Tuesday, December 16, 2014

DAY 2 POL Prep
Picture
Do you feel like this kid right now?
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Don't worry! Soon you'll have passed your POL and be like this kid.
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Or like these guys!
8:25-9:25: Interviewing Tips and Practice
  • How to handle Q and A coaching (15 minutes): Teacher-led role play 
    • When answering a question, you can….
      • Ask for more time
      • Be quiet for a few moments
      • Ask for clarification
      • Give specific examples
      • Take the question and run with it
        • I.E. What have you read recently that you enjoyed? “Oh, I don’t like reading very much”. Wrong answer. Make something up! You’ve read several things in Humanities but just don’t say ‘for class, I had to read…”.  
  • Time to individually brainstorm answers to the questions (30 minutes)
  • Speed dating round practicing questions and answers (15 minutes)

9:25-9:45: BREAK

9:45-11:15: Work Time (Parts 5 and 6 of the Planning Packet)

11:15-12:00 LUNCH

12:00-1:30: Rehearse/Peer Critique
  • In groups of 4-5 take turns presenting your POL and responding to questions from the panel (PANELIST QUESTION BANK)
  • Peer critiquers: Use the rubric to provide Positive, Specific and Meaningful feedback

1:30-1:45: BREAK


1:45-3:15 Refinement

Monday, December 15, 2014

POL Prep Resources

Announcement:

Considering a gap year between high school and college?  Check out this cool program Ashley's friends, Becca and Chris, started:  http://vimeo.com/113512029

TODAY'S AGENDA
8:15-9:45
1. A Case of the Monday's + Why do POLs? 
2. Go over the agenda for today and tomorrow
3. Review POL Expectations
  • Be sure to highlight Strengths AND Areas for Improvement
  • Directly address the question “Why should we retain you?’
  • Be creative!
  • Q and A from students about guidelines
  • Professional dress, 
4. Critique Past Student Examples
  • Individually fill out the rubric
  • Small group share out
  • Whole class discussion
5. Academic and Cultural Strengths 
  • Example of a thoughtful comments: "I appreciate the insightful comments you contribute during small group discussions and seminar"; "You are a talented artist and always give helpful critique on my art projects for Humanities exhibitions"; "Your writing skills are through the roof and I'm impressed by how strong of a poet you are"; "You always have a positive thing to say to someone to brighten their day"; "You are non-judgmental and that helps make other students feel comfortable at Animas".
  • Write your name on top of a paper
  • Pass your paper around and highlight strengths in that person in both the academic and cultural/social sense
9:45-10:00 BREAK

10:00-Lunch 
Seminar
Seminar Prep:
A. How do these ideas/readings challenge traditional models of education and notions of "success" in school?
B. How does this content inform your understanding of your own intellectual and cultural strengths AND areas for growth?  Decide which of Gardner's Intelligences you think you most possess and which you need to work on strengthening AND which of the "roles" from reading #2 that most correspond to you and which you think it would be helpful to you to improve.  WHY?
C.How can you or others bring these ideas INTO POLs?
 
LUNCH

1:00-3:15
1. Open Brainstorm time (1 hour)
Complete pages 2 and 4 of the PLANNING PACKET
GOAL: Coming out of this you should be able to identify at least 3 key strengths in your academic and cultural contributions and LINK/COLLEGE at Animas and SUPER SPECIFIC pieces of evidence to support each strength as well as 3 areas for refinement AND ideas for how you'll present your POL.

Remember! You MUST answer “WHY SHOULD WE RETAIN YOU?” How are you contributing overall?

2. Share-out (10-15 minutes): What types of evidence can you use? (be specific); What are creative ideas for presenting your POL? Make a list on the whiteboard.

3. Break (15 minutes)


4. Work time to the end of the day (fill out planning packet): 
  • Coming out of this you must have a draft of your deliverable (What is your POL content and HOW will you deliver the message? i.e. powerpoint, song, rap, extended metaphor, act, etc..)
  • Email your supervising teacher your draft (ticket out the door)
  • Complete Steps 2 and 4 of the planning packet (pages 3 and 5)
  • Create a draft or outline of HOW you'll deliver your presentation.

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Goal for the Day
  • To process and reflect on the course content thus far
Process Reflection Writing

Circle up!  What are our takeaways?

Work Time for Chem

Process Reflection due at midnight

Turn in Sherman Alexie!

Comp Books should be finished by the weekend.  Click here for Table of Contents for this project.

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Goals for the Day
  • Draft and refine our writing
  • Give and receive feedback to help each other refine

Starter:  Turn to a partner and share your claim.  Explain how the texts led you to that claim.

WORK TIME!
Analytical response writing due at midnight tonight.
We will do a mini-critique after break.


AFTER BREAK Mini-critique protocol
1. Groups of 3
2. Pass Around
3. For each piece of writing go through this protocol.

ANALYTICAL RESPONSE DUE AT MIDNIGHT!

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Starter:  With a partner, discuss your questions and apprehensions about POL's.
Task Statement
Question Bank
Rubric


Goal for the Day
  • Integrate the content a narrative film into your thinking about our current studies.
  • Make connections across genres.

Film Screening:  Smoke Signals

As you watch the film, look for evidence that relates to the themes we have been discussing in the other texts.  Look for connections.  Have the project essential questions in the back of your mind. Take notes in such a way that will help you  be able to write the response and process our course content.

Film Response should be written in Comp Book .

Monday, December 8, 2014

Goals for the Day
  • Identify themes across fictional and non-fictional works by Native authors
  • Make a claim about theme in multiple works

Trailer from the Lone Ranger
Starter 12.8:  Why do you think the title of this book (and/or the story of the same name) is called The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven?


Brainstorm ideas in small groups for two of the themes
1. Pick two themes
2. Come up with one example from the Dartmouth student essays and one example from Alexie's short stories that support illustrate that theme.
3. What is the point that the author is making about that theme? What is the message or big idea the authors are trying to show the reader?



Making Claims 
PRACTICE!!!  
Following the guidelines in the Powerpoint, write or rewrite a potential claim for your analytical response essay.  Get feedback from a peer.  Revise again?  Show me when you are finished.


WORK TIME
1. Plan (see outline templates on page 3 of essay description)
2. Write
3.  See this SAMPLE ANALYSIS for a better idea of what this assignment is calling for.




POL PREVIEW
1. The Bobs
2. Task Statement
3. Question Bank
4. Rubric


HOMEWORK
1. Look closely at POL description.  What questions do you have?
2. Continue to plan and write your essay.  If you haven't finished all of the readings for this assignment, get after that first!

  • We will have a mini-critique about 1/2 way through Wednesday's class.  Please have a working draft during class on Wednesday.  This means that you should have already written your claim, gathered evidence, and planned your writing before class Wednesday.
3.  Be sure your comp book is caught up!  Click here for Table of Contents.
4.  Send my DP link if you have not already done so.


Friday, December 5, 2014

Dear beautiful students:
Staying home with Luca today.  I will miss you terribly.  Perhaps I will run into you on your Digital Comp Books second period, as you work through the day's tasks.  If you are struggling with technology and can't access my DP, please look on with a partner and do the work on paper.  If you are struggling with Friday-itis, please persevere.  If you are struggling with analyzing literature, ask Nicholas Turco what themes the stories contain:)

Zoe will be here 3rd period to talk to you about LINK.

Announcements:
Avalanche 1 course information meeting in Ashley's room at lunch today. 
DP link for Rhetoric Project due by the end of the day!

Today's Goals:

  • Identify overarching themes in Alexie's stories and find textual evidence that supports the themes
  • Get information and clarification about LINK from Zoe

Starter 12.5
For either story you read last night ("This is What it Means to Say Phoenix, AZ" or "The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven"), try to make an interpretive claim about the story.  What do think might be a thematic statement that Alexie is trying to make?

Themes Brainstorm Activity
1. You may work with your peers on this, but everyone should have his or her own work in the comp book.   
2. Create a T-chart table in your digital comp book or copy and paste this one.  One side should say "Themes" and the other "Textual Evidence."  
3. Think about all five of the stories we have read.  What overarching themes emerge from Alexie's work?
4. You may note evidence from any of the stories.  The evidence does not just have to be direct quotes. You can also paraphrase things that happen in the stories as evidence.  Note the page numbers to make it easier to incorporate the evidence into your writing later.  (See example)
5. Try to identify at least 5 themes, but feel free to do more.  This brainstorm is designed to help you process your ideas for the writing assignment.  

READ Essays from First Person, First Peoples
1. Paper copies of this on the front table.  THIS IS YOUR HOMEWORK THIS WEEKEND!
2. Read the info on the book cover to contextualize the writing.
3. Read and annotate these essays with the analytical response assignment in mind.

THIRD PERIOD:  WELCOME, ZOE!!!!





Thursday, December 4, 2014

Goals for the Day
Clarify expectations of the analytical response assignment
Identify themes in Sherman Alexie's stories
Make interpretive claims about literature

Verbal Starter:  Turn to a partner and discuss your reaction to reading Alexie's stories.  What do you notice about his style?  Do you like his work?  Why or why not?


GO OVER:  Analytical Response Writing
What questions do we have?


GROUP WORK: "A Drug Called Tradition"

  • Take notes on a shared google document with me and all group members
  • Elect one note-taker.  Put everyone's name on the document and share with all.
  • Everyone should have their book open and be working to analyze the lit
  • Don't divide and conquer- work through each question as a group and make sure everyone understands.

1What does it mean to be a "real Indian" according to the characters in "A Drug Called Tradition"?

2. How does Alexie divide dreams from reality? What is the difference between dreams and reality for the three boys?

3. What does this quote mean: "When Indians make lots of money from corporations that way, we can all hear our ancestors laughing in the trees.  But we never can tell whether they're laughing at the Indians or the whites. I think they're laughing at pretty much everybody"(13).

4. Where else do you see evidence of a tension between Western society, or the U.S. government and Native culture? What does Alexie seem to suggest about the way these boys feel about the government and/or white society?



5. How does tradition function like a drug for Native Americans? What does it offer them? What does it let them dream of?

6. The narrator talks about skeletons that represent the past and the future. How does he describe these skeletons and how must a young Indian relate to them?  What is he saying about tradition in this selection? 



WHOLE CLASS:  What do you think are the primary "thematic concepts" in this story? What are the passages and quotes that seem to represent the themes?


What do we mean when we say "Make an interpretive claim about literature?"




INDEPENDENT WORK:  "Indian Education"

  • Re-read story and revisit annotations
  • Exit Ticket: Make a claim!  Write a paragraph explaining what you think might be the "thematic statement" of the story.  That is to say, what does the story "say" about the subject matter, in this case, Indian education.  What evidence in the story points to this theme?

HOMEWORK:

"This is What is Means to Say Phoenix, AZ" (p. 59) and "The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven" (p. 191)
(Read and annotate with larger assignment in mind.  Interpret, analyze, identify evidence that may help you on the writing assignment.)

Essays from First Person, First Peoples (for Monday)

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

NO STARTER!

Goals for the Day:
  • Process and synthesize readings and film
  • Understand the perspective of Sherman Alexie's work
  • Define "theme" 

1. Wrap up yesterday....
Finish Reel Injun
20 minutes to work on your response to the film

2. Circle up!!  Discussion: Chapter 1, Bury My Heart

3. Assign Books

4. About the Author:  Sherman Alexie and Colbert

5.  Read together:  "Imagining the Reservation"

  • Powerful Images?
  • What strikes you about this writing?
  • What is Alexie doing here?

What is a theme?
  • Central idea of a literary work
  • Categories of theme in contemporary literary studies:
    • Thematic concept:  what it's about
    • Thematic statement:  what the work "says" about the subject matter

What themes emerge from this story?

Why does Alexie say, "Imagination is the only weapon on the reservation"?

7. Preview: Analytical Response Writing

8.  Timeline of due dates for December

9.  Google folder of project resources

HOMEWORK:
Read "A Drug Called Tradition" (p. 12) and  "Indian Education" (p. 171) for tomorrow.
As you read through Alexie's work, try to pick out passages that seem to represent the themes of the stories.  Annotate on post-it's or stand-alone notes in ways that will ultimately help you analyze the stories in your written response.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Starter 12.2:  What stereotypes and ideas about Native Americans have you seen perpetuated in the media and popular culture?


Film Screening:  Reel Injun
1.  A resource:  Film Guide (read fact sheet on page #4)
2.  Annotate film as desired in order to do the assignment below.
3.  Keep the project essential questions in mind as you watch the film.

  • How do the historical experiences and ideologies of America’s indigenous tribes impact their contemporary identity?
  • How can an examination of multiple sources and perspectives lead to a more enlightened understanding of history AND contemporary social, cultural and political realities?
  • Where do history and creative expression intersect to reveal the human experience?


Reel Injun Film Reaction
IN COMP BOOK:  In at least 2 solid TEA paragraphs, write a reaction to the film.  What did you find interesting or striking about the film's content?  What new perspectives did you gain from watching this film?  (You may also respond to elements of the film guide.)

Monday, December 1, 2014

WELCOME BACK!!!!  How was break?

Chat about Ferguson verdict....

Announcements

  • DP update extension.    Please send me link when this is complete.  New Ospreys:  Does Dusty have your link?
  • Honors lunch meeting on Wednesday.  Please sign up for a meeting on the calendar!
  • I'm still grading reflections:)

NEW PROJECT!!!




Starter 12.1:  Read the poem "Crazy Horse Speaks"

  • What historical content do you think this is referring to? 
  • What questions do you have about this poem, its significance?
  • What people/places/events do you think you need to research/study to better understand this poem’s meaning?
  • Can you formulate any interpretations of this poem right now? 
  • Choose a passage from the poem and make an interpretive claim about its significance.


Goals for the Day

  • Understand the goals for our Native American Studies project
  • Explore the place where history intersects literature (that is to say: use historical information to understand literature and use literary interpretation to understand history)

Project Description

  • Questions and Clarifications


Group Work:  "Crazy Horse Speaks"

  • Take turns sharing your starter responses
  • One group member open up the google document 
  • Make a copy and share it with all of your group members AND Jessica
  • Divvy up research on the people/places/events and add notes to Google Doc.


Video:  Where Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse Defeated Colonel Custer


Whole class discussion:  What new understandings do we have about the poem? What further questions do you have?


We are going to be exploring the intersections between history and literary expression.


Reading:  Chapter 1 of Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee
Who was Dee Brown?
Read intro aloud; establish bias of the history.


Bury My Heart Chapter One Response (HOMEWORK)
Annotate with the following questions it mind and then respond to them it your COMP BOOK


1.  How does this version of America’s history diverge from how you have traditionally learned it? 
2.  Where do you see evidence of a different ideological lens or worldview in the way the history is being told?  
3.  Why is it important to look at this version of the history of the West?

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Starter:  Fill out rubric in preparation for our grading conference!

See yesterday's post below for today's agenda/to-do list!

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Goals for the rest of the week (Wednesday-Friday)
  • Get metacognitive about your work (Reflect!  Self-Assess!)
  • Express your thoughts about the project to give feedback to Jessica and self
  • Update your DP and feel proud of your work

TO DO LIST:
1.  Osprey Week Sign-Up (see email!)
2.  Self-Critique (due Thursday @end of hour)
3.  Grading Conference (according to the rubric)
5.  DP update
  • Overview of the study of Rhetoric and Ideology
  • Seminar Synthesis Writings (Race/Crash, Civil Disobedience, Economic Ideology)
  • Rhetoric Project (video)
  • Reflection

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Monday, November 17, 2014

Today's Goal:
Rehearse, refine, troubleshoot!!!!

MUSTS FOR THE DAY:
1.  If you have not done so, please fill out this survey.  Please think of a clever, concise, rhetorically impactful title!
2.  Send me any support  materials for your project (PPT, Video, Music, etc.)

HOMEWORK:
1.  Self-Critique
Annotate your draft.  Mark and answer the following.
1.  Highlight a place in the draft where you feel you have captured the essence of your perspective.  Using the comment function, label it PERSPECTIVE.  If you feel like your perspective comes through strongly in several places, mark them all.
2.  Mark 2-3 places in the draft where your research shows up.  In the comment field, explain how something in your research informed your rhetoric.  Specify which source if possible.
3. Label (by name) the rhetorical devices you incorporated into your project.
4. Label places where you have incorporated Aristotelian appeals.  Explain in the comments how and why you have chosen to incorporate them the way that you have.
5.  Answer the following in writing;
a.  How are you attempting to modify the perspective of your audience?  What is the bias that you want to get them to understand/believe?
b.  How have you appealed to your audience’s values/beliefs/emotions?
c.  Comment on how the form, beauty, or force of your project impacts the rhetoric.  How does your genre allow you to achieve your goals?

2. PRACTICE!!!

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Goals for Today:

  • Give and receive critical feedback in order to make all of our projects more beautiful.
  • Get your initial performance jitters out!



Group 1
Sonya (Captain)
Samantha D.                          
Devin
Ellie                                                                           
Lia                               
Josh                    
Bekah                           
Alicia                           
Chris     
Samantha S.                  
Turco                           
Rowan

Group 2
Lacey (Captain)
Lyle
Ellen
Vivi
Noah
Max
Daniel/Charles
Lawson
Cameron
Becca
Hayden
Bryce

Cameron

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Today is your last day of project work time!

Starter:  Make a to-do list of everything you want to accomplish before tomorrow's critique.  Remember, your piece should pretty close to finished.  

@the end of the hour:  Everything on your to-do list that you didn't finish is homework!

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Starter:  Read over my feedback.  On one side of the index card, articulate your goals for project work time today.  What are your next steps?  On the other side of the card, express your needs.  What do you need from me?  From peers?  From your self?

Odds and Ends
1.  Did you turn in your research notes?  Did you turn in your project plan?  Check Powerschool and see if this assignment is missing.  If so, rectify it!
2.  Exhibition is in one week!  I need to meet with the exhibition team ASAP!  Today at lunch?  Where is my video and audio crew?  What is everyone's first period class?
3.  Democratic moment:  Do we want to do whole class critique or small group critique?  
4.  I have office hours today!  I will hold them Thursday too if need be.
5.  ONE WEEK MARK!  This is when the magic happens....

Work Time
Conference with me?

At the end of the hour...check in with yourself.  Share with a partner what you got done today and what you need to keep working on as homework,  What are your next steps?

Friday, November 7, 2014

FIRST:  Check in with yourself.  Revisit yesterday's comp book entry.  What are  your "next steps"??  Share with a partner what you would like to accomplish today.

ENACT YOUR NEXT STEPS!!

Draft due to me at the end of class!  
When you send your draft, please answer the following questions, either in the body of the email or on the draft itself:
1.  What is strong about your project?  What are you the most proud of about it?
2.  What do you see as the greatest areas for improvement?
3.  What would you like me to focus on when I give you feedback?  Do you have a focusing question?
4.  Anything else you want to say about the project or your process?


Thursday, November 6, 2014

Project Tune!

Today let’s help each other work out the kinks!

Please sit in your "consultancy groups" and begin working on the starter.

Starter 11.6Reflect for a few minutes on where you are in the project and what you might need feedback on.  Write a focusing question for today’s “tune.”

Project Tune Protocol
1. Project Share/Focusing Question (1-5 min)
  1. Presenter articulates the nitty-gritty of the project details.  Share the perspective you are trying to convey with your project. –AND/OR—Group members read the draft of the project in its written form—AND/OR—Presenter reads the project aloud to group members.
  2. Presenter shares out the focusing question from the starter and shares any areas they feel they need feedback on.
2.  Clarification (1-2 minutes)
  1. Participants ask questions to get information they may need about the concrete details of the project.
  2. These questions are matters of fact, and should not delve into deeper issues.
  3. Examples:
What is the ideological bias of the project?  What genre will you use?  How will you edit the video?
3.  Probing Questions (4-5 min)
  1. The purpose of probing questions is NOT to give suggestions, but to help the presenter think more deeply about their project and what they are trying to do with it.
  2. Probing questions should be big open-ended questions.  (think: seminar questions)
  3. Examples: 
Why is it important that you communicate this message to your audience? 
Why did you decide on this topic?   
How will you connect emotionally to the audience?  
What rhetorical impact do you want the audience to experience?
4.  Participant Discussion (5-7ish minutes)
  1. Participants share feedback with each other while the presenter is silent and removed from the circle.
  2. Start with WARM feedback. What is strong about the project?
  3. Move into suggestions/ideas for improvement.  Discuss the presenter’s focusing question!  Think about ways the project could achieve its desired effect, incorporate rhetorical strategies, and generally get to the next level of awesomeness.  Continue to discuss questions that you have about the project.
  4. Presenter is silent and takes notes.
5. Reflection (2-3ish minutes)
  1. Presenter speaks to comments/questions that were posed in the discussion while participants are silent.  This is a time for the presenter to reflect aloud on those ideas or questions that seemed particularly interesting or helpful or to ask questions about the comments of the group members.
6. Open discussion (if time allows…try to keep it to 20ish minutes per project)
1.   Group openly discusses the ideas for revision that came out of the critique.  This is the time to help each other troubleshoot the project!



AFTER, add some reflection to your comp book entry:  What ideas/thoughts did I get out of today?  What are my next steps?

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Some Rhetorical Devices


WORK TIME
Project, in its current form, due tomorrow for a "Project Tune."
If you have a written draft, bring three copies for your group members.  If you want to "perform" what you have so far, that is fine too.  If you are doing a video, a storyboard or plan should suffice.

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Models
1.  Tanner
2.  Nat Dogg


Project Plan due at the end of the hour!!
Project Plan Guidelines
Write a project plan that includes the following:
1. What is the topic of your project?  What is the exigency of the rhetoric?  Why is it important?
2.  Explain the perspective you want to capture in your rhetorical piece.  Can you distill it into a thesis statement?
3.  What genre will your project take?  Why is this genre a good form for your expression?
4.  What main “arguments” will your project put forth?  If you are working within a creative genre, such as music or poetry, how will you incorporate arguments and evidence?
5.  How will you appeal to your imagined audience’s values/beliefs/emotions, etc?  Which appeals are most appropriate for your genre and topic?
6.  What challenges do you anticipate?  What will you need to overcome these challenges?
You can answer these questions one by one, or you can write a few paragraphs that cover all of them.




Draft due for a "Project Tune" on Thursday!

Monday, November 3, 2014

Project Time!!!

1.  Models

2.  Exhibition Details

a. Animas City Theater!!  Tuesday, November 18  6:15 PM
b. Hiring for the following roles
  • Exhibition Coordinators
  • Public Relations
  • Set-up/Clean-up
  • AV and Film Crew
c. Audience Response?  How should we do this?

3. Work Time
  • Finish and Turn In Research Notes
  • Conference with me!
  • Project Plan due tomorrow at the end of the hour!

Thursday, October 30, 2014

PROJECT WORK TIME:

  • Refine topic/Decide on Genre
  • Conference with Me?
  • Research Notes Due @ end of hour tomorrow


"Ender":  Google Form check-in


Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Starter:  Please give me feedback on the Edmodo seminar assignment!


WORK TIME!
At this point, you should be refining your topic and researching perspectives that will help you think about your argument.
Conference with me if you need to!

HONORS:
Meeting tomorrow?
Individual Meetings during work time
Note upcoming due dates:
Monday 11.3:  2 historical thinking skills charts, 1 primary and 1 secondary
Monday 11.10:  2 responses due (1 primary, 1 secondary)

Monday, October 27, 2014

Starter:  Edmodo Seminar Self-Assess
Where do you fall on the rubric?  In this Google Form, write a brief paragraph explaining how you would grade yourself.


Revisit Essential Questions
  • What ideologies are central to the American experience and how have they evolved over time?
  • What is the relationship between ideology and rhetoric? 
  • How has rhetorical discourse shaped the American experience historically?  
  • What do I believe about America, and how has my personal ideology been formed by my encounters with rhetorical discourse?
  • What important rhetorical contributions can I make to the conversation?
    

FREEWRITE IN COMP BOOKS:  Brainstorm issues that are important to you as a young American.


PROJECT LAUNCH!
Google Folder of the Project Docs


Project Models:  
1. Tatum
2. Justin


WHOLE CLASS TOPIC BRAINSTORM
Here is a list of Political/Social Issues (Thanks, Ashley!)


RESEARCH NOTES AND SOURCE ANALYSIS
(due Friday)
Does anyone want a hard copy?


WORK TIME!
1.  Finish Edmodo Seminar Writing (due by the end of class tomorrow!)
2.  Decide on a Topic
3.  Begin  Researching 


Friday, October 24, 2014

Do you guys want to finish the movie or do you want more work time?



Review/Quiz Make-up:
1.  The Gilded Age (Robber Barons and Populism)
The Robber Barons and the Industrial Age
The Populist Movement (this video has info on the Robber Barons and the Progressive Era as well!)
2.  Progressive Era:
a short documentary on the Progressive Era
Crash Course:  The Progressive Era
3.  Great Depression
A Social Studies teacher explains the reasons for the Great Depression
Short documentary about causes and effects of the Great Depression
4.  The New Deal
History.com:  The New Deal
John Green on The New Deal




Historical Infusion: "The Reagan Revolution" 
More info...
Basics of "Trickle Down Economics"
Milton Friedman videos 



Project Change!  What's coming...
If you want to preview the project in detail, here is the Project Overview!


Work Time:  Edmodo Seminar
You may have through Sunday to finish the Edmodo seminar
Writing due on Tuesday, October 28 at the end of the hour




Honors Announcements
See revised calendar of due dates.
Meetings on Wednesday and Thursday of next week
Whole group meeting on Wednesday lunch
See Honors DP tab for resources!