含まれるもの
24 ライブミーティング
18 授業時間宿題:
週あたり 4+ 時間. The ONLY way students will be successful in this class is if they complete all assigned readings and work prior to each class meeting. Additionally, to keep up with timely feedback on writing assignments and grading, students MUST complete all assigned work by the end of the school week. (see "Weekly Assignment Sheet") Each week, students will complete readings, have discussions with peers, and complete assignments, and work on group projects. Please make sure your student has four or more hours each week to work on this course. Limited live meetings. An estimated 5+ hours per week outside of class.テスト
Students will be assessed through quizzes, exams, and short answer responses that are aligned to the national standards. Each student will have access to google classroom for assignments and for grade progression.評価
含まれるこの文章は自動翻訳されています
このクラスで学べること
英語レベル - 不明
米国の学年 10
Course Content and Order are Subject to Change based on semester and needs. Also, not all of the readings found herein may be assigned. See attached example Outline for a fuller description of this class. Course Description: This class will prepare students to critically read and respond to a wide variety of literature and informational texts. During the course, students will learn to discuss and write about literature, skillfully analyze and form arguments, grow their personal lexicons, and improve their writing through revision. During the weekly meetings, students will discuss any issues or concerns with the material. I will provide background knowledge and guidance and the students will be able to interact with one another and with me. Student Interaction with Instructor and students: The outline of this course may be altered depending on time constraints, scheduling, and students' interests. I will have office hours available throughout the semester for students who may need additional help with readings, essays, presentations, or any questions. This can be done over email or on the Outschool Zoom platform. Partner/group interactions can occur however the group desires. Whether this is done over zoom, email, or another method, they are free to do so. What will be taught? The course is aligned to state and national standards. The course will focus on the areas of reading literature, reading informational texts, writing and speaking and listening; while simultaneously developing critical vocabulary and grammar skills. During this course, students will work on the standards that focus around citing text evidence, theme, summarizing, plot, character development, point of view, main idea, argumentative writing, informational writing, narrative writing, and collaboration and discussion. Course Format and how will I teach?: At the beginning of the week, a "Weekly Outlook" video will be posted in the Outschool classroom detailing the week's work. Each class meeting will start with an "Anticipation Guide." The students will have to agree or disagree with each statement and then share out with the rest of the class why they agree or disagree with a statement. Each statement in the anticipation guides are points of discussion for the students to engage in with each other. This is a fun activity that enables students to hear what other students are thinking and to agree or disagree with them. Weekly Lesson Examples: Weekly lessons include "Anticipation Guides" for class discussion and interaction, concept videos to watch when a new standard or concept is being taught or introduced, and group projects where students will have work together to complete a task and then present to the class their findings. There will also be reading assignments with discussion questions for students to respond to, assessments to complete, writing assignments, and other assignments or extension opportunities to share with other students. It is encouraged to have the readings and assignments completed prior to each class meeting so students can participate in discussions together. To give each student a more meaningful learning experience, all students need to participate in the discussion questions by responding to the questions and giving feedback to other students. Any work that will be turned in for grades/scores, will be recorded in google classroom. Google classroom will be shared with each student in order to track progress when an assignment is graded/scored. Spring Semester - 10th Grade English Language Arts (ELA) Part 2: Course Outline (Subject to Change): Jan 23 - Feb 3: Weeks 1 & 2: UNIT 1: The Cliff Hanger (Conflict & Suspense) Feb 6 - Feb 17: Weeks 3 & 4: UNIT 2: Comedy Feb 20 - Mar 3: Weeks 5 & 6: UNIT 3: The World of Fantasy - Wishes and Nightmares Date? - Date?: Spring Break No Classes??? Mar 6 - Mar 17: Weeks 7 & 8: UNIT 8.3: Trickster Tales and Tall Tales (The Legend of Sleepy Hollow) Mar 20 - Mar 31: Weeks 9 & 10: UNIT 4: TBA Apr 3 - Apr 14: Weeks 11 & 12: UNIT 5: TBA UNIT 1: FICTION AND NONFICTION Literary Analysis Workshop Literary/Informational Skills: Theme vs. Central Idea Reading Skills: Make Predictions; Author’s Purpose Writing Workshop: Autobiographical Essay; Problem-and-Solution Essay Author Story/Text Type Literary Analysis Workshop: Fiction and Nonfiction Determining Themes in Fiction Instructional Essay Determining Central Ideas in Nonfiction Instructional Essay Tillie Olsen from “I Stand Here Ironing” Short Story Elizabeth McCracken from “The Giant’s House” Fiction Franklin D. Roosevelt from “State of the Union Address (1941)” Historical Account Elizabeth McCracken Desiderata Personal Essay Leveled Selections: Isaac Bashevis Singer The Washwoman Narrative Essay Maya Angelou New Directions Narrative Essay Leveled Selections: Joan Aiken Sonata for Harp and Bicycle Short Story Edgar Allan Poe The Cask of Amontillado Short Story Reading for Information: Analyzing Functional and Expository Texts Shaunda Kennedy Wenger and Janet Kay Jensen New Road Chicken Pies Functional Text Ursula K. Abbot, Ralph A. Ernst, Francine A. Bradley Incubating Eggs in Small Quantities Expository Essay Writing Workshop Writer’s Toolbox Painting a Picture with Words Writer’s Toolbox Revising to Correct Use of Possessive Nouns UNIT 2: SHORT STORIES Literary Analysis Workshop Informational Skills: Character, Plot, and Theme; Text Structure Reading Skills: Make Inferences, Cause & Effect Writing Workshop: Short Story, Cause-and-Effect Essay Author Story/Text Type Literary Analysis Workshop: Short Stories Analyzing Character Instructional Essay Analyzing Structure and Theme Instructional Essay Ernest Hemingway Old Man at the Bridge Short Story Wayson Choy The Jade Peony Short Story Leveled Selections: Richard Connell The Most Dangerous Game Short Story Judith Ortiz Cofer American History Short Story Leveled Selections: O. Henry The Gift of the Magi Short Story Saki (H. H. Munro) The Interlopers Short Story Reading for Information: Analyzing Functional and Expository Texts Hawaiian Lifeguard Association Beach Safety Guide Functional Text Rock Climbing Equipment and Techniques Expository Text Comparing Functional and Expository Texts: Timed Writing (pg.289) Comparing Literary Works (pg.290) Leslie Marmon Silko The Man to Send Rain Clouds Short Story R. K. Narayan Old Man of the Temple Short Story Writing Workshop: Narrative Text: Short Story Writer’s Toolbox Developing the Plot Writer’s Toolbox Revising Inconsistent Verb Tenses Leveled Selections Amy Tan Rules of the Game Short Story Guy de Maupassant The Necklace Short Story Leveled Selections Toni Cade Bambara Blues Ain’t No Mockin Bird Short Story Mark Twain The Invalid’s Story Short Story Comparing Literary Works James Hurst The Scarlet Ibis Short Story Ray Bradbury The Golden Kite, the Silver Wind Short Story Writing Workshop: Explanatory Text: Cause and Effect Essay Jeff Anderson, M. Ed. What Do You Notice? Sentence Structure Wayson Choy Writers on Writing: On Showing Cause and Effect Writer’s Toolbox: Revising to Correct Faulty Subject-Verb Agreement (pg.407) UNIT 3: POETRY Literary Analysis Workshop Literary Skills: Figurative and Connotative Language; Tone Reading Skills: Read Fluently; Paraphrase Writing Workshop: Descriptive Essay; Response to Literature Author Story/Text Type Literary Analysis Workshop: Poetry Analyzing Poetic Language Instructional Essay Sara Teasdale Barter Emily Dickenson We grow accustomed to the dark Poem Pat Mora Uncoiling/A Voice Poem Leveled Selections: Poetry Collection #1 Langston Hughes Dream Deferred Poem Langston Hughes Dreams Poem Jean de Sponde Sonnet on Love XIII Poem Gabriela Mistral Meciendo/Rocking Poem William Wadsworth I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud Poem Poetry Collection #2 Richard Brautigan All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace Poem Emily Dickinson “Hope” is the thing with feathers- Poem Emily Dickinson Much Madness is divinest Sense- Poem Stanley Kunitz The War Against the Trees Poem Leveled Selections: Poetry Collection #3 Walter Dean Myers Summer Poem Alfred Lord Tennyson The Eagle Poem May Swenson Analysis of Baseball Poem Poetry Collection #4 Edgar Allan Poe The Bells Poem Yusef Komunyakaa Slam, Dunk, & Hook Poem Lewis Carroll Jabberwocky Poem Leveled Selections: Poetry Collection #5 Ernst Lawrence Thayer Casey at the Bat Poem William Stafford Fifteen Poem Sandra Cisneros Twister Hits Houston Poem Poetry Collection #6 Edwin Muir The Horses Poem Richard Wilbur The Writer Poem Edgar Allan Poe The Raven Poem Leveled Selections: Poetry Collection #7 Robert Frost The Road Not Taken Poem T.S. Eliot Macavity: The Mystery Cat Poem Emily Dickinson We never know how high we are Poem Poetry Collection #8 E.E. Cummings Maggie and milly and molly and may Poem William Shakespeare The Seven Ages of Man Poem Robert Frost Fire and Ice Poem Comparing Literary Works Walt Whitman I hear America Singing Poem Basho and Chiyojo Three Haiku Poem Alice Walker Women Poem William Shakespeare Sonnet 30 Poem Writing Workshop: Argument: Response to Literature Jeff Anderson, M. Ed. What Do You Notice? Direct Quotations Pat Mora Writers on Writing: On Response to Literature Writer’s Toolbox: Using Quotations (pg. 761) Vocabulary Workshop: Connotation and Denotation Communications Workshop: Oral Interpretation of Literature Assessment Workshop: Cumulative Review (pg. 768) Assessment Workshop: Performance Tasks (pg. 772) UNIT 4: TYPES OF NONFICTION (PG. 422) Literary Analysis Workshop Informational Skills: Development of Ideas; Word Choice and Tone; Point of View and Purpose Reading Skills: Main Idea; Evaluate Persuasion Writing Workshop: Business Letter, Editorial Author Story/Text Type Literary Analysis Workshop: Types of Nonfiction Analyzing the Development and Organization of Ideas Instructional Essay Analyzing Word Choice and Rhetoric Instructional Essay Learned Hand I Am an American Day Address Historical Account Patrick Henry Speech to the Virginia Convention Persuasive Speech Rebecca Walker Before Hip-Hop Was Hip-Hop Narrative Essay Focus on Point of View and Purpose Leveled Selections: Rudolfo A Anaya A Celebration of Grandfathers Reflective Essay Lorraine Hansberry On Summer Reflective Essay Leveled Selections: Sally Ride Single Room, Earth View Expository Essay Neil Postman The News Expository Essay Reading for Information: Analyzing Expository Texts NASA Space Shuttle Basics Expository Text NASA NASA Launch Schedule 101 Expository Text Comparing Literary Works Carl Sandburg from A Lincoln Preface Biography John McPhee Arthur Ashe Remembered Biography Writing Workshop: Explanatory Text: Business Letter Writer’s Toolbox: Setting Your Tone Writer’s Toolbox: Revising to Combine Choppy Sentences Focus on Point of View and Purpose Leveled Selections: Lian Dolan Carry Your Own Skis Persuasive Essay Pete Hamill Libraries Face Sad Chapter Persuasive Essay Leveled Selections: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. “I Have a Dream” Persuasive Speech Franklin Delano Roosevelt First Inaugural Address Persuasive Speech Reading for Information: Analyzing Arguments Alan Axelrod from Nothing to Fear: Lessons in Leadership from FDR Argumentative Essay Franklin Delano Roosevelt from Radio Address on Drought Conditions Argumentative Essay Comparing Literary Works Gary Soto The Talk Humorous Essay Harold Courlander and George Herzog (retellers) Talk Humorous Folk Tale Writing Workshop: Argument: Editorial Jeff Anderson, M.Ed. What Do You Notice? Supporting Evidence Rebecca Walker Writers on Writing: On Choosing the Right Details Writer’s Toolbox: Revising to Create Parallelism UNIT 5: DRAMA (PG. 776) Literary Analysis Workshop Literary Skills: Figurative and Connotative Language; Tone Reading Skills: Read Fluently; Paraphrase Writing Workshop: Descriptive Essay; Response to Literature Author Story/Text Type Literary Analysis Workshop: Drama Analyzing Character Development Instructional Essay Tennessee Williams from The Glass Menagerie Drama Gary L. Blackwood from The Shakespeare Stealer Drama Extended Study: The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet Drama Selection William Shakespeare The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet (Act 1) Drama William Shakespeare The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet (Act 2) Drama William Shakespeare The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet (Act 3) Drama William Shakespeare The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet (Act 4) Drama William Shakespeare The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet (Act 5) Drama Reading for Information: Analyzing Functional and Expository Texts Dorling Kindersley Italy Functional Text Liberty Travel Italy Expository Text Comparing Literary Works Ovid Pyramus and Thisbe Short Story William Shakespeare from A Midsummer Night’s Dream Drama Writing Workshop: Explanatory Text: How-to Essay Writer’s Toolbox: Getting Organized Writer’s Toolbox: Revising to Combine Sentences With Phrases Leveled Selections: Anton Chekhov The Inspector-General Drama Reading for Information: Analyzing Expository Text NOAA Tornadoes Expository Text Wikipedia Tropical Cyclones Expository Text Comparing Literary Works Oscar Wilde from The Importance of Being Earnest Drama Henry Alford from Big Kiss Humorous Essay Writing Workshop: Informative Text: Research Report Jeff Anderson, M.Ed. What Do You Notice? Examples that Build an Argument Gary L. Blackwood Writers on Writing: On Showing, Not Telling Writer’s Toolbox: Revising to Combine Sentences Using Adverb Clauses UNIT 6: THEMES IN LITERATURE: HEROISM (PG. 1026) Literary Analysis Workshop Literary Skills: Theme; Social and Cultural Context Reading Skills: Historical and Cultural Context; Compare and Contrast Writing Workshop: Technical Document; Compare-and-Contrast Essay Author Story/Text Type Literary Analysis Workshop: Themes on Literature Determining Themes Instructional Essay Analyzing Point of View and Cultural Experience Instructional Essay R. K. Narayan (reteller) from the Ramayana Epic Dean Smith with John Kilgo from The Carolina Way Essay Extended Study: The Odyssey Epic Selection Homer (translated by Robert Fitzgerald) from the Odyssey Part 1 Epic Homer (translated by Robert Fitzgerald) from the Odyssey Part 2 Epic Reading for Information: Analyzing Arguments Justice Paul E. Pfeifer A Hero in Our Midst Argumentative Text Rebecca Murray World Trade Center Argumentative Text Comparing Literary Works Edna St. Vincent Millay An Ancient Gesture Poem Margaret Wood Siren Song Poem Derek Walcott Prologue and Epilogue from the Odyssey Poem Constantine Cavafy Ithaca Poem Writing Workshop: Explanatory Text: Technical Document Writer’s Toolbox: Expressing Your Ideas Writer’s Toolbox: Revising to Correct Fragments and Run-ons Leveled Selections: George A. Toudouze Three Skeleton Key Short Story Sir Arthur Conan Doyle The Red-headed League Short Story Leveled Selections: Chief Dan George There Is a Longing Historical Account Nelson Mandela Glory and Hope Historical Account Reading for Information: Analyzing Expository Texts John Nadel Dodgers Celebrate Expository Text Sharyn Moore Emily Dickinson Poetfans: Sharyn Moore and Her Students Expository Text Comparing Literary Works Harold W. Felton Pecos Bill: The Cyclone Tall Tale Edith Hamilton Perseus Myth Writing Workshop: Informative Text: Research Report Jeff Anderson, M.Ed. What Do You Notice? Methods of Comparing and Contrasting Coach Dean Smith with John Kilgo Writers on Writing: On Word Choice Writer’s Toolbox: Varying Sentence Structure and Length
学習到達目標
National Standards:
-RL.10.1 - Citing Text Evidence Literature
-R.10.1 - Theme
-RL.10.2 - Summarizing
-RL.10.3 - Plot
-RL.10.3 - Character Change
-RL.10.6 - Point of View
-RI.10.1 - Citing Text Evidence
-RI.10.2 - Main Idea
-RI.10.2 - Summarizing
-W.10.1 - Argument Writing
-W.10.2 - Informational Writing
-W.10.3 - Narrative Writing
-SL.10.1 - Collaboration and Discussion
-L.1 - Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and
usage when writing or speaking.
-L.2 - Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English capitalization,
punctuation, and spelling when writing.
その他の情報
受講に必要なもの
Students MUST have a gmail/email account. It is extremely helpful to me if students have a gmail email account. This type of email account works the best when sharing documents with students and when students collaborate on group projects. Google email accounts are free so if your student does not have a google email account, please sign them up for one prior to our first class meeting. In addition to the Outschool classroom, this class utilizes Google Email/Drive, Google Classroom, Google docs and slides, Youtube, Kahoot!, and Quizlet.
外部リソース
学習者は、Outschoolが提供する基本ツール以外のアプリやウェブサイトを使用する必要はありません。
使用する教材
In addition to the Outschool classroom, this class uses Google Email/Drive, Youtube, CommonLit, Kahoot!, and Quizlet.
Just like I do in my public teaching classroom, I pull reading texts from a wide variety of sources and textbooks and then I add my own experience to the text and assignments and then I have the students engage with the content through discussions, group projects, and individual presentations.
教師の専門知識と資格
学士号 New Mexico State Universityから 教育 へ
I am a public school teacher who has previously taught Language Arts in a middle and high school setting. I am currently teaching Spanish 1 and Spanish 2 in a public high school setting. The standards in high school build off those found in middle school; therefore, I am familiar with the national requirements at both levels.
レビュー
ライブグループコース
$400
24 クラス分週に2回、 12 週間
45 分
3 人がクラスを受けました
オンラインライブ授業
年齢: 14-16
クラス人数: 4 人-10 人