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Final Blog

       1.       I disagree with the statements made against children’s and young adult literature. The two I agree with most are “No one around here knows anything about it. If it was really worth knowing, we’d have heard about it.”, and “Children’s and young adult literature has no permanence. Something is popular today and something else is tomorrow.” In my opinion, both of these arguments are very flawed. Every great book was once unknown to the masses at some point. The great books used in classrooms across the country all had to be introduced to teachers, school boards, and administrators at some point.   The Graveyard Book   by Neil Gaiman can be the next great book introduced to our school’s curriculum. The book is a Newberry Medal winner with a great plot, numerous exciting characters, and many of the literary elements that should be taught to students. The book is a great read that students will love, and I am sure all of y...

Rite of Passage

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 To become and adult, you must first pass the rite of passage. The rite of passage contains three tasks that must be completed on your own in order to enter into adulthood. The tasks are as follows. 1. Make a doctor appointment on your own. Adults have to make their own doctor appointments, simple as that. If adults are ill or need to see a doctor they have to figure out how to do that on their own. A key component to this task is knowing where your health insurance card is. One simple rule must be followed while completing this task: No calling your parents for help. 2. Get a job and pay some bills . Unfortunately, adults have bills to pay and therefore must have money. Time to get a job so you have money for the bills. Fill out some applications, go to some interviews, and land a job. Doesn't need to be a dream job, any old job will do. To complete this task, you need to get that hard earned pay check and then turn around and put the money towards bills when you would much rather...

Persepolis Cover Redesign

 If I were to redesign the cover the Persepolis  by Marjane Satrapi I would try to design it so it allowed someone to get a better understanding of what the book is about just by looking at it. The actual cover is fairly simple. It features the title with the statement "The story of a childhood" below the title, which doesn't even indicate who's childhood the story is about. It also has a picture of Marji in a veil looking forward with her arms crossed. Just by looking at the current cover, the only thing a viewer would gather about the book is that it is about a girls childhood. They would also probably assume that the girl is of Islamic faith due to the veil. The viewer wouldn't know anything else about the context and may wonder, "Why should I care about this childhood?"  I would change the statement below the title from 'The story of a childhood" to something more descriptive such as "The story of my childhood during the Iranian Revolut...

An Unforgettable Passage

 Out of all 359 pages of Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Saenz,  there was one passage that stood out to me more than any other part of the book. The passage is as follows:     I don't know why, but I couldn't stop crying. And then I stopped and I knew I was really angry. More angry than I'd ever been in my life. "There were four of them. The other boy ran. But Dante didn't run. Because Dante's like that. He doesn't run."     I looked at my dad.      He didn't say a word.     My mother had moved closer to me. She couldn't stop combing my hair with her fingers.     "I'm so ashamed," I whispered. "I wanted to hurt them back."     "Ari?" My father's voice was soft. "Ari, Ari, Ari.  Your fighting this war in the worst possible way."     "I don't know how to fight it, Dad."     "You should ask for help," he said.   ...

Unit Plan: Gothic's and Graveyards

I plan to teach  The Graveyard Book  by Neil Gaiman for the 6 th  grave level. Some things I would like to include in my unit plan are weekly poems, themes of gothic literature, character analysis, creative writing/drawing, research on graveyards, and a compare and contrast essay between the book and the focus poems. Something specific I would like to include is having the students write their own gothic literature and illustrate it (possibly in comic form).    One question I have is how long should each lesson be planned to take? I noticed in some of the examples, the lessons are 50 minutes. Should we aim for that length? Another question is how do we know how much time students will need for things like a research essay or a creative writing essay? Is there a good way to gauge this and estimate the time effectively?   Some things I still need to determine is how to split some of the longer chapters and how to assess the students learning. I am thinking we...

The Book Thief passages

 "Please believe me when I tell you that I picked up each soul that day as if it were newly born. I even kissed a few weary, poisoned cheeks. I listened to their last gasping cries. Their vanishing words. I watched their love visions and freed them from their fear." (350)     This passage was critical moment in the development of death as a character/narrator. This moment is when death shows that amongst all the terrible things going on, they are there to offer support and compassion to the dying in their final  moments. I think this shows some of the inner torment that death means when it talks about how humanity haunts it. Death sees all the good and evil in humanity, yet is still there to offer compassion in humans dying moments. "He lay in bed with one of his sisters. She must have kicked him or muscled her way into the majority of the bed space because he was on the very edge with his arm around her. The boy slept. His candlelit hair ign...

Brown Girl Dreaming: The Movie

 The idea of turning books into movies or tv series always intrigues me. After reading Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson, I began to think about how this story could be transferred into a TV show or movie. Personally, I think this story would make a better movie than TV show. The book is made up of many short verses that tell the overall story of Jacqueline Woodson growing up and finding herself as a writer. I think the nature of the verses and the stories told would make it difficult to make a TV series out of the book. The verses are short and would be challenging to turn into TV episodes. I think the story would be much better suited as a movie. The story could be depicted in a similar style to the movie "42" which is about Jackie Robinson and tells his story from the early stages of the civil rights movement. From what I remember of the movie "42" it tells Jackie Robinsons story by focusing in on certain moments from his life. Brown Girl Dreaming is writ...