Wednesday, 18 June 2025

Ratatouille Stuff!

We've just finished the film and it's time to write! 

In Ratatouille, Remy is a rat who dreams of becoming a great chef. Although the world tells him he doesn't belong in the kitchen, his passion and talent help him succeed in surprising ways.

"Can greatness come from unexpected places?"

"How can teamwork help you to accomplish more than you could have alone?" 

Use examples from the film and your own ideas to support your answer.

Tuesday, 10 June 2025

English 12: Final Essay

Topic time. Though this technically falls into the synthesis essay and literary essay, how we cite and work with film in this kind of essay is quite different than how we work with text. Check the criteria handout. Today, start your research and find sources to support your position.

Read the topic carefully. It's one thing to just write freely about existentialism, but each topic has a specific framework you must follow to be on topic

1. Sartre’s Hell is Other People: Isolation and the Self

Consider Sartre’s notion that “hell is other people.” How do the interactions among the crew (or between Willard and Kurtz) illustrate existential isolation, bad faith, or authenticity? Analyze how characters struggle with self-definition in the face of others’ expectations and judgment.

2. “I Love the Smell of Napalm”: Kilgore and the Absurd Hero?

Analyze the character of Lieutenant Colonel Kilgore through the lens of Camus’ concept of the absurd. Does Kilgore embody the absurd hero, confronting the meaningless violence of war with passionate intensity and personal code, or is he a figure of existential denial? Consider how his flamboyant behavior, love of surfing, and surreal detachment from the war reflect or contradict Camus’ ideas in The Myth of Sisyphus.

3. Kurtz and the Collapse of Essentialism

Colonel Kurtz appears to have abandoned traditional moral frameworks and embraced a new identity. Does Kurtz’ transformation reflect the existential rejection of essentialism? Discuss how his philosophical evolution compares with existentialist ideas found in the writings of Camus, Kierkegaard, or Sartre.

Breadwinner

Respond to both of these in an extended response. Your response should be at least one paragraph for the first question, and 2 paragraphs for the 2nd. 

  • How did The Breadwinner help you understand life in Afghanistan under Taliban rule?

  • Parvana often breaks rules to help her family. How do we know when the rules should be broken to do the right thing?

Monday, 9 June 2025

The Breadwinner

Choose 5 central themes from a list and:

  • Explain how each one appears in the film.

  • Provide a key scene or moment that represents it.

Theme options:

  • Courage

  • Freedom

  • Family

  • Storytelling

  • Injustice

  • Identity

  • Hope

  • Survival

  • Gender roles

More Existentialism!

 We're going to zoom in on Camus, Sartre, and Kierkegaard. For this activity, we break into three groups and create a poster that gives us some information on each of these renowned philosophers and their contributions to existentialism.

For whichever philosopher your group gets, organize the following information:

  1. What is their contribution to Existentialism?
  2. Where are they from?
  3. What are their unique beliefs?
  4. How do they differ from the other two philosophers?

Kierkegaard

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D9JCwkx558o

Sartre

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3bQsZxDQgzU

Camus

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jQOfbObFOCw

The Search for Yourself

Existentialism makes reflection meaningful. Without this background, reflections can seem meaningless or like grunt work (in fact, a nihilist would say that all reflection is meaningless). Existentialism requires us to take responsibility for our lives, our values, and our direction. It refutes essentialism, which argues that there is an essence that makes you, you (as defined by someone, or something else). Some terms to inform our discussion:

Determinism: The idea that our lives are pre-determined. There are several angles to this school of thought. Some believe that God has determined every aspect of our lives, others feel that every aspect of our personality is the product of chemical reactions and electrons moving through our brain; that there are essentially aspects to our existence that we will likely never fully understand that influence us in subtle ways that ultimately determine how we live.

Free Will: Refutes determinism. Our actions are entirely of our own making. We have control over our future and how our lives turn out. We must be responsible and accountable for every aspect of our lives. Free will is a battle over the hardship of reality, 


For the following scenarios, describe how free will and determinism will explain their thinking differently:
  1. A boy steals bread to feed his family.
  2. A man hijacks a plane, and crashes it into one of the twin towers.
  3. A young lady on the verge of bankruptcy wins the lottery.
  4. A young lady loses her house due to her gambling addiction.
  5. A student hasn't handed in any assignments because they have been staying up late playing video games.
  6. A student has fumbled during their soliloquy presentation.
  7. Another student in your class seems to have everything going for them. Good marks, good relationships, good money.

Monday, 2 June 2025

Some more writing

Imagine that your school is going to add a new class or club, and you get to decide what it will be. What kind of class or club would you create? Who would join it, what would you do there, and why would it be helpful or fun for students?

Tips to help you:

  • Describe the purpose of your class or club.

  • Explain who it’s for and what kinds of activities it would include.

  • Be creative, but stay clear and organized.

  • Use sentence connectors to show cause, contrast, and addition.

English 12

Write a singular response that covers the following questions:

  • Do you believe people are born with a purpose?
  • Have you ever questioned the meaning of something you were expected to do?