Transcript Document

Do Now 9/26/14
• Take out HW: Quick Write 6
• Open Spiral notebooks and write today’s date
for notes about tone
Agenda 9/26/14
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Do Now & Agenda
Learning Targets
Notes on tone, connotation, & denotation
Tone Practice
Ticket out
HW - begin to review vocab and notes on
tone for Quiz next Wednesday, upcoming
test 10/7
Learning Targets
1. I can participate in discussions with a small
group, partner, and the whole class.
2. I can identify how tone and meaning affects
the author’s meaning of a passage.
Notes
• What is tone?
• Tone is the writer's/speaker’s attitude (emotion)
toward his/her subject.
• Why does it matter?
• Tone helps to establish the mood, and mood is what
makes us engage in the text or song or movie or TV
show…
• Common Tones: formal, informal, serious, comical,
sarcastic, sad, and cheerful
Understanding Tone
• Tone is deciphered through:
– 1. Figurative Language: a tool that an author uses to
help a reader visualize what is happening in his or her literary
work
– 2. Diction: an author’s choice of words. [WORD CHOICE]
– 3. Denotative/Connotative Language:
• Denotation is the literal meaning of a word.
• Connotation involves a cultural or emotional feeling associated with a
word.
Denotation & Connotation
• Denotative meaning: A red octagon
• Connotative meaning: A sign that indicates
potential danger ahead.
Example: “snake”
• Snake: any of numerous scaly, legless,
sometimes venomous reptiles having a long,
tapering, cylindrical body.
• Snake: Something evil or untrustworthy.
Perhaps an omen of bad things to come.
Take out Binder p. 13
• Take 2 minutes to skim and scan through the
test.
• What words are you unfamiliar with? Lets
annotate some synonyms…
Partner Talk
1. Choose a tone from the tone list.
2. Turn to a partner and say this sentence with
that tone in your voice:
“I am an eighth grader at South Buffalo Charter
School.”
3. Try a few others…who can share with the
class?
Emphasis and Tone
• Read each sentence, but emphasize the word
in red. Ask yourself: what can you infer from
each sentence?
1. I didn’t steal your red hat.
2. I didn’t steal your red hat.
3. I didn’t steal your red hat.
4. I didn’t steal your red hat.
How does emphasis add to tone?
Whole Group Practice: What is the
tone of each of these excerpts?
1.
2.
3.
4.
The devils were eight or nine feet tall, with wild and tangled hair. Their
horrific bodies were blackish and hairless, and their eyes as round as
monkey’s eyes and as fierce as the bluest point of a flame.
The angels were elegant and soaring, with tresses that sparkled and
floated in the sunlight. Their graceful figures were ethereal and their eyes
as gentle as the kiss of Spring.
Father: “We can’t go on vacation this summer.”
Son: “Ok. Great! That’s what I expected.”
“And the trees all died. They were orange trees. I don’t know why they
died, they just died. Something wrong with the soil possibly or maybe the
stuff we got from the nursery wasn’t the best. We complained about it.
So we’ve got thirty kids there, each kid had his or her own little tree to
plant and we’ve got these thirty dead trees. All these kids looking at
these little brown sticks, it was depressing.”
Ticket Out
1.
Mr. Jones, since you obviously appear to know everything, would you
like to come up here and teach this class for me?
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B.
C.
2.
Did you see what he just did? My goodness!
A.
B.
C.
3.
sarcastic
Critical/ pointing out errors
disrespectful
Insecure/uncertain
humorous
surprised
This is one of the best essays I've ever seen. It's clear, concise, and
convincing.
A.
B.
C.
complimentary
sad
hopeful