and "awful hanging breasts." Between the reading of that magazine "right straight through" and the "bright and too hot" dentist's waiting room, the girl bursts "an oh! of pain." That "oh!" is an existential epiphany; it is not the "foolish and timid" aunt that the speaker seems so eager to mock. "It was me." Her awareness is excruciating. She "falls" into what most readers will realize is the "nothing stranger" moment when you see that you are human, "shadowy" and "in it."  She tries, like we all do, to define "it," to peg life down. After all, isn't all that "blue-black" space definable and compartmentalizable? No. At the end of the poem, she slides "beneath a big black wave, another, and another..." [Conclusion] Like all of us, our innocent seven year old speaker has just realized that she is alive and that being alive is miraculous and weird.

In the Waiting Room/Sad Daughter Response

1) Draft of What a Young Woman/Man Wants Poem - how is your first draft coming? Final draft due on Tuesday.

2) Another brief response to a poem.
  • In a long paragraph response, analyze the theme of either "To a Sad Daughter" or "In the Waiting Room." 
  • Show that you are in control of a close reading of the poem. 
  • Explain the significance of the beginning, middle and end of the poem. 
  • At least SIX small INTEGRATED quotes of only 1,2, or 3 words in length.
  • See the example paragraph (above).
  • You may use the following resources. However, if you read them you must put a Works Cited at the end. 
example:
Works Cited


Resources:
In the Waiting Room Online - http://www.shmoop.com/in-the-waiting-room-bishop/
To a Sad Daughter - http://www.enotes.com/sad-daughter

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Louder than a Bomb and More...

1) Finish Louder than a Bomb - there are only 20 minutes left.

In a group of two or three, discuss the following questions - co-write a paragraph response to each:
  • Given that Comox is a capital S Small town, and given that many of you are putting your heads into your cell phones more than you are into anything else and given that the internet is changing our brains (watch the video).... What do you think Ms. Colborne thought you would get out of this documentary? Why did she think it might be "good" for you?
  • Speaking your mind and expressing your emotions can be difficult. The Louder Than a Bomb competition has a saying, “The point is not the points. The point is the poetry.” Why do you think they stress this saying? What can you personally take away from this perspective? Why should expressing one'e emotions be first and foremost?

    Due today - put your names on it.
2) Creative Writing Assignment - most of the Louder than a Bomb poems were about the ordinary but heavy concerns of teens living in a family, surviving in a school, enduring a society.

Check out this poem I found in the most recent copy of The Claremont Review - an International magazine of student writing that is published in Victoria, BC. http://www.theclaremontreview.ca/

Read aloud - twice: What a Young Woman Wants


What do you want? Not as in what do you want to buy (shallow stuff), but as in what do you want to be allowed to experience? How do you want to be percieved?

Now, write your own version - see handout. Due Thursday. (Keep in mind a new written response will be assigned tomorrow)

Monday, May 6, 2013

Poetic Terms Review, Poems of Childhood Begin

1) Poetic Terms

Alliteration - the repetition of sounds/letters at the beginning of words in a line of poetry.

EXAMPLE: seven stars go squawking

Allusion - a reference to something that most people are familiar with (can be literary, biblical, historical, popular, etc...).

EXAMPLE: "the Giant is enchanting to Jack" (as in Jack and Jill)
Assonance - the repetition of vowel sounds near to each other in a line of poetry (beginning, middle and ends of words).

EXAMPLE: "O look, look in the Mirror"

Consonance - a poetic device characterized by the repetition of the same consonant two or more times in short succession, as in "pitter patter" or in "all mammals named Sam are clammy".

Hyperbole - deliberate exaggeration for emphasis.

Metaphor - a direct comparison. A=B

Onomatopoeia - when the pronounciation of the word imitates the sound of the word.

Personification - to give a non-animate thing human characteristics.

Simile - an indirect comparison that uses the words "like" or "as."

Symbol - an object that represents or stands in for something else.

2) My Papa's Waltz
  • Read three times
  • Questions to Ask of a Poem
  • Discussion
One man's take on it: 

3) Your work - Those Winter Sundays

Friday, May 3, 2013

Into the Wild...


1) Altered Journals (and Chapter Q's) DUE 
2) Self Assess and Submit. (Copies of Rubric)
3) Wild - connotations? Poetry - connotations?
4) Poetry Unit Outline
5) Tara, this is stupid stuff! And Questions to Ask of a Poem.

Next Week: Library to get independent novel study. Another two poems. First written response.

Monday, April 29, 2013

Wrapping Up The Kite Runner

1) Chapters 22 - 24 Discussion

What happens when Amir meets with the man who has Sohrab? How did you react?
p. 302 - why is this scene so important?

Ch. 23/24 - the hospital... Farid is still there... Sohrab is okay... looking for orphanage... letter from Rahim...visiting the mosque... asks Sohrab if he would like to come back to America with him.

"I think he was ashamed of himself."

The embassy. Trying to get Sohrab papers to go to the US. The promise. The disappointment. The heart-break.

25 - He is alive. But, he is silent. The silence that lasts a year.

The ending - p.387 -

  • Given this ending, why is the book called The Kite Runner?
  • Is the ending apt?
  • Would you recommend this book to others?
2) Group Activity - Develop a theme statement. See handout. Write it on the board.

We all make mistakes, sometimes even terrible mistakes that deeply hurt the people we love; to move forward from dark times, we must face our wicked actions, and make peace with what we have done.

OR

Suffering is a universal experience; once we know this we must do what we can to help the people that we can.

3) Unit Review Notes - use these notes to prep for tomorrow's test.

20 marks of Multiple Choice

30 marks - Choice of Written Response topics - multi-paragraph. You can use the book for this part of the test, if you want.

4) Journals - take them home! There is no more time to work on them in class. Make it beautiful and engaging.


Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Chapter 7 - 10

Discussion Questions:

  1. How is Hassan's dream of the lake and the monster important?
  2. p.71 - What has he really won? Why is this winning the greatest moment of his life? "I was a hero."
  3. The worst moment of his life - p 78 - 83 What is dissociation? Where is it that Amir retreats to? What thoughts keep him from remaining present at the scene of the crime?
  4. We can all agree that rape is wrong. What about rape as a symbol - Rape in the news http://goodmenproject.com/ethics-values/a-letter-to-my-son-about-consent/ - Rape of boys in Afghanistan http://www.sfgate.com/opinion/brinkley/article/Afghanistan-s-dirty-little-secret-3176762.php - reacting to any of this, would make for excellent journal topics.
  5. What happens at home afterwards? Silence, the trip, he says it, insomnia...
  6. "Have you ever thought about getting new servants?" What is Amir up to?
  7. The Pomegranate Exchange - p98
  8. The Birthday Party - what happens?99- 106
  9. Chapter Nine - the money and the watch p.110 WHY?
  10. Chapter Ten - escaping the country - what are the most memorable scenes? 
Quiz - Read this poem and write a short response to the following question. How is Hassan like the lamb? How does this make him noble and good? How does this quality also make him weak? Use at least three specific examples from the book. A paragraph response.

The Lamb

BY WILLIAM BLAKE
Little Lamb who made thee 
         Dost thou know who made thee 
Gave thee life & bid thee feed. 
By the stream & o'er the mead;
Gave thee clothing of delight,
Softest clothing wooly bright;
Gave thee such a tender voice,
Making all the vales rejoice! 
         Little Lamb who made thee 
         Dost thou know who made thee 

         Little Lamb I'll tell thee,
         Little Lamb I'll tell thee!
He is called by thy name,
For he calls himself a Lamb: 
He is meek & he is mild, 
He became a little child: 
I a child & thou a lamb, 
We are called by his name.
         Little Lamb God bless thee. 
         Little Lamb God bless thee.

Time to work on Journal Entries - bookable lab. Check out your journals...

Friday, March 22, 2013

Kite Fighting Short Film

Happy Spring Reading!

Please read 
up to and including...

Chapter 13.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

A Slippery Spectrum, Ch.6 and work time!

Are some actions absolutely right? Are some actions absolutely wrong? A stand up and stand your ground exercise.

Before we judge Amir and other characters, let's face who we are.

Altruism <------------> Hedonism

Possible Journal Topics: How do you know who is mostly good?
Why is empathy/caring/doing good for others a key way to happiness?





Read: Chapter 6

Work: Journal, Questions, Reading (Ch.7)





Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Chapters 1-5

1) Discuss - chapter 4 and 5 questions... let's talk them through out loud! Together we are better.

2) Review Terms -

Irony - see board.

 sym·bol/ˈsimbəl/

Noun:
  1. A thing that represents or stands for something else, esp. a material object representing something abstract. A symbol's meaning can shift to represent more than one thing, especially in a longer piece of literature.

Examples from the Kite Runner (so far). What do these represent?
  • Hassan's Hairlip
  • The Pomegranate Tree
  • "Feeding from the same breast"
  • Kites
  • Throwing up
2) mo·tif/mōˈtēf/

Noun:
  1. A recurrent and distinctive feature or dominant idea in an artistic or literary composition. 

Examples from The Kite Runner:
  • Tragedy and Loss
  • Father and Son Relationships
  • Wounds/Scars/Disabilities
  • The Connection between the Social and Political
  • Discrimination (Pashtuns vs, Hazaras)
  • What is Masculine?

3) New Possible Journal Entries
  • Buzkashi Video... what does this video teach us about Afghani culture? 



4) Time to read - Chapter 6... silent reading or read-along - your choice.

5) Time to work - journal entries, chapter questions, vocabulary


Starting Journal Topics



  • What do you think about the state of the world today? Do you keep yourself informed about the world? If not, what not. If so, to what effect?
  • Interview an adult about 9/11. What do they remember? What do they describe? OR - watch some of the 9/11 footage online... how do you think this act of terrorism changed the world.
  • How does the movie, "Slumdog Millionaire" relate to The Kite Runner? What themes or ideas about life do they seem to share in common.
  • Characterize Baba and Amir's relationship. Why does "hate" enter into their father/son relationship? What quotations show us, the readers, the raw truths about their feelings towards one another?
  • Children are not colouring books.
  • Much of this novel is about discrimination and cultural divides across political/social/religious lines. Is it human nature to hate the "other"? Do we in Canada have our own stories of ugly discrimination? Or, what about right here in the hallways of Highland, what ugly divides and discrimination happen here? How can we deal with this sort of hatred?
  • Do you identify with Amir in any way? Most students see at least a glimmer of themselves in the complicated relationship he has with his father. In what ways are you like Amir?
    Reflection is a form of personal response to 
    experiences, situations, events or new information. 
    It is a ‘processing’ phase where thinking and learning 
    take place. There is neither a right nor a wrong way 
    of reflective thinking, there are just questions to 
    explore. 

    Reflective writing is:
    • your response to experiences, opinions, events or new information
    • your response to thoughts and feelings
    • a way of thinking to explore your learning
    • an opportunity to gain self-knowledge
    • a way to achieve clarity and better understanding of what you are learning and thinking about in class
    • a chance to develop and reinforce writing skills
    • a way of making meaning out of what you read and discuss in class

    Reflective writing is not:
    • just conveying information, instruction or argument
    • pure description, though there may be descriptive elements
    • straightforward decision or judgement (e.g. about whether something is right or wrong, good or bad)
    • a summary of course notes
    • a standard formal essay
  • The Lottery, Hate, the Journal, and Chapter Four

    1) Life is a Lottery. 

     Discuss: How is this metaphor true?


    http://www.economist.com/news/21566430-where-be-born-2013-lottery-life 


    • What if you were re-born POOR? Draw a country...
    • What if you were re-born to Afghanistan? Draw Pashtun or Hazara...
    2) Let's talk about HATE.

    What, really, is hate? 
    Small h hate, and capital H Hate...
    Where does hate come from?
    Why did hate bubble up in Ch. 3? 
    What about hate in Afghanistan?

    3) The Journal 
    • At least 40 topics will be provided.
    • You pick and or create 20 topics that suit the span of the novel.
    • 40 marks for journal writing.
    • 20 marks for creative elements added to reclaimed book. (Quotes, art, clipped photos, images, stickers, leaves, advertisements, recipes, hand-made crafts, anything goes...)
    4) Chapter 4 - reading... who prefers to read silently? Where did we leave off?

    Friday, March 15, 2013

    Packing for Afghanistan

    Let's Pack... We have a lot of stuff to put in our packs before we can go to Afghanistan...
    Destination Afghanistan (Hell on Earth?) 

    1) What did you think of Slumdog Millionaire?
    • The two brothers allegory - bible stories, literature across the world, typically about something... What did the two brothers represent in movie?
    • How was this story depressing?
    • How was this story uplifting?
    • What was the theme, in your opinion? There are many....
    2) What is the state of the world for most young people?

    3 questions - Number of TV's in your house? Average dinner? Average ?
    Let's see some visuals and photos to make

    Look: https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B2_H3hKK6a0zTlBabDM0cllJQlE/edit?usp=sharing



    3) What is Afghanistan like? What do you already know?
    4) Library - Let's get the book!



    Monday, March 11, 2013

    How to Write an English Test

    1) Before you even get there... sleep, eat and believe in yourself.

    2) Once you are able to open the test, take a minute (or five) just to take it all in. 

    • Flip through all the pages. 
    • Read all the writing topics, in particular.
    3) When you are a reading a text:
    • Read with a pen/pencil in your hand.
    • (Remember the writing topic).
    • Underline passages that seem important.
    • Take a look at the title - what does it tell you?
    • Remember to use The Questions to Ask of a Story to get to a deep understanding quickly. 
      • Setting?
      • Plot?
      • Character?
      • Conflict?
      • POV?
      • Theme?
      • Figurative Language?
    4) When you are writing your literary response, be sure to include the following:
    • An engaging opening/ "Hook"
    • In your introduction, introduce the characters and some of the basic plot...
    • A clear and detailed thesis - includes title and author and main idea (answer to question/topic)
    • Plenty of short, integrated supporting quotations
    • Layers of points, evidence and evaluation (pee method)
    • Transitions from idea to idea
    • A clear and memorable conclusion (re-visit but do not re-state your thesis)
    Movie time!? In between units... Anyone seen Slumdog Millionaire?

    Wednesday, March 6, 2013

    Group Handout - Best Minds and Happiness...

    Click here if you need the handout.

    Tuesday, March 5, 2013

    Inquiry Project: Best Minds and Happiness...

    Review and Preview - Is your "Boys and Girls" response in? This is our last story... practice exam and real exam to follow.


    Terms: - Genre - Science Fiction - Dystopia - 
    Coming of Age - Conflict

    The Psychological Lens

    • Why isn't the protagonist happy?
      (Internal conflicts are often about a lack of happiness).
    • How is his unhappiness related to our own lives?
    • What research/ideas support your theory about why he is unhappy?
    • Present your answer to the class on Wednesday/Thursday - you need to speak for at least 3 minutes, you need to reference and refer to your research (quote, read aloud), and you need to use literary terminology.
    Resources:

    - Books in class
    - Articles online... I have a couple...
    - Websiteshttp://www.ppc.sas.upenn.edu/publications.htm 

    Homework: Listen to Just Say No to Happiness -  http://www.cbc.ca/ideas/episodes/2012/02/14/say-no-to-happiness-2/

    Sunday, March 3, 2013

    Mondayyyyy.....

    I'm away. Sick. Icky. SO sorry.
    Mr. Janz will take excellent care of you all.

    1) Generation Why has published three people's commentary. Any guesses? Take a look together, if you can... maybe tell Mr. Janz about it.

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/yourcommunity/2013/03/generation-why-this-weeks-must-reads-from-a-youth-perspective.html  Share this with your parents and friends! You should be very proud of this formally published piece - it means they saw something significant in your words and ideas. If you want to link to it, you can simply go to cbc.ca and find the link on their front page.

    They said they just did not have enough room to include all the good ones, so they will include more of our work next week! Bravo!

    2) "Boys and Girls" Response is due. 

    Before you hand it in I want you to find a partner and read your work to one another. Then, together look over this essay rubric. Self assess using it - and attach the rubric to your work.

    3) I Saw the Best Minds....

    I know I asked you to read the story over the weekend, but here it is to listen to again. Underline passages that jump out at you as you listen. http://nides.bc.ca/tutorials/english_essay/Street_Poet_Talks.mp3

    If you want to watch the tutorial series attached to this story you are welcome to here. http://nides.bc.ca/tutorials/english_essay/  It is possibly the silliest (read: most embarrassing)  thing I have ever created, but many students have said that it has helped them to understand the essay writing process.

    Your task today - Elements of Fiction Cards: Find the handout - The Elements of Fiction - and element by element go through this story and create notes about each element. Include quotes. Cue cards are the ideal way to do this. You`ll each need your six cards or sets of notes for our discussion and work tomorrow. 12 marks

    Ex. Setting Card

    - Futuristic - provide details
    - Seems not entirely unlike our world - explain why
    - quote
    - quote
    - social and political context - explained.


    Thursday, February 28, 2013

    Generation Why - What?!

    1) Review (and some babbling to transition us to the next story and a little real-life writing job we've been asked to do) - looking at short stories, reviewing basic terms, beginning to write analytically, making-meaning (the stuff of life), and yesterday, we watched a "story." The story was about addiction... addiction is a struggle for every generation... which leads me to a point.


  • All the stories we have looked at, so far, have been about a vastly different social/cultural/historical setting from the one you live in - 2013, technology, social media, exponential change, media savvy, etc...
  • Discussion Questions - What are the features of the world you live? What is your setting? What are the addictions of your generation? What are the  things that your generation will be remembered for? What will your generation have to figure out and fix? What will be celebrated about your generation?
    What do these images seem to say about your generation?




    • With these ideas in mind, let's first explore your REAL lived setting and then, by Friday, read a more contemporary story, that will feel a lot like your world right now.
    2) Generation Why - a weekly interactive magazine curated by young Canadians for young Canadians.

    In partnership with CBC News Canada, a number of teachers across Canada have been asked to help to support the development of this online news magazine. It offers students a rich opportunity to write in response to non-fiction news and opinion pieces. You are going to be published online! 


    Read over how to submit. Tour the CBC website.

    Today  - find a CBC item and then write about it. Your item can be a story, a standout radio or TV interview, a documentary, a photo gallery, an interactive map, etc. As long as it's CBC content we can link to online, it's an option! 

    Write a couple paragraphs (200 words max) about why this news item caught your attention and why you think other young Canadians might be interested, too. First person and conversational is fine! 


    Submit by email, and 'cc' me too... tara.colborne@sd71.bc.ca 



    Sunday, February 24, 2013

    Library Day - Boys and Girls Response


    Hey Everyone,

    I have been asked to attend a district meeting this morning about creating cross-curricular courses in our high schools (for example, taking a CSI English/Chemistry class where you read mystery novels and solve crimes using science). So, I'm away again today. My apologies. Mr. Janz will go over the writing topic and the integrating quotes handout and take you to the library. 

    Best, Ms. C

    Boys and Girls Response:

    Read this article about gender norms and toys http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/23/opinion/sunday/gender-based-toy-marketing-returns.html or find your own article that is from 2010 or earlier, and answer the following question, quoting both the story, "Boys and Girls" and the non-fiction article, and referencing your own impressions and opinions about gender issues.

    How is the protagonist in the short story "Boys and Girls," by Alice Munro, trapped, like the foxes, and like Flora, 
    by the gender norms of her time? This is a formal response (please do not use first person).

    Min 500 words - multi-paragraph.

    Focus - Style:
    • Elevate Vocabulary
    • Sentence Diversity
    • Seamlessly integrate quotes from two sources... see handout on board
    • Works Cited - see example introduction below...
    Outfoxing Gender Norms
    Exploring the limits of gender in "Boys and Girls."
    by Tara Colborne

    Gender norms have pervaded most societies since there have been societies; girls are raised to be caged and boys to wander. Post-feminism, post-modernity, one would expect the limits of gender to be a thing of the past. However, a quick tour through a local Toys-R-Us will plainly point out "there are pink aisles, where toys revolve around beauty and domesticity, and blue aisles filled with toys related to building, action and aggression." The hegemonic, divisive, gendered, and colour-coded norms are still predominant. The simple fact is that boys and girls even in privileged 2013 North American high schools can still read Munro's "Boys and Girls," set in a small farm-town in the Forties, and understand exactly how it is that the "just a girl" girl is unjustly set-up to set foot in the cage of the kitchen. The protagonist is limited, at first softly, but then firmly, by a very strict set of gender norms: girls work inside cooking, cleaning and sewing, while boys only get to experience the roaming freedom and independence of outdoor work. Only briefly, as a young child, was the main character able to out-fox the rules of the fox farm. Unfortunately, it was just a temporary thing; like Flora, eventually she had to be reigned in and sacraficed. 



    Works Cited:

    Munro, Alice. "Boys and Girls." Handout. 

    Sweet, Elizabeth. "Guys and Dolls No More?"  Web. Feb. 25, 2013 <http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/23/opinion/sunday/gender-based-toy-marketing-returns.html?_r=0>


    Thursday, February 21, 2013

    Boils and Ghouls Cont'd

    1) Boys and Girls Questions - discuss and submit...

    2) Hand back "A & P" responses - feedback... read an example.

    3) How to integrate quotes - handout

    4) Netbooks - new writing topic:

    Read this article about gender norms and toys http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/23/opinion/sunday/gender-based-toy-marketing-returns.html or find your own article that is from 2010 or earlier, and answer the following question, quoting both the story, "Boys and Girls" and the non-fiction article, and referencing your own impressions and opinions about gender issues.

    How is the protagonist in the short story "Boys and Girls," by Alice Munro, trapped, like the foxes, and like Flora, 
    by the gender norms of her time? 

    Min 500 words - multi-paragraph

    • Elevate vocabulary
    • Sentence Diversity
    • Seamlessly integrate quotes from two sources
    • Works Cited