Dear
Parents,
We
just finished our 8th grade integrated unit on the Progressive
Movement and the Roaring 20’s. In English we learned about writing with
elaboration such as anecdotes, indirect quotes, direct quotes and descriptions;
we also wrote two essays. After watching the Disney movie the Newsies, we read
about, wrote about and acted out anecdotes about the real newsies from Kids
on Strike by Susan Bartoletti and the New
York Times newspaper articles from 1899. Students then put their new
knowledge and writing skills together by writing an anecdotal essay about the
newsies. This essay was done with a fair amount of teamwork and teacher
guidance. Finally, we wrote an essay on the Roaring 20’s, students choose a
topic, researched it and wrote an essay with less guidance and teamwork.
Our
next integrated unit is the Great Depression. We are going to use the theme of
the Great Depression to anchor our writing and our literature. In English
students are going to be working on word choice, figurative language, sentence
fluency, conventions and parts of speech. They will also be learning how to
write an analytical paragraph and essay. In class we will use excerpts from Seabiscuit
by Laura Hillenbrand as a model text of great word choice. In Literature we
will use clips from the movie Seabiscuit to learn about literature
elements such as symbolism, motifs, themes and allusions. Students will also be
reading either Out of Dust by Karen Hesse, Of Mice and Men by
John Steinbeck, A Long Way to Chicago, by Richard Peck, Hitch by Jeanette
Ingold or Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis and doing a packet
of activities with classmates to gain a further understanding of the literature.
A reading calendar is on sms8students@blogspot.com. Also, I purchased extra
novels this year, so that parents could check one out to read along with their
child.
During
the 8th grade year I would really like the students to read every
night. I do not give students much time to read their novels in class, so it is
helpful if they read their assigned novel at home or another novel, magazine,
graphic novel when they do not have an assigned novel. Students learn to be
better writers, gain more vocabulary, and become faster readers by simply
reading. I really strive to not give students homework, so that they have time
to read for twenty minutes at home.
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