Wednesday, October 26, 2011
AR points and project!
AR points for the second nine weeks will be due December 14. Please encourage your child to get their AR points well before this date so that they are not having to work extra hard at the last minute. Also, the second nine weeks AR project (a diorama of a setting from one of the books they are reading) is due Monday, December 12. Your child will need an empty shoebox for this project, along with some arts and crafts supplies depending upon what they decide to create. I do have some extra shoeboxes if your child needs one.
Quiz Friday!
On Friday, October 28, there will be a quiz given. Students will have to successfully identify and correct run-ons and fragments in a piece of writing. We have spent some time this week talking about avoiding run-ons and fragments and ways to fix them.
Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck
Dear Parents:
Our next unit of study in eighth grade English will be the novel Of Mice and Men (1937) by Nobel Prize-winning author John Steinbeck. According to the National Common Core Curriculum, which Arkansas has adopted and in which the Lake Hamilton School District participates, this novel is on the preferred reading list for eighth grade.
Of Mice and Men is a classic that tells the tragic story of George Milton and Lennie Small, two displaced migrant ranch workers during the Great Depression. This novel is based on Steinbeck’s own experiences in California during the 1920s-30s. While this novel is a required reading in many schools and has been studied in literature classes across the nation since its publication, Of Mice and Men has also been a frequent target of censorship for what some consider offensive language. Our students will be sporadically exposed to some language and perspectives that we feel are inappropriate for today, but that accurately reflect the era of the 1930’s.
Although we do not condone the language and perspectives portrayed, the historical and literary value of this novel far outweigh any offensiveness that is depicted. Certainly our mission is to present the novel in the light of understanding our heritage and gaining respect for cultural and racial differences. The themes presented in this novel are many, including the following: friendship, the American Dream, loneliness, companionship, tolerance, and fighting injustice.
If you have any questions, feel free to call Lake Hamilton Junior High to speak with any of us.
Sincerely,
Amanda Kincannon Jennifer McCullah Rachael Barnes
— John Steinbeck in his 1938 journal entry
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