Transcript Document
Board work starting 4/6
IB English
Chapter 10
After reading chapter 10, list the key actions which
progressed the relationship between Ash and Christabel.
How did these actions influence Ash? How did they
influence Christabel?
Which of the two characters do you relate to the most?
Which one do you sympathize with the most? Do you
like both of them? Neither of them? Why?
After reading this chapter, what do you think Ash's
strengths and weaknesses are? Christabel's? How have
these strengths and weaknesses influenced their
outcomes by the end of this chapter?
Research projects
The next several days will be dedicated to our research projects.
Here's what you need to know:
You will work in teams which have been selected for you on a
designated packet.
You will follow the outlined schedule through the research
process. However, you will be personally responsible for
scheduling your interview and any extra cross referencing you
plan to do.
You will be careful to treat your packets appropriately and
observe all warnings related to the mishandling of packets.
You will produce a bibliography, research notes (organized by
fact and inference and linked to sources), an inquiry page, a first
draft, and a final paper.
Research schedule
Days One and Two: Creating a Bibliography
Days Three and Four: Reading and creating Research Notes and Inquiry
pages
Day Five: Cross-Referencing Day
Day Six: Final research day/Rough Draft
Day Seven: Finish paper and turn it in!
Schedule may vary as I see necessary.
Cross Referencing Day and the
Interview
Cross-Referencing Day is a day dedicated specifically to collaborating with
your peers and answering questions through their research. You must
answer any questions you are asked to the best of your ability, preferably
with support from your research notes.
You may choose to simply continue research on Cross-Referencing Day,
but it's the ideal time to get some answers to your questions from your peers
who may have some information that you don't.
The Interview is a chance to get answers to your questions from the owner
and person most knowledgeable about the documents (Me!). However,
you only get ONE interview. WARNING: Be sure you have all of your
questions ready at the time of the interview. If you think of another
afterwards, tough bananas. WARNING 2: You may be tempted to casually
ask me a question during the process. Don't or you'll waste your interview
and your partner will hate you forever.
Handling your packet
You will be given a packet of original documents from which you will research
the lives of the people who relate to these documents.
You must be very careful to preserve every document in the exact order and
condition in which you originally found it, even if the order makes no sense to
you. (It probably won't.)
You may put post-it notes on the documents to help you organize and
understand them. Please do not remove post-it notes from other classes.
Remember that others in other classes are using the same documents, and
anything you do to disturb the order will disturb their research as well.
Remember that these documents do not belong to you and any damage is
vandalism.
Any violations to the above, be it so little as changing the order of the
documents on accident, will incur heavy penalties, starting with 5-10%
deduction of your final grade on the project for the first offense.
Bibliography
Your first task is to create a bibliography. You will catalogue your
sources by author, title, and date. Any relevant publication
information is useful as well, but most of the documents are
unpublished.
You must list all documents in your bibliography.
If you have a question about how to cite a type of document, you
may reference our handbooks or ask me. (Don't worry; process
questions don't count toward the interview!)
An entry for a letter would look something like this:
Dickison, Lyndsee. "Hey," Unpublished letter. June 2, 1994. Print.
Author Last, First. "Title" Publication Info. Date. Media type.
Research Notes and Inquiry Page
The Research Notes are notes you take over the documents. You must
divide these notes into facts and inferences.
Be sure to link each fact and inference to the source. TIP: if you number
your bibliography in the first place, you can simply write the source number
next to the detail or quote in your notes.
Inquiry page is a place for you to write down your questions. These can be
questions that you think your can find the answer to yourself by further
research or cross-referencing as well as questions you feel you need to ask
me. Hopefully, many of your questions will be answered as you continue
your research.
Drafting
Once you've made good progress into your research, you need to start
developing a direction for your paper.
What are the big ideas or inferences you've drawn? What arguments can
you make about them? Brainstorm and come up with a good overall idea
for your paper. The best place to start is with your bigger inferences in your
research notes.
Once you have a plan for the argument, start laying out points and
evidence to support your points. Remember, research papers require
specific evidence, so you'll want to lay out around three quotes per
paragraph.
Don't forget to cite each bit of evidence! Your final draft requires a work
cited page, including only the documents you used specifically for your
paper.
Wow. A lot happens in chapter 12.
How does the Bethany house reflect the tension
between Romantic and Postmodern ideas?
(Postmodern ideas are those influenced by a
decentralization of meaning--basically, those that
have been shattered by deconstruction.)
How do Val and Fergus provide tension within this
chapter? How do they add to the story?
Why does Beatrice connect with and choose to trust
Maud? What is the connection between the two?
What is their connection to Ellen, other than the quest
for answers? (pages 240-242)
Chapter 11-12 Quiz
Swammerdam does not leave his microscopes and other
paraphernalia to his friend Thevenot, in spite of their
friendship. Why not?
What shocking discovery does Swammerdam make about the
ants, causing him to remark, “Their commonwealths are not as
we supposed”?
What does Beatrice believe Ellen is trying to do in her
journals?
Who comes to visit Ellen?
What do Maud and Roland decide to do next in their search?
Research Day 2: Continuing
Bibliographies
Break into your groups and collect your packets.
Continue working on your Bibliographies today. If you
finish before time is up, focus on your Research notes
and Inquiry pages.
Reminder: You will catalogue your sources by author, title, and date. Any
relevant publication information is useful as well, but most of the
documents are unpublished.
You must list all documents in your bibliography.
If you have a question about how to cite a type of document, you may
reference our handbooks or ask me. (Don't worry; process questions don't
count toward the interview!)
An entry for a letter would look something like this:
Dickison, Lyndsee. "Hey," Unpublished letter. June 2, 1994. Print.
Author Last, First. "Title" Publication Info. Date. Media type.
Research Day 3: Research Notes and
Inquiry pages
Poetry?
Be sure to note both facts and inferences.
Be sure to link all information back to which source it comes from.
(Referencing it back to the Bibliography page.
Keep writing down questions.
Use the Wikiboard to share information/family tree