Monday, December 23, 2013

Human Rights Violation Research Project

Objective:  Choose one of the human rights violations listed below.  In your 3-5 page MLA style essay, describe the history of the violation (who were/are the groups involved, what were/are the issues highlighted by the conflict, etc) and describe the impact of the violation on those involved.
~The Holocaust
~The Rape of Nanking
~The Albanian Genocide
~The “Disappeared” in Argentina’s Dirty War
~The Civil Rights Movement in the United States
~Apartheid
~Darfur
~North Korean Repression
Requirements: 1) Essay must be 3-5 pages long, not including the bibliography.  2) You must quote at least three sources in your essay.  3) MLA standards must be adhered to in this essay.  4) All planning components must be completed.


Planning Components:


Component
Due
Worth points:
1) Create an annotated bibliography/notes page where you will keep track of the pages you visit and significant quotes/information from these pages.
January 10
15
2) Create an outline using information from your annotated bibliography.
January 13
10
3) First Draft
January 17
15
4) Engagement in Peer Editing process
on January 17
10
5) Final Draft
January 23
50


Other Information:
1) Your final essay will be graded based on the usual English Regents Rubric (Meaning, Development, Organization, Language Use and Conventions), but there will be an added quality for adhering to MLA guidelines
2) You must use the Customized Search Engine linked below in order to do your research for this paper.

Thursday, December 12, 2013

This is boring.

Is this a Monday morning?
One of the challenges that I face in my ELA classroom is the fact that it doesn't really matter what books I bring into class-- no one seems to really like them.  Even when students enjoy the classroom discussions and like the activities that we do for enrichment, it keeps coming up that the book was "boring."

Well.

I used to spend a lot of time trying to explain what I find so magical about reading, but it fell on deaf ears.  So then I started ignoring what students said about being bored, but I felt like I wasn't doing the right thing as an English teacher.  So my new goal is to find books that students of all skill levels might actually like.  After all, I don't like every book I read either, and I am a darn good reader.  The Board of Ed says so.

What appeals?

I am looking for books that have something different about them, something that makes them stand out from the other books students have read in the past.  It could be a difference in format or in content that draws students in, but that's my criteria.  I need to see a hook.

What am I reading now? 

Like this book or I'll eat your brains.
The first book I'd like to explore as a possibility is the book World War Z by Max Brooks.  It meets my criteria of having that hook, because, well, ZOMBIES!  It is a fantastic read.  I didn't see the movie because I heard it was terrible, but the book is really great.  

The concept is that the author is compiling a collection of survivor histories following World War Z, or the Zombie Wars.  In the world of the narrator, much of Earth has been decimated by an outbreak of Zombies who are mindlessly destroying the world's population, creating an atmosphere of fear, distrust, and desolation.  

Other than the whole OMG ZOMBIES thing, this particular novel has a lot going for it on a literary level.  There are multiple perspectives from many speakers, all of whom "speak" differently.  There is an opportunity for students to study the use of diction and syntax as a way of differentiating characters by class, education, and age.  The settings of the book are varied, and yet as each country deals with zombie crisis differently, it is clear to see the importance of setting on outcome.  And then there is the structure of the novel itself. The whole book is written as a dossier of documents that have to do with the outbreak, containment, and relative control over the zombie plague.  What I think is most compelling is that the whole story is structured as though the zombie advance is an illness.  This could be fascinating to connect to history in terms of real behaviors that followed outbreaks of the black plague, polio, tuberculosis and influenza and how these diseases were "fought" in similar and dissimilar fashions.

I think this book has the hook we are looking for.