7. Come to class at the end of the trimester having finished both books and write an essay about your topic.
8. Give a three minute presentation about the topic you studied from this time period and discuss why it is important or why you are interested in it. Use specific examples from your Reader’s Notebook.
11. The reading assignment asked you to read two books that allow you to study a time period and topic. My hope is that you learned something about your topic and why it is of interest to you. Now it’s time to write!
14. Establish a focus for your paper. What is important about your topic (thesis statement)? (20 pts.)
15. Organize your ideas effectively to communicate them. What points do you want to make about your topic (body)? (20 pts.)
16. In the body of the essay, develop your points by providing examples and quotations from your Reader’s Notebook then explain how these relate to your main focus-thesis statement. (20 pts.)
17. Show that you read and understood the books. (20 pts.)
18. Include the Works Cited information from the forms you filled out on each book. (20 pts.)
42. Do not read the whole speech from the note cards
43. 75 points total Steps<br />Introduce your topic, refer to the titles and authors of the books you read, explain why you chose this topic, and explain why it is important to you and to others-thesis statement.<br />Identify the points you want to make about the topic and provide examples for each point from your Reader’s Notebook and note the source. Explain how these points relate to your main idea-thesis statement.<br />Conclude your presentation by discussing what you learned from reading these two books and how they relate to your life now or in the future: maybe they inspired you or maybe you learned something about human nature. <br />Total project grading (375 pts.):<br />In-class Reader’s Notebook entry on Fridays100<br />Reader’s Notebook100<br />Essay100<br />Presentation 75<br />Standards (ELA 8th Grade)<br />2.0 Reading Comprehension (Focus on Informational Materials) Students read and understand grade-level-appropriate material. They describe and connect the essential ideas, arguments, and perspectives of the text by using their knowledge of text structure, organization, and purpose. The selections in Recommended Literature, Kindergarten Through Grade Twelve illustrate the quality and complexity of the materials to be read by students. In addition, students read one million words annually on their own, including a good representation of narrative and expository text (e.g., classic and contemporary literature, magazines, newspapers, online information). Structural<br />2.0 Writing Applications (Genres and Their Characteristics)<br />2.2 Write responses to literature: a. Exhibit careful reading and insight in their interpretations. b. Connect the student’s own responses to the writer’s techniques and to specific textual references. c. Draw supported inferences about the effects of a literary work on its audience. d. Support judgments through references to the text, other works, other authors, or to personal knowledge.<br />1.0 Written and Oral English Language Conventions Students write and speak with a command of standard English conventions appropriate to this grade level.<br />2.0 Speaking Applications (Genres and Their Characteristics) Students deliver well-organized formal presentations employing traditional rhetorical strategies (e.g., narration, exposition, persuasion, description). Student speaking demonstrates a command of standard American English and the organizational and delivery strategies outlined in Listening and Speaking Standard 1.0.<br />2.2 Deliver oral responses to literature: a. Interpret a reading and provide insight. b. Connect the students’ own responses to the writer’s techniques and to specific textual references. c. Draw supported inferences about the effects of a literary work on its audience. d. Support judgments through references to the text, other works, other authors, or personal knowledge.<br />