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Survey: Survey: The Four Unit The Four Unit Year Year Josefino Rivera, Jr. Josefino Rivera, Jr. 24 August 2009 24 August 2009

Survey: The Four Unit Year

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Survey: The Four Unit Year. Josefino Rivera, Jr. 24 August 2009. What’s the difference? The literature-centered approach:. When Steinbeck describes the tree as having “recumbent limbs” what is the effect on the reader? What event foreshadows Lennie’s death? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Survey: The Four Unit Year

Survey:Survey:The Four Unit YearThe Four Unit Year

Survey:Survey:The Four Unit YearThe Four Unit Year

Josefino Rivera, Jr.Josefino Rivera, Jr.24 August 200924 August 2009

Page 2: Survey: The Four Unit Year

What’s the difference?The literature-centered approach:

When Steinbeck describes the tree as having “recumbent limbs” what is the effect on the reader?

What event foreshadows Lennie’s death?

Who is to blame for the tragic deaths of Romeo and Juliet?

What’s the recurring metaphor in this poem?

Who saved Scout and Jem at the end of the novel?

What happens to Esperanza in “Red Clowns”?

The book is at the center of the curriculum

Page 3: Survey: The Four Unit Year

What’s the difference? The student- centered approach:

Student Inquiry (4 Unit Year)Approach: Focus is on the student and his/her inquiry process.

Why do people through the centuries write about relationships, especially those involving love and hate?Is there anything the contemporary literature shows the human race has learned about family relationships in the last ten years?What do literature and my experience suggest about deciding who is and isn’t a scholar?Compare the strategies for resolving ethical conflict employed by Mayella Ewell and Friar Lawrence.

Page 4: Survey: The Four Unit Year

Ok, but what’s the difference to me? Greater student choice in reading materials,

writing topics and styles. Greater variety in materials. Greater opportunity for students to be responsible

for the level of their learning. Greater opportunity for students to direct their

own learning.

Page 5: Survey: The Four Unit Year

What the year looks like

Discovering Personal and

Cultural Identity

Examining the Complexity

of Relationships

Making Moral and

Ethical Decisions

Becoming a

Scholar and a Leader

Page 6: Survey: The Four Unit Year

Unit One: Becoming a Scholar and a Leader

“The Game of School” by Robert Fried Various selections of non-fiction essays Various selections of speeches

Page 7: Survey: The Four Unit Year

Unit Two: Making Moral and Ethical Decisions

Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Ethical Systems from the Santa Clara

Markkula Center of Applied Ethics

Page 8: Survey: The Four Unit Year

Unit Three: Examining the Complexity of Relationships

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee Interview of the cast of Crash on Oprah Scottsboro Boys—a documentary The Riddle Scale

Page 9: Survey: The Four Unit Year

Unit Four: Developing Personal and Cultural Identity

The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros

Various poems on identity YA (Young Adult) novel on teenage topics

Page 10: Survey: The Four Unit Year

The Essential Questions Every unit has its own set of provocative,

challenging questions that you will learn to answer using fiction, non-fiction, film clips, the internet, interviews, etc. instead of just using a book to answer questions about it.

Page 11: Survey: The Four Unit Year

All of the texts (fiction, non-fiction, movies, songs, poetry, advertisement, etc.) we encounter have something to tell us about who we are and how we can live our lives. When we interpret them meaningfully, we expand our understanding of the world around us and become more thoughtful and interesting people.

The Enduring Understanding