Sunday, September 25, 2016

Daily Bell Ringer Writing Schedule

Students are expected to spend the first 3-5 minutes of class completing the daily bell ringer.  A bell ringer is an activity or brief assignment for a student to complete as soon as he or she arrives to class and is seated.  All students are expected to be engaged in the daily bell ringer prompt by the time the bell rings signifying the start of class.

I will give students an opportunity to share their responses on occasion.  I will also circulate around the classroom to ensure that students are actively engaged in the bell ringer assignment.  Students may earn a weekly bell ringer grade for sharing a bell ringer response as well as completing all 5 bell ringer prompts for the week.

Students who talk while someone is sharing their written response, work on other assignments, interrupt or disrupt while others are sharing, or refuse to write quietly for the 3-5 minute period are subject to losing some or all bell ringer points for the week.

Below is the link to our weekly bell ringer schedule:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1dFVNLomjjQw4nqqfHgG54DJ8A4XGb1AX8Ss9duZkcmo/edit?usp=sharing


Saturday, July 25, 2015

Text Message Reminders for Homework, Tests, and Quizzes

Students and Parents,

Please feel free to subscribe to my Remind text messages.  Remind is a safe one-way communication tool that allows teachers to send text message reminders for homework assignments, quizzes, and tests.  I will not have access to anyone's cell phone number.  For more information, check out the Remind app or visit the web site at www.remind.com.

Text @nrlions2 to 81010 to start receiving Remind text messages.

Thank you!

Friday, July 24, 2015

Class Supplies 2015-2016

Class Supplies


Students will need the following supplies for English class:

  • blue or black pens 
  • #2 pencils
  • college ruled notebook paper
  • a folder for keeping all handouts and assignments
  • 1 writer's notebook (spiral notebook, composition notebook…whatever works for you!  One -subject spiral notebooks are usually less expensive)
  • your school-issued student agenda
  • textbook cover (Feel free to use a paper grocery bag)
  • helpful, but not mandatory:  index cards, highlighters, post-it notes 
Note:  I will ask you to decorate your writer's notebook during class time the first full week of school. Be creative and have fun!  Feel free to use cut-outs from magazines (pictures, words, phrases), song lyrics, photos, stickers, postcards, duct tape, art work, recycled greeting and birthday cards, print-outs from the internet, etc.  This is your writer's notebook, and you will be using it often, so have fun decorating it!

Friday, June 26, 2015

Summer Reading 2015

Summer Reading 2015



Grade 10 summer reading:  you will read the book, Night, by Elie Wiesel.  The ISBN number for this book is:  13: 978-0-374-50001-6.  Books are available at school and can be obtained any time between 8:30am-3pm Monday-Friday.  Mrs. Griffin is at school every Wednesday from 9am-11am if you need extra help with the book or the assignment.   After reading the book, you are required to complete the assignment below.  Please call or email Mrs. Griffin at 513-535-5407 or griffin_s@nrschools.org if you have any questions about the assignment or the book.
Night Reading Response
Complete any two of the following on a separate sheet of paper.  This assignment will be counted as your first grade for first quarter.  Each of your responses should be about a page long.  You may type or hand-write your answers.  Additional items you complete will be counted as extra credit.
1.  Which of the following best describes how you felt when you finished reading 
Night.:  angry, awed, amazed, baffled (puzzled), disgusted, disturbed, dissatisfied, irritated,   joyous, uneasy, untouched, sad?   Explain why you feel this way.   
2.  Complete any five of the following statements with a minimum of three additional sentences   each, reacting to what you read.
        a.  If I were in this story, I would/wouldn’t have . . .
        b.  I admire the character of ______________________  because . . .
        c.  I realized . . .
        d.  I can’t understand . . .
        e.  I did/didn’t like the way . . .
        f.  The character of ____________________ reminds me of myself when . . .
        g.  I know the feeling of . . .
        h.  I began to think of . . .
3. The main thing that the character of ____________________ learned in this story was . .
4.      The most important lesson I, the reader, learned in this story was . . .
5.      Which of the following descriptive terms makes you think of one of the characters in Night:  lonely, angry, helpless, uncaring, helpful, wise, responsible, unselfish?  Describe the character and explain why you think this character feels or personifies this emotion.
While you’re reading Night, consider the following questions and be prepared to discuss them when we return to school.
a. How is night an appropriate symbol to convey Elie Wiesel's concentration camp experience?  How does it represent his suffering, man's inhumanity to man, and the effects of the Holocaust upon his faith?
b. Wiesel describes his total loss of faith in God for allowing the Jews, God's chosen people, to suffer so inhumanely.  How could a God who was all-knowing, all-powerful and all-loving allow this to occur?  Was he too weak to intervene?  Was he too apathetic to care?  Did he know this would one day occur?  How could God, in his perfect justice, allow children to be burned, tortured and hanged?  How could God stand by silently while six million Jews were starved, worked to death and gassed for no apparent reason?
c. In what ways did Elie Wiesel change as a result of his imprisonment?  Discuss emotional, physical and spiritual changes and the causes of these changes.
d.  At one point in the novel, the prisoners are told by a Kapo, "...let there be comradeship among you.  We are all brothers and we are all suffering.  Help one another.  It is the only way to survive."  Toward the end of the novel, Elie is given the opposite advice by a Blockalteste:  "Don't forget that you are in a concentration camp.  In this place, it is every man for himself and you cannot think of others.  Not even your father.  In this place, there is no such thing as father, brother, friend.  Each of us lives and dies alone."  Which advice is best for concentration camp prisoners, in your opinion?






Saturday, June 7, 2014