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Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,
Page 2: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions, a large group discussion and a written paragraph.

Agenda: Small group discussions Large group discussion Small group paragraph

Objective

Page 3: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

1. London, Geoffrey, Zach, Halle 2. Jacob, Shea, Ariel, Shun 3. Zoe, Stephanie, Keshav, Rayshawn 4. Jacinda, Naomi, Malachi 5. Feruza, Isha, David, Isaiah 6. Mitchell, Dipak, Christian 7. Mohammad, Tyler, Inga, Jose 8. Angelica, Chris, Afra, Ashley, Amanda 9. Daniel, Sam, Jereme-Ashlee, Zaw

Period 3 groups

Page 4: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

1. Ammar, Jose, Martha, D’Naya 2. Brittany, Isaiah, Kaylee, Alma 3. Ogden, Eduardo, Antonio 4. Victory, Sandra, Azspen, 5. Malachi, Nicole, Anis 6. Tran, Abdul, Selena, Jesus P. 6. Cierra, Sadie, Chelsea, Chris 7. Michael, Simon, Jesus, Nubia 8. Luke, Antonio I. Lorenzo 9. Akmal, Haley, Johnnie

Period 4 Groups

Page 5: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&oe=UTF8&msa=0&msid=106327373044699100974.00046ad8f43679ddcd43c

Map

Page 6: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Marlow’s & Conrad’s1889-90 journey into

“Heart of Darkness”

Joseph Conrad(1857-1914)

Page 7: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,
Page 8: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,
Page 9: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Write down three quotes with images that stand out to you.

Describe the scene in your own words.

In groups

Page 10: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Tone: the writer's attitude toward the material and/or readers. Tone may be playful, formal, intimate, angry, serious, ironic, outraged, baffled, tender, serene, depressed, etc.

Tone

Page 11: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

The author’s attitude towards the characters or the story. The author may not like the characters, and may make fun of them in a subtle way.

Tone is different from mood because it describes how the author feels about the characters, whereas mood describes how the reader feels when reading the story.

Tone

Page 12: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Exit ticket: In your groups

How are the images you found setting the tone for the novel?

Images creating the tone

Page 13: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Objective: Students will evaluate and analyze Marlow’s perspective on colonialism through small group discussions and a group paragraph.

1-15

Page 14: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

What do you think Marlow’s view on colonialism is? ◦Colonialism is the policy or practice by

which one country installs a settlement of its people on the lands of another society.

Use three quotes to support your argument.

Group Paragraph

Page 15: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Figure out, as a group, what you think Marlow’s stance on colonialism is.

What made you think that? Those should be your quotes in your paragraph. (Note: Your answer to this may change as you continue to read, and that is okay.

As a group, write a paragraph with a clear argument for the topic sentence and quotes to support it.

What is Marlow’s perspective on colonialism?

Page 16: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Objective: Students will analyze the use of imagery and evaluate the Conrad’s description of the natives through watching a video clip, small group discussions and large group discussions. ◦ ACT Practice-Reading◦ Discuss Part 1◦ Heart of Darkness Video◦ Short reading-Racism in Heart of Darkness◦ Small group discussions◦ Is Heart of Darkness a racist novel? ◦ Homework: Read through page 40 and answer

questions for Friday.

1/16-1/17

Page 17: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

How is Kurtz similar or different from the image that is presented of him?

How does Conrad portray the natives?

What is Marlow’s view on colonialism?

Prior to 1950, Heart of Darkness was considered “The African Novel” in the Western culture. Do you think it should be considered the quintessential African novel?

Focus questions

Page 18: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

What main events could you figure out that happened?

What new characters were introduced? What questions do you have?

Take 5-In small groups discuss

Page 19: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

1. London, Geoffrey, Zach, Halle 2. Jacob, Shea, Ariel, Shun 3. Zoe, Stephanie, Keshav, Rayshawn 4. Jacinda, Naomi, Malachi 5. Feruza, Isha, Luke, Isaiah 6. Mitchell, Dipak, Christian 7. Mohammad, Tyler, Inga, Jose 8. Angelica, Chris, Afra, Ashley, Amanda 9. Daniel, Sam, Jereme-Ashlee, Zaw

Period 3 groups

Page 20: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

1. Ammar, Jose, Martha, D’Naya 2. Brittany, Isaiah, Kaylee, Alma 3. Ogden, Eduardo, Antonio 4. Victory, Sandra, Azspen, 5. Malachi, Nicole, Anis 6. Tran, Abdul, Selena, Jesus P. 6. Cierra, Sadie, Chelsea, Chris 7. Michael, Simon, Jesus, Nubia 8. Antonio I. Lorenzo, Cassidy 9. Akmal, Haley, Johnnie

Period 4 Groups

Page 21: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Do you agree or disagree with this interpretation of the novel so far?

Images: Were they how you imagined it, or different?

Heart of Darkness Video

Page 22: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

In Part 1, what descriptions do you see of the natives?

What impression do you get of them from Marlow?

What language does he use to describe them? What words does he choose, and when does he choose to use each of them?

Exit Ticket: On the same paper… After your discussions and reading up to this

point, and the handout: Do you think the novel is racist?

In small groups

Page 23: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Based on what you discovered, do you think the novel is racist?

After reading the handout, do you agree or disagree?

Is the novel racist?

Page 24: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Mitchell, Sam, Afra, Amanda Geoffrey, Chris, Malachi, Isaiah Halle, Daniel, Jereme-Ashley, London Inga, Mohamad, David, Zoe Dipak, Feruza, Ashley, Jacinda Angelica, Tyler, Shun, Jacob Christian, Keshav, Zaw, Zach Isha, David, Naomi, Stephanie Rayshawn, Ariel, Jose

Groups-Period 3

Page 25: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Anis, Antonio G., Simon, Joe Lorenzo, Tran, Abdul, Malachi Sandra, Eduardo, Ammar, Isaiah Jesus P., Sadie, Chelsea, Haley D’Naya, Martha, Antonio I, Eduardo Akmal, Jesus S., Victory, Azspen Kaylee, Martha, Selena Cierra, Chris, Michael, Nicole, Johnnie, Nubia, Ogden, Alma,

Groups-Period 4

Page 26: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Objective: Students will analyze and discuss pages 1-40, especially focusing on the images of light and darkness, the character of Kurtz and racism in the novel Heart of Darkness through writing, and a Socratic seminar. ◦ Journal entry◦ Discuss essay◦ Discussion/Socratic Seminar: Pages 1-40◦ Exit ticket

1-18

Page 27: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Write your own story or poem using images of light and darkness to help set the scene.

Journal Entry: Creative Piece

Page 28: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Participate in the conversation. (10-8-5) When possible, use supporting evidence to

help you make your point. (+1) Actively listen when you are not speaking. Take notes (especially consider your essay

topic).

Discussion Expectations

Page 29: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

How does Conrad use light and darkness in the novel?

How is Kurtz characterized?

Discussion

Page 30: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

Is the novel racist?

Socratic Seminar

Page 31: Students will understand the basic plot line of Heart of Darkness and begin to evaluate Marlow’s view on colonialism through small group discussions,

What new insights do you have from today? What is still confusing?

Exit Ticket