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“Eleven” and “The Monkey’s Paw”. 26 Feb. 2013. Warm-Up. Correct the following sentence by adding commas: The man bought a coat book and candy. *Please take out comma HW. Agenda. Prefixes Review HW Comma Rules POV Wrap up “Eleven” Intro. “The Monkey’s Paw”. ENG. 10 Objectives 2/26.
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“Eleven” and “The Monkey’s Paw” 26 Feb. 2013
Warm-Up • Correct the following sentence by adding commas: The man bought a coat book and candy. *Please take out comma HW
Agenda Prefixes Review HW Comma Rules POV Wrap up “Eleven” Intro. “The Monkey’s Paw”
ENG. 10 Objectives 2/26 To understand how point of view affects a story. To use similes and metaphors to analyze literature. To learn and apply proper comma rules. To familiarize students with the plot diagram. To use context clues and dictionaries to define difficult vocabulary. To use new vocabulary correctly in writing. To understand personal opinions on fate.
Prefixes 2/26 • En/em • Ex.- encode, embrace • Fore • Def.- before • In/im • Ex.- infield, import
Review Warm-Up Correct the following sentence by adding commas: The man bought a coat book and candy.
Review HW Volunteers to come up to the ELMO
2. Using commas in compound sentences • Wait…what is a compound sentence?
2. Using commas in compound sentences • A comma usually comes BEFORE a conjunction (FANBOYS) that joins two independent clauses in a compound sentence. • (FANBOYS = ?)
2. Using commas in compound sentences • You may want to use a semicolon rather than a comma when the clauses are long and complex or contain other punctuation.
2. Using commas in compound sentences • NOTE: Be careful NOT to use only a comma between 2 or more complete thoughts. Doing so is a serious grammatical error called a COMMA SPLICE. Either use a conjunction after the comma OR use a semicolon.
2. Using commas in compound sentences • Comma Splice Ex: Do not say luck is responsible for your new job, give yourself the credit you deserve. • Can you correct this sentence using a comma? • Can you correct this sentence using a semicolon?
2. Using commas in compound sentences • Comma Splice Ex: Do not say luck is responsible for your new job, give yourself the credit you deserve. • Revised: • Do not say luck is responsible for your new job,butgive yourself the credit you deserve. • Do not say luck is responsible for your new job; give yourself the credit you deserve.
3. Using commas to separate items in a series • A comma is used between items in a series of three or more words or phrases. • Where do the commas go in the following sentence in your packet?
3. Using commas to separate items in a series • Answer: • He has plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people.
Comma Rules 1-3 HW Complete the HW sheet
Vobackulary No list today!
Point of View • Point of View: the perspective from which a story is told • affects the tone, mood, feel, and meaning of the story
First Person POV Character tells the story using the word “I” This narrator offers his or her opinions about the events and the other characters in the story
Second Person POV Story is told using the word “you”
Third Person Limited POV An outside narrator tells the story Narrator knows the thoughts of ONE character Uses the words “he” or “she”
Third Person Omniscient POV An outside narrator tells the story The narrator knows the thoughts of more than one character “omni” = all knowing
Main Character • Central character of a story • This character is the focus for its theme • Undergoes a change or should • Involved in story’s main action • Ex.- The boy in “This Boy’s Life”
Minor Character • Person, animal, or object • Not central to the story, but contributes to the plot somehow • Ex.- The biker in “The Bridge”
Protagonist Another word for the main character Usually the hero
Antagonist • Character or force that works against the protagonist • Ex.- The husband in “Say Yes” • Often the villain
Points of View “The Bridge” “Say Yes” “This Boy’s Life”
“Eleven” • Focus on POV and comparison • Simile: a comparison of two unlike things • Uses the words “like” or “as” • Metaphor: a comparison of two unlike things • Uses the words “is” or “are”
“Eleven” Highlight similes POV? How could the story have been misconstrued? Which actions show us she is upset?
Horror • Who likes the genre of “horror?” • Why?
“The Monkey’s Paw” Group Work • Groups of 3 (pick a card) • You will be assigned 2 vocab. in context words for “The Monkey’s Paw” • In your chart, write your 2 words’ parts of speech and definition using context clues • Check with us to make sure you have definitions correct • Each group member should write in his own chart • Write a creative “horror” paragraph • Include your 2 words in the paragraph (underline them) • Be prepared to read them to the class
Student Folders • Put your “Student Expectations” quiz & Pledge/Anthem quiz in your folder • Put your Auto as Haiku in your folder • Staple your Auto as Haiku reflection to the front • Put all other papers we are handing back in your binder
Homework Comma rules 1-3 worksheet “The Monkey’s Paw” anticipation guide Vocabulary project due Thursday – remember what it is? Someone recap the assignment directions…
Plot The sequence of events Let’s think about “The Three Little Pigs”
Plot: Exposition Introduces setting, characters, conflict, and sets the mood and tone Usually in the beginning of the story -There are three pigs that are brothers. They each need to build houses.
Plot: Inciting Incident Event that occurs as a first example of the conflict Sparks the action -There is a wolf in the forest!
Plot: Rising Action Series of events that build tension Lead to the climax -There is a straw house, a house of sticks, and a house of bricks being built. Each one takes a different amount of time to build.
Plot: Crisis “The point of no return” Usually before the climax, but can also occur after -The straw house and the house of sticks have both been destroyed by the wolf!
Plot: Climax The point of greatest emotional intensity Everything explodes Turning point -The wolf tries to blow down the brick house, but he can’t
Plot: Falling Action Series of events that lead to the resolution -The other brothers thank the one who built the brick house and learn their lesson
Plot: Resolution How the conflict is resolved The final untying of the plot They all live in a brick house now