Unit Calendar
Unit Calendar
Unit Calendar
Learning Target(s):
Speaking/Listening (LITERACY.SL.9-10.1)
Language (ELA-LITERACY.L.9-10.3)
Writing (ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.3)
Friday, 50 minutes
Reading quiz
Small groups: exploring Scout as a child
narrator
Each group should create a poster Venn
Diagram comparing/contrasting Scout
and Holden
Below, write why Holden was often
considered an unreliable narrator. Do
we think that Scout may also be a
questionable narrator? Why or why
not? Find one Scout quote that supports
your reasoning.
Close reading: looking closer at passages that
reveal Scouts child narrator identity; discuss
what that means for us as readers.
Goal: lead students to an understanding
that Scouts child perspective may, at
times, lead to ambiguous/unclear
situations.
Hand out small Post-it notes; explain to
students that they should mark points while
reading when Scout does not give us the whole
picture of what is going on in the story, places
where we still have questions.
For next class: Chapters 7-9
Learning Target(s):
Reading (LITERACY.RL.9-10.1,
LITERACY.RL.9-10.3)
Megan Gilson 6
Week 2: Voice and Values
Tuesday, 90 minutes
Journal: At what point do people grow up?
Are there typical events in a persons life that
cause them to grow up? What moments in your
life have caused you to grow up (even if you
are still in the process of growing up)? When
does growing up end?
Ambiguity and voice
Mini lesson: Elements of a characters voice
What is included in a person or
characters voice?
How can we discover voice in reading?
Thursday. 90 minutes*
Journal: What are your values? Where do you
get them? What does Scout seem to value, and
where does she get her values?
Pass out/introduce character organizer (preplanning for writing assignment, step 1)
Introduce writing assignment
Learning Target(s):
Reading (LITERACY.RL.9-10.1,
LITERACY.RL.9-10.3)
Learning Target(s):
Speaking/Listening (LITERACY.SL.9-10.1)
Writing (ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.3)
What is ambiguity?
Clip from The Hunger Games ending
Return to The Necklace short story
why was the ending ambiguous? What
do we, as readers, do when we dont
know everything?
Close reading: Boo Radley from
Scouts perspective
Friday, 50 minutes*
Reading quiz
Ambiguity role play:
Groups of 4-5 students
Remind students to look at Post-it
notes; have students select a moment of
ambiguity in the text
Students have 15 minutes as a group to
solve the ambiguity and come up
with a possible solution
3 minutes for each group to present
Short discussion: (in preparation for next
classs discussion on identity) What does it
mean to create a safe (and confidential)
space? Why is this important?
(Can be moved to next week if necessary)
Megan Gilson 7
Week 3: Identity in America: Yesterday and Today
Tuesday, 90 minutes
Journal: Do you agree with Peggy McIntoshs
White Privilege article? Why or why not?
Are there any parts of the list specifically that
you agree/disagree with? Why? Could you
apply McIntoshs thinking to other identities
(gender, sex, sexual orientation, religion,
nationality, etc.)?
Thursday. 90 minutes
Friday, 50 minutes
Reading quiz
Learning Target(s):
Writing (ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.3)
Speaking/Listening (LITERACY.SL.9-10.1)
Language (ELA-LITERACY.L.9-10.3)
Learning Target(s):
Speaking/Listening (LITERACY.SL.9-10.1)
Learning Target(s):
Writing (ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.3)
Language (ELA-LITERACY.L.9-10.3)
Megan Gilson 8
Week 4: The Legal/Justice System
Tuesday, 90 minutes
Journal: Free write on last nights reading.
What surprised you? Concerned you? Is there
anything youre wondering about? Why? Do
you have any predictions?
*Character organizer due*
Pre-Writing organization (step 2)
Look at your sticky notes to reveal
moments of ambiguity in the text,
make list
Close reading of critical trial passages in To
Kill a Mockingbird. What are we missing
from Scouts POV? What do we want to
know, and what are we still left wondering?
Watch trial clip from To Kill a Mockingbird
movie.
Discuss how the movie fills in some of the
blanks how can we do this in our own
writing?
Learning Target(s):
Writing (ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.3)
Reading (LITERACY.RL.9-10.1,
LITERACY.RL.9-10.3)
Thursday. 90 minutes
Journal: What do you know about the legal
system in the United States? If you dont think
you know a lot about it, why do you think that
is? What do you think it is like?
Friday, 50 minutes
Classroom mock trial
Learning Target(s):
Speaking/Listening (LITERACY.SL.9-10.1)
Megan Gilson 9
Week 5: Writing
Tuesday, 90 minutes
Journal: What are your thoughts on the mock
trial? Did anything surprise you? Is there
anything that you do not understand?
Mock trial de-brief
What do we learn about justice?
Goal: learn that justice is difficult when
you dont know the whole story
How can we relate what we learned in
the mock trial activity to Tom
Robinsons trial in the novel?
Time to work on/revise outline (step 2), due
at the end of class
Thursday. 90 minutes
Friday, 50 minutes
Learning Target(s):
Speaking/Listening (LITERACY.SL.9-10.1)
Writing (ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.3)
Learning Target(s):
Writing (ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.3)
Learning Target(s):
Writing (ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.3)
Megan Gilson 10
Week 6: Writing, Unit Wrap-Up, and Assessment
Tuesday, 90 minutes
Thursday. 90 minutes
Friday, 50 minutes
Learning Target(s):
Writing (ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.3)
Learning Target(s):
Writing (ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.3)
Reading (LITERACY.RL.9-10.1,
LITERACY.RL.9-10.3)
Language (ELA-LITERACY.L.9-10.3)
Speaking/Listening (LITERACY.SL.9-10.1)
Learning Target(s):
Writing (ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.3)
Reading (LITERACY.RL.9-10.1,
LITERACY.RL.9-10.3)
Language (ELA-LITERACY.L.9-10.3)
Megan Gilson 11