- How does the Party use language and memory to maintain power? Find at least two examples (with quotations) from Chapter 4 that demonstrate how the Party manipulates language and memory to control the population.
- How does Chapter 4 develop the theme of truth and reality in 1984? Find at least three quotations that show how the Party distorts truth and creates its own version of reality. What is Orwell suggesting about the nature of truth in a totalitarian society?
Friday, 28 February 2025
Part 1 chapter 4
Thursday, 27 February 2025
English 12
We'll be writing a synthesis essay in the later stages of 1984. Going forward we'll be reading quite quickly. Complete the comprehension handouts and we'll look over these items in class to begin our overview.
- Essay arguing the current validity of 1984 (Kakutani)
- Why Nobody Cares The President is Lying (Sykes)
- All of the Passages in 1984 that relate to you right now (Temple)
- Letter that explains why Orwell wrote 1984 (Orwell)
Also, here is Orwell's Essay: Politics and the English Language cited from the video.
Monday, 24 February 2025
A Sound of Thunder
ELL3: Here we go!
- How does the story show that people want to control nature? What are some good ways and bad ways that it shows this?
- The "path" in the story is an important symbol. Think about why Eckels steps off the path and why Travis says we must not step off the path. Eckels thinks he is brave and courageous, but when he sees the dinosaur, he loses his courage. Of course, we don't want to change the past, but Eckels does it anyway. What does the path represent in the story?
- In what ways does the story warn against using technology in bad ways?
- Look at the part of the story that describes the tyrannosaurus rex. Find 3 examples that describe it in a scary way. Use quotation marks! After you find 3 quotes, explain how each one creates a scary effect.
- Example: "Eckels swayed on the padded seat," (p. 363)
Tuesday, 18 February 2025
Post-Presentation: TYFUB Reflection
Greetings Grade 12s! After your presentation, please submit a brief reflection on the process and production of your presentation. Answer the questions and put your name at the top:
- What was your role in the development of the project? What did you contribute?
- During the presentation, what portion did you present?
- Did you feel the work was fairly distributed and balanced within your group?
Tuesday, 11 February 2025
All Summer in a Day
Here's our short story, ELL3!
Once we read we'll do some questions! Please use several sentences for each one. Explain your answer with evidence from the story.
- Why do the other children resent Margot? How do they express their jealousy?
- How does the story explore the theme of jealousy? How does jealousy influence the children’s actions?
- What does this story teach about jealousy? Explain.
- The sun is an important symbol in the story. What does it represent? How does it affect those who have never seen it before, how has it made Margot different than the others?
- What might this story suggest about how society treats people who are different.
Thursday, 6 February 2025
Omelas Topics
- By imagining and co-creating this city of Omelas with Le Guin, do we share a responsibility for the suffering of the child in the basement? (this is an allegorical question; obviously we don't lock a child away in a basement somewhere in Richmond)
- How might the contrast of childhood and adulthood (or at least puberty), be represented through the coming of age in Omelas? Why are youth the first ones to consider walking away?
- Is the sacrifice of something precious a worthy trade-off for the pleasure and comfort of thousands?
- Why does Le Guin use such thoroughly exaggerated pleasures to allegorize our own? How do these pleasures echo the kinds of pleasures we pursue?
Tuesday, 4 February 2025
ELL3
Raymond's Run.
- How does Squeaky’s personality change throughout the story? What events contribute to this change?
- What does Raymond’s Run suggest about competition and personal growth?
- What message does the story convey about disability and inclusion?
Omelas Prep
Here you go grade 12s! Find quotes to support these topic areas. These are not the essay topics but your essay topics will be connected to them.
The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas.
- Our Imagination as a vehicle for Complicity: As the narrator invites the audience to create an image of Omelas, we become complicit in the moral consequences of its greatest crime: the agreement to allow a child to continue suffering in order for everyone else to be happy. By reading this story, Le Guin pulls us in to its creation, generating consensus and understanding of our circumstances.
- Coming of Age and the Loss of Innocence: All children between 8 and 12 learn about the child in the basement. At this discovery, the narrator states that everyone is disgusted and horrified at first.
- The utilitarian scapegoat. A child suffers in a basement somewhere in Omelas so that thousands of citizens can live in bliss and comfort. Evaluate the pleasures of Omelas' citizens in light of the suffering that this child must endure.
- The absurd pleasures we desire. Many pleasurable behaviors described in Omelas come across as bizarre. Motifs such as nudity, music, drugs, and plenty of contradictions populate Le Guin's narrative.
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