Friday, December 16, 2011

Friday / Monday, 16 December 2011 Tuesday, 3 January 2012

In class students completed their SSR sheets for December.

We reviewed unit vocabulary.

As a class we examined the first three years of the memoir (pages 3-8).

Students were assigned the task of reading and taking notes per the "Close Reading" handout the first chapter (through page 29) of Night.

Additionally students were given the following "Millions" Assignment due January 5th/ 6th 2012. The assignment is to create a visual representation of one million. In this unit we are studying the murder of twelve million 12,000,000 humans. It is difficult to comprehend such a horror. In order to help understand the scope of the tragedy of the holocaust students are to create a visual project that conveys as specifically and precisely as possible how large a number one million is.


Happy Holiday Break!

Friday / Monday, 16 December 2011 Tuesday, 3 January 2012

In class students completed their SSR sheets for December.

We reviewed unit vocabulary.

As a class we examined the first three years of the memoir (pages 3-8).

Students were assigned the task of reading and taking notes per the "Close Reading" handout the first chapter (through page 29) of Night.

Additionally students were given the following "Millions" Assignment due January 5th/ 6th 2012. The assignment is to create a visual representation of one million. In this unit we are studying the murder of twelve million 12,000,000 humans. It is difficult to comprehend such a horror. In order to help understand the scope of the tragedy of the holocaust students are to create a visual project that conveys as specifically and precisely as possible how large a number one million is.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Wednesday / Thursday 14 / 15 December

The class began with a review of and practice with the current vocabulary words.

family; faith; Romani; Gypsy; Transylvania; Jewish; Holocaust; genocide; antisemitism; discrimination; propaganda; racism; stereotype

The class then spent time looking at the questions that Ellie Wiesel asks in his forward to Night.

7th period received the following homework assignments; periods 2&3 will get these assignments on Friday.

Finnish reading the first chapter of Night (through page 23).

The second assignment, if very well done, and effective allows for extra credit. The assignment is to create a visual representation of one million. In this unit we are studying the murder of twelve million 12,000,000 humans. It is difficult to comprehend such a horror. In order to help understand the scope of the tragedy of the holocaust students are to create a visual project that conveys as specifically and precisely as possible how large a number one million is.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Monday / Tuesday 12 /13 December

Students reviewed unit vocabulary and added the word
Genocide -- extermination of a group of people.

Students had SSR ALL December SSR reading is due on Thursday / Friday of this week!

Students were assigned to read the Preface and Forward to Night.

Students received the following assignment for chapters 1-3 of Night. In class we read the first five pages and took notes on the first three paragraphs, noting that the book, though a memoir of Ellie Wiesel, begins by talking about Moishe the Beadle.

Close Reading of Night Chapters 1-3

Night is a disturbing story of human atrocities; it is also a hopeful story of triumph. The subject matter that we will be dealing with during this unit is difficult. I know that you can be sensitive to the needs of others; and I hope that you will be sensitive to your own needs and personal safety, as well. After every night is a new dawn.

There are many different issues to address when reading Night. The passages I have selected below are ones that address some of the most significant and recurring issues. First review the entire set of references. Choose five of the passages to write very detailed responses to; as you read through the chapters also create a journal entry or note on each of the passages.

Page 5:  “What question and answer is one?”

Page 10:  “The Eight Days of Passover. The weather was sublime.”

Irony is when what happens is the opposite of what is expected; are there other examples of irony in the text?

Page 12:  “Most people thought that we would remain in the ghetto until the end of the war, until the arrival of the Red Army. Afterward everything would be as before. The ghetto was ruled by neither German nor Jew; it was ruled by delusion.”

Could Ellie have had this point of view from the Ghetto? Is being ruled by delusion always bad?

Page 20:  “Oh God, Master of the Universe, in your infinite compassion, have mercy on us…”

Will this prayer be answered?

Page 24:  Mrs. Schachter cries out, “Look! Look at this fire! This terrible fire! Have mercy on me!” Ellie relates, “Some pressed against the bars to see. There was nothing. Only the darkness of night.”

How do you explain this episode?

Page 29:  “The beloved objects that we had carried with us from place to place were now left behind in the wagon, and with them, finally our illusions.”

What objects in your life create illusions? Would delusions be a better word in the text of Night? What about for objects in your life? Objects that you see in other peoples’ lives?

Page 30:  “’Shut up, you moron, or I’ll tear you to pieces! You should have hanged yourselves rather than come here. Didn’t you know what was in store for you here in Auschwitz? You didn’t know? In 1944?’”

Should they have known?

Page 31:  In the cattle car, young men and fathers have an argument: To revolt, or not. The argument is won by saying, “We mustn’t give up hope, even now as the sword hangs over our heads, So taught our sages…..”

Do you agree that this was the argument to have? Is it better to die in a hopeless battle, or to maintain hope?
Page 32:   A truck load of babies is dumped in a flames. 

Ellie writes, “I did see this, with my own eyes … children thrown into the flames. (is it any wonder that ever since then, sleep tends to elude me?)

There are those today who deny that The Holocaust of WWII happened. Do you think the monstrosity of the events makes it easier, or harder to deny the truth?

Page 33: “I don’t know whether, during the history of the Jewish people, men have ever before recited Kaddish for themselves.

Ellie writes, “For the first time, I felt anger rising within me. Why should I sanctify His name? The Almighty, the eternal and terrible Master of the Universe, chose to be silent. What was there to thank Him for?

What would you say to Ellie? Is what you would say were you standing next to him in 1943 be different from what you would say to him were you to meet him today?

Page 34:  “Never shall I forget.”

Consider this passage in the center of the page.

Page 42: “I became A-7713.”

What is the importance of a name? What is the significance of making a person a number?

Page 45:  “Akiba Drumer said: ‘God is testing us. He wants to see whether we are capable of overcoming our base instincts, of killing the Satan within ourselves. We have no right to despair. And if HE punishes us mercilessly, it is a sign that He loves us that much more…”

Page 46:  “How we would have liked to believe that. We pretended, for what if one of us still did believe?”

Is this kind of belief a delusion, or a source of power?

Page 46:  “On the way, we saw some young German girls. The guards began to tease them. The girls giggled. They allowed themselves to be kissed and tickled, bursting with laughter. They all were laughing, joking, and passing love notes to one another. At least, during all that time, we endured neither shouting nor blows.”

Are bystanders evil? Guilty? Can the girls be held libel for being girls?



Consider the passages that I have asked you to pay special attention to above. Now read, or review Chapter 4 (pages 47-65). Which passages seem most important to you in this section. Copy the passage down; write a question or prompt that you think is important to consider in conjunction with the passage. You should have at least two passages.

Thursday / Friday 8 / 9 December

(Sorry for the delayed posting.)
Ms. Brandy guest taught.

First the class reviewed the "Write Around Night" poster discussions. Students wrote additional ideas and questions on their own; afterwards their was a class discussion on the issues.

The class studied five new vocabulary terms. Antisemitism; Discrimination; Propaganda; Racism; Stereotype. Definitions in the picture below.

Students also looked at Nazi era antisemitic propaganda, and contemporary antisemitic propaganda.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Tuesday / Wednesday 6 / 7 December

In class today students were reminded of the vocabulary quiz on December 8/9.


The class then began the unit on Ellie Wisel's Night.

Students wrote about what they thought about each of the following words, and what each of these words made them feel.

Family
faith
Romani
Gypsy
Transylvania
Jewish
Holocaust

Students are to look up definitions for each of these words for homework for December 8/9.

Then in small groups students did a "Write Around" on the following six concepts.
Theme: Religion                                    1/6
Give examples of religion as a beneficial aspect of society.
Then give examples of some horror it has caused.

Theme: Hate                                    2/6
Do all people hate?
Is hating part of being human?
What other emotion is hate most like?

Theme: Social Injustices                                    3/6
If Congress considered passing a law so that all people must carry identification with them when traveling between states to help police detect illegal aliens, would you support this idea? Why?

Theme: Social Injustices                                    4/6
At what point is violence justified to remedy social injustice?

Theme: Quest for Freedom                                    5/6
Fundamentally what are rights?
How are they established?
To what degree are they absolute?
Are there any rights that apply to all people?
Are there any that should, but don’t?

Theme: Power of the Human Spirit                                    6/6
What motivates people to keep living when in dire straits?

Monday, December 5, 2011

Friday / Monday 2/5 December

Students in periods 2&3 turned in essays. Students in period 7 turned in extra credit projects.

Students in both classes finished analyzing modern Iranian society through the lens of the contemporary film Offside.

Night unit begins on Tuesday / Wednesday. 

Mr. Zartler will be our Thursday and Friday.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Wednesday / Thursday 30 / 1 November / December

On Thursday 2nd and 3rd period classes reviewed vocabulary words:
martyr; connotation; analytical; err; mediocre; illiterate; 2nd period-- redundant 3rd period -- craven. There will be a quiz on December 8th / 9th on these words.

Persepolis essays are due on Friday.

2nd and 3rd period classes then had SSR.

All classes watched the first half of the film Offside. Offside is set in contemporary Terhan, and the class is watching the film to get a different, and more contemporary perspective on living in Iran than we got from Persepolis.

7th Period turned in Persepolis essays.

7th period checked out Night from the library.