MONDAY: The Interesting Life of Olaudah Equiano PROGRESS CHECK
OBJECTIVE: After reading and annotating Olaudah Equiano’s “The Interesting Life of Olaudah Equiano”, students will be able to write formal analytical paragraphs that provide evidence of their ability to : 1.) identify authors’ purpose , claim and use of imagery 2.) explain how these early writers’ views of human nature influenced American identity and political thought.
Essential Question: How did author’s of slave narratives such as Olaudah Equiano view HUMAN NATURE? How did slave narratives such as “The Interesting Life of Olaudah Equiano”, use IMAGERY and the ARISTOTELIAN TRIANGLE to clearly communicate their message about human nature? How did his views influence the United States of America as a political and cultural entity?
HANDOUTS: Learning Scales, Progress Check Revision Guide
TUESDAY: The Interesting Life of Olaudah Equiano PROGRESS CHECK PEER REVISION
OBJECTIVE: After reading and annotating Olaudah Equiano’s “The Interesting Life of Olaudah Equiano”, students will be able to write formal analytical paragraphs that provide evidence of their ability to : 1.) identify authors’ purpose , claim and use of imagery 2.) explain how these early writers’ views of human nature influenced American identity and political thought.
Essential Question: How did author’s of slave narratives such as Olaudah Equiano view HUMAN NATURE? How did slave narratives such as “The Interesting Life of Olaudah Equiano”, use IMAGERY and the ARISTOTELIAN TRIANGLE to clearly communicate their message about human nature? How did his views influence the United States of America as a political and cultural entity?
HANDOUTS: Learning Scales, Progress Check Revision Guide
WEDNESDAY: Phyllis Wheatly Revision
OBJECTIVE: After reading and annotating Phyllis Wheatly’s “To the Right Honorable William, Earl of Dartmouth”, students will be able to provide evidence of their ability to : 1.) identify authors’ purpose , claim and use of imagery 2.) explain how these early writers’ views of human nature influenced American identity and political thought.
Essential Question: How did authors view HUMAN NATURE? How did Phyllis Wheatly use IMAGERY and to clearly communicate their message about human nature? How did his views influence the United States of America as a political and cultural entity?
Homework: Annotate & Summarize Phyllis Wheatly’s poem, ““To the Right Honourable William, Earl of Dartmouth”
THURSDAY: Introduction to the Declaration of Independence
Unit Goal: In a TIMED WRITE ESSAY, SWBAT describe how Early American texts and genres explored and communicated views of human nature through the use of the rhetorical triangle, imagery, and figurative language.
Objective: AFTER viewing video on the The Declaration of Independence and Thomas Jefferson’s background, students will be able to write a background paragraph that describes the historical context of the founding document.
Handouts:from “The Autobiography: The Declaration of Independence” Declaration of Independence Notes,
FRIDAY: The Declaration of Independence
Unit Goal: In a TIMED WRITE ESSAY, SWBAT describe how Early American texts and genres explored and communicated views of human nature through the use of the rhetorical triangle, imagery, and figurative language.
Objective: After CLOSE READING, SWBAT compare how Thomas Jefferson and Elizabeth Cady Stanton used rhetorical triangle and parallelism to achieve purpose, communicate tone, and reveal their ideas about HUMAN NATURE in The Declaration of Independence”
Essential Question: How did authors such as Thomas Jefferson view HUMAN NATURE? How did documents like the Declaration of Independence, use the RHETORICAL TRIANGLE & PARALLELISM to communicate their message about human nature? How did his views influence the United States of America as a political and cultural entity?
Handouts:from “The Autobiography: The Declaration of Independence” Declaration of Independence Notes,
Homework: Read about Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Write Background Paragraph, Close Read & Annotate The Declaration of Sentiments on the Rights of Women, Complete Says-Means-Matters