Outschool
Abrir configuración de moneda, zona horaria e idioma
Iniciar sesión

Análisis literario, enfoque en la comprensión, redacción de resúmenes y debates sobre novelas

Los estudiantes analizarán novelas de nivel de grado con énfasis en términos literarios, comprensión de lectura, habilidades gramaticales y uso de evidencia textual en preguntas de respuesta escrita.
Striving Students Towards Success, LLC.
Puntuación media:
4.9
Número de reseñas:
(245)
Clase
Jugar

Qué está incluido

12 reuniones en vivo
10 horas presenciales
Tarea
2-4 horas por semana. Learners will be provided a study guide for each novel that consists of 2-3 questions per chapter.
Evaluación
The teacher will informally assess students' knowledge of material assigned by asking questions from the comprehensive study guide. The teacher will provide central idea and summary paragraph assignments that students will be encouraged to complete in order to better assess common core reading and writing standards.

Experiencia de clase

Nivel de inglés - B1
Grado de EE. UU. 5 - 7
The Fall Section will be reading- A Long Walk to Water by Linda Sue Park, Revolution is Not a Dinner Party Ying Chang Compestine, and "The Tiger Rising" by Kate Dicamillo.
This course is meant to provide learners with in-depth literary analysis of three to four common texts read during a middle school career. As a certified English teacher for grades 7-12, I have been teaching these texts in the classroom for over ten years. I have also worked in Social Studies classrooms so I try to choose novels that can be used to strengthen students' knowledge of historical eras and global politics/concepts. These are the main novels that I rotate in this course. If a learner chooses to attend another semester, I can always have new book selections to read. I regularly add new novels that are age appropriate for middle school learners. 

“A Long Walk To Water” by Linda Sue Park
“The Outsiders” by S.E. Hinton 
“Bomb” by Steve Sheinkin
“I Am Malala” by Malala Yousafzai 
“Inside Out & Back Again” by Thanhha Lai 
"Wonder" by R.J. Palacio
"Speak" by Laurie Halse Anderson
"Esperanza Rising" by Pam Ryan
'Fish in a Tree' by Lynda Mullaly Hunt
"The Tiger Rising" by Kate DiCamillo
"The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind" by William Kamkwamba
"The Endless Steppe" by Esther Hautzig
"Revolution is Not a Dinner Party" by Ying Chang Compestine
"Refugee" by Alan Gratz

When reading novels from a global perspective, learners will be exposed to more nonfiction texts. We will also spend time discussing the geography, culture, religion, and history of each novel’s setting. Learners will learn to identify literary elements and how to discuss how authors develop central ideas or themes. Students will engage in discussions about government and society while reading the texts "The Outsiders" and "Bomb". The novels 'Speak' and 'Wonder' touch on themes of growing up and how events in one's youth can have profound effects on a person's psyche.

Learners are regularly provided with video content to supplement their understanding of the story. There is also a custom study guide for each story for learners to practice their writing skills. For several of the novels, the teacher will provide movie adaptation clips so learners can visualize the story lines while reading the text. Most of the reading will be expected to be done by learners outside of the live meetings but the teacher will select passages that are of confusion or imperative to understanding the central idea to read aloud during live class meetings. 

If learners and parents have no preference on what novels are read during the semester, I will choose the texts. Before starting each novel, teacher will provide a comprehensive study guide with questions on plot, literary elements, vocabulary, and research questions. Learners that complete written assignments will receive prompt graded feedback from the teacher. There will also be regular writing assignments that encourage learners to meet Common Core writing standards which include utilizing textual evidence to support claims regarding the main (central) idea of the novels. This course can be utilized as a supplemental course for learners attending a hybrid school model or as a stand alone English course for homeschooled learners.

Metas de aprendizaje

Learners will identify the literary elements used by the author to build a central idea.
Learners will write a central idea essay discussing ho the author used one literary element to build a central idea.
objetivo de aprendizaje

Otros detalles

Orientación para padres
'Bud, Not Buddy' has situations that involve child abuse as the protagonist experiences a very neglectful foster home at the start of the novel. 'Fever: 1793' is set in Philadelphia during the Yellow Fever Epidemic. Learners who have anxiety surrounding pandemics may find the story triggering. Parents should be aware that the novels "Inside Out & Back Again", "Refugee", "I am Malala", and "Revolution is Not a Dinner Party", and "A Long Walk to Water" discuss extreme poverty, discrimination against marginilized groups, war and conflict. While there is not graphic violence in the texts, there is mention of gun violence in guerilla warfare and a main character is shot to death in "A Long Walk to Water".
Lista de útiles escolares
"A Long Walk to Water" by Linda Sue Park
"Revolution is Not a Dinner Party" by Ying Chang Compestine
"The Tiger Rising" by Kate DiCamillo
Recursos externos
Los estudiantes no necesitarán utilizar ninguna aplicación o sitio web más allá de las herramientas estándar de Outschool.
Se unió el May, 2020
4.9
245reseñas
Perfil
Experiencia y certificaciones del docente
Nueva York Certificado de Docencia en Educación especial
Nicole Hess
Nueva York Certificado de Docencia en Artes del lenguaje inglés
Nicole Hess
Maestría en Educación especial desde Grand Canyon University
Nicole Hess
Licenciatura en Lengua Inglesa y Literatura desde State University of New York at Oswego
Nicole Hess
I have a Bachelor's Degree in Literature and a Master's Degree in Students with Disabilities. As a certified high school English teacher, I have been teaching these texts in the classroom for over ten years and I am experienced in leading lectures that deal with sensitive race relation topics. I teach in the city of Buffalo, New York and have experience discussing sensitive issues of race, immigration, and conflicts of developing nations with diverse groups of learners that include students who share the refugee experiences of the characters. I have also worked as a co teacher in various grade level Social Studies classrooms so I am experienced in how these texts should tie in with high school Social Studies standards. 

Reseñas

Clase grupal
Compartir

11 US$

semanalmente
1 x por semana, 12 semanas
50 min

Completado por 44 alumnos
Videoconferencias en vivo
Edades: 10-12
5-9 alumnos por clase

Acerca de
Apoyo
SeguridadPrivacidadPrivacidad de CAPrivacidad del alumnoSus opciones de privacidadTérminos
Obtener la aplicación
Descargar en la App StoreDescargar en Google Play
© 2025 Outschool