Binder with Paper Remember to use Cornell Note-taking method.

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• Binder with Paper• Remember to use Cornell Note-taking method.

• Write down the terms and definitions in your notebooks.

• Word in column in left and definition in column on right.

• You will be able to:1. Read for comprehension.2. Analyze a story to determine the method of

characterization.3. Determine if characters are dynamic, static,

round, flat.4. Determine mood and tone.5. Analyze a story for meaning.

• Literary Terms: Characterization, Mood, Tone• Take Notes – Cornell Method

• the people or animals who take part in the action of a literary work

• Static - A static character does not change throughout the work, and the reader’s knowledge of that character does not grow,

• Dynamic - A dynamic character undergoes some kind of change because of the action in the plot.

• Static - A static character does not change throughout the work, and the reader’s knowledge of that character does not grow,

• Dynamic - A dynamic character undergoes some kind of change because of the action in the plot.

• Round - A round character has many character traits or qualities. They have many likes, dislikes, opinions, beliefs and attitudes.

• Flat - A flat character has only one or two personality traits. A ‘type” without unique opinions, beliefs or attitudes.

• the ways in which a writer develops a character, making him or her seem believable

• Two Methods of Characterization• 1 - Direct Characterization  - The writer tells you the

characters’ traits through the narrator's direct statements and descriptions

• 2 - Indirect Characterization - The writer reveals the characters' personalities through their own words, thoughts, and actions, as well as by what other characters say to them or about them.     

• More often, writers will have us listen to what their characters say and watch what they do. Then we can draw our own conclusions about the kind of people we are meeting.

1. By letting us hear the character speak; 2. by describing how the character looks

and dresses; 3. by letting us listen to the character's

inner thoughts and feelings; 4. by revealing what other people in the

story think or say about the character; and 5. by showing us what the character does-

how he or she acts.

• Although she was a stranger to him, Bobby looked at her hand-me-down outfit with disdain and asked, “Is that the best clothes you have?”

• Describe Bobby:

• Reading Strategy – Identifying with a Character

• Tone - the author's attitude toward the subject

• “Don’t give me that tone!”

• Mood - the feeling a work creates in the reader

▫ Susan Eloise Hinton was born in the 1950s in Tulsa, Oklahoma, a place that she describes as “a pleasant place to live if you don’t want to do anything.”

▫ She began The Outsiders at the age of sixteen, inspired by her frustration with the social divisions in her high school and the lack of realistic fiction for high school readers.

▫ The Outsiders, first published in 1967, tells the story of class conflict between the greasers, a group of low-class youths, and the Socs (short for Socials), a group of privileged rich kids who live on the wealthy West Side of town.

▫ The novel broke ground in the genre of Young Adult fiction, transcending established boundaries in its portrayal of violence, class conflict, and prejudice.

• “Many Americans believe in a simple three-class model that includes the "rich", the "middle class", and the "poor".”

• “Most definitions of class structure group people according to wealth, income, education, type of occupation, and membership in a specific subculture or social network.”

• http://youtu.be/f0ehzfQ4hAQ

• Sociologists Dennis Gilbert, William Thompson, Joseph Hickey, and James Henslin have proposed class systems with six distinct social classes.

• These class models feature:• an upper or capitalist class consisting of the rich and

powerful, • an upper middle class consisting of highly educated and

affluent professionals, • a middle class consisting of college-educated individuals

employed in white-collar industries, • a lower middle class, a working class constituted by clerical

and blue collar workers whose work is highly routinized,• and a lower class divided between the working poor and

the unemployed underclass.[

• Hinton was born in _____• The Outsiders was published in _____.• What was America like at that time? What was

happening?

                                                                                        

                               

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