Honors Latin IV Agenda for the week of November 11, 2013 Monday, November 11th – No school! Tuesday Nov. 12th – Friday November 15th: At home this week: This work should be done independently. You should not have the same reflections or questions as anyone else in the class. I will not give credit to any duplicate assignment. Watch at least 3 videos from the YouTube list. Take notes and/or watch each video twice. Write a two to three sentence reflection for each video – telling me what you have been struggling with understanding related to the topic, why this topic has been challenging to understand, what has been made more clear related to the topic, what you are still having a difficult time understanding, what might make this topic more understandable, etc. Write two grammar questions about the Lesson XX story (with answers) related to the video that you watched. For example, if you watched a video on subjunctive verbs, ask for the voice, mood, tense, person and number of two verbs in the story. Be sure to include the lines from the story. These reflections can be saved in the class drop box on the server (preferred), or emailed to me, or printed out and turned in. In class: Finish reading the article/watching the movie about the Oracle of Delphi Write 15 questions (with answers) about the article. They must be comprehension questions relevant to the main idea of the article and come from all parts of the article. Pick 10 vocabulary words to define in context (define them). These should complicated words and preferably Latin derivatives or words directly tied to the topic. Vocabulary and derivatives – Wednesday in class. Complete the oral practice activity on page 109 together using the chalk board. Leave this on the chalk board for me to check and to give you credit for. If you need more room, I have oak tag poster paper that you can use. Complete the translation sentences on page 109. You may work together, but you should each have your own sentences. Copy them to Socrative so that you can check them (and I can see how you did), and correct them. Take the Lesson XX test on Friday, November 15th. You will be asked questions about indefinite pronouns and the verb eō in the story (book and translation not allowed), vocabulary and derivatives, and information about the Oracle of Delphi. On Thursday, we can play a review game (possibly) if we have the work done. You will be given credit for working throughout the class period. You will lose participation points for not staying on task during class time. Class time ends for juniors and seniors no earlier than TWO MINUTES before class ends. You will lose participation points if I have to tell you to put your phone away and work. If you use an online translator, you will lose points – both participation points and translation points. You are not cheating when you use an online translator – you are wasting time and are not completing the given assignment. If your group finishes early, there are other enrichment activities that you may work on – duolingo.com, freerice.com, SAT practice, logic puzzles, etc. I will be happy to help you find something to do. Read Lesson IV story and write an English translation. Divide the translation into equal parts for the group. For your part, you must be prepared to help your group members with the vocabulary and grammar in your section. Write your sections here: I should see the markings on your copy of the story where you have identified clauses in the sentences, where you have identified the vocabulary words that you are unfamiliar with, and where you have identified cases of nouns and tenses of verbs that may not have been obvious. You will be given credit for your effort in understanding your section of the story. You will also be given credit for explaining it to other members of the group. You will be expected to seek out help from group members and from me when you do not understand something. Each group member should pick two sentences in their sections of the passage to parse using the guided “think aloud” worksheet. You will be responsible for explaining, in detail, the grammar of the sentences and why they are translated the way they are. These two sentences should be longer and more complicated sentences. I will take into consideration what you chose to work on when giving you points for this assignment. Did you just find an easy sentence, or did you find a sentence that was more complicated that you needed help in translating. I expect each of you to have a written translation for the entire story. As a group, write 5 comprehension questions about the story. They should not be similar to the ones in the book. As a group, create 10 grammar questions about the story. They must identify each of the cases (preferably coming from different declensions with some being singular and some being plural), different tenses and voices of verbs (focus on the perfect system in this lesson), and possible adjective agreement. Credit for this assignment will depend on the quality of your questions – did you ask challenging questions about grammar that is important to understand in order to understand how to translate the story. Complete the oral practice activity together using the white boards. Leave the verb conjugations on the white boards for me to check and to give you credit for. Complete the translation sentences. You may work together, but you should each have your own sentences. Copy them to Socrative so that you can check them (and I can see how you did), and correct them. Read “The Year One” and answer the questions. You must complete your own question/answer worksheet. You will be given credit for working throughout the class period. You will lose participation points for not staying on task during class time. Class time ends for juniors and seniors TWO MINUTES before class ends, and when the bell rings for freshmen and sophomores. You will lose participation points if I have to tell you to put your phone away and work. If you use an online translator, you will lose points, both participation points and translation points. You are not cheating when you use an online translator – you are wasting time and are not completing the given assignment. If your group finishes early, there are other enrichment activities that you may work on – duolingo.com, freerice.com, SAT practice, logic puzzles, etc. I will be happy to help you find something to do.