Thursday, March 17, 2011

Philosophy of Education

Running head: PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION

Philosophy of Education
Susan Stokley
University of Colorado Denver


My Literacy Development
My love for language analysis comes from my extensive reading background. I have been an avid reader for as long as I can remember. At first, I read for the love of the story, and as I matured, and became a more sophisticated reader, I read for style. I read all of the works by certain authors for their style these days, not necessarily for their content. My mother was an elementary school teacher for many years, so reading was always part of our home. As I grew, I read longer books, and classic literature. In the 1960’s, Young Adult Literature as we know it was very rare. I read the Nancy Drew Series, stories by Beverly Cleary, and finally, Judy Blume. Soon after, I moved to whatever books my parents had on their shelves. My mother preferred historical novels, and after a few, I was hooked. I still enjoy this genre. In high school, we read the canon, outside of class, we read Ayn Rand. It was not until college that I realized my love for language and the written word. World Literature—which at that time was from the Western Tradition—was the class that defined me as a reader. Multicultural literature was not included in this anthology, but it was the early 80’s. Now, multicultural literature is an integral part of any study, and lends another facet to the work. I will always be an avid reader. As an educator, I feel it necessary to read journals about my field of study, keep abreast of trends in Young Adult Literature, and continue to search for relevant, rigorous texts for classroom use.
Because I have always been a reader, I have never developed a writing style that is not academic and based on some sort of literary analysis. I do not journal, but I definitely see a place for this in the classroom. I write reflections and reports in my role as English Department Chair, and Co-curricular leader for 11th grade, but never seem to find time for any sort of creative writing. That said, I do enjoy my students creative writing. I feel it is necessary to allow them some creative outlets in all of their literature classes because personal responses and adaptations increase the relevance of the text for them. I am, however, because of my extensive college career, a good analyst. Through years of practice, I have also become very good at research writing and synthesis. I try to impart these skills to my students by giving them many opportunities to practice these skills, which is the way I learned. The difference for them from college is that I am there to support them along the way as they develop their own personal processes and styles.
I believe in providing access and equity to all students by teaching a rigorous, differentiated course of instruction.

Most educators today land on one side or the other in the debate over access and

equity in education, but Wagner and Benavente-McEnery, in their article, Education:

Misunderstood Purpose and Failed Solutions, posit that with a universally defined

purpose of education, this debate does not exist. This universal definition of the purpose

of education is traced back to the early civilizations and the writings of the Talmud, the

discourse of the Classical Greeks, Aristotle, and Maimonides. It consists of academic

discourse referred to as the Great Conversation, not to be confused with Mortimer

Adler’s Great Ideas series, but considered in concordance with the Great Books

Foundations standards of inquiry and discussion.

Using the minimal notion of the Great Conversation, the authors go on to use this concept as the basis for a unified purpose of education by suggesting that education is not just about content knowledge, but is also about knowing when and how to use this knowledge in the Great Conversation. They define the Great Conversation as the inherent capacity of human beings to ask the big questions concerning their environment and existence, “such as what is the world made of, how do things come into being, what is happiness” etc.
The idea is that all of humankind has these questions in common, and that only by engaging in a conversation about these larger truths can humans effectively cross cultural boundaries in search for understanding.
Unfortunately, according to the authors, two factions within the educational system differ greatly in their ideas on the purpose of education. Those with the power to legislate education require accountability based on hard data, in the form of assessment results based on test data. This type of assessment of skills and knowledge is limited to content specific material and does not test the student’s participation in the Great Conversation, and therefore the student’s ability to function cross-culturally in the global society as a contributing member. Programs like “No Child Left Behind,” have detracted from a unified purpose of education, and created an atmosphere of fear and competition instead. But, the authors continue, these federally mandated programs have been very good to curriculum creators and educational strategists. (Wagner, & Benavente-McEnery)
Ultimately, both Wagner and Benevente-McEnery conclude that the Great Conversation teaches both content and social consciousness, and invites participation by members of all races, classes, and genders. They caution that participants in this type of learning must always keep two questions in mind: “How do you know?” and “What do you mean by X?” These questions, according to John Dewey, are “moral imperatives” and promote intellectual integrity in which one must keep an open mind a show mutual respect for other participants.
The conclusions drawn are that both rigorous academic focus and curriculums that focus solely on self-expression are isolationist, and that participation in the Great Conversation enables all students to take a rightful productive place in the global society of today.
How, then do we maintain the rigor of the instruction, and accommodate the individuality of each student? The International Reading Association offers a comprehensive program of intervention that addresses these needs while educating teachers, parents, and administrators in the Response to Intervention process. In the February/March 2009 issue of Reading Today, one of the IRA’s publications, Response
to Intervention was considered one of the hottest topics in education today. Because of the close connection between the intentions of both the IRA and RTI to increase literacy, the IRA joined with the NCLD and other organizations interested in literacy to form the RTI Action Network. Further, the IRA has created six principles for the planning and implementation of the RTI program as follows: Instruction, Responsive teaching and differentiation, Assessment, Collaboration, Systemic and comprehensive approach to literacy, and Expertise. The International Reading Association supports the implementation of the RTI model for individual student success.
RTI and Me: As an Advanced Placement English Literature teacher, I am most interested in how to apply the IRA’s six principals in my own classroom to ensure student improvement in all literacy skills. As chair of the English department, I am interested in establishing a menu of common practices in our classrooms, which support the literacy development of our students while meeting their individual needs. My ideas and thoughts are outlined here.
Instruction: After five years in the classroom, I still find the most basic interventions to be the most effective. Strategies like reading aloud, questioning the text, and scaffolding instruction are still effective ways to reach most students. Some students already have these skills, but I find that modeling these strategies reminds the students to use them. Some students have never used these skills, and modeling is a way for them to emulate close reading and make them their own. For struggling students, these basic strategies help them make sense of the text in the most basic ways, and therefore enhance their comprehension skills.
Responsive teaching and differentiation: Differentiation does not mean giving students any choice they want to show their learning. Differentiation is adjusting your instruction to meet the needs of the individual students. That said, responsive teachers, of which I am one, approach content in a variety of ways and use different techniques and strategies to help students make sense of the material. This could mean using a variety of instructional strategies such as a cycle of individual work, then small group work, and finally whole class work to make meaning of any given text. I find literature circles to be particularly effective in this case. When students are in small groups and working individually in class, I can check for understanding and support each student according to their needs, while identifying students who may need more intensive interventions.
Assessment: The goal of the RTI model is to show student growth over the course of the school year, no matter how minute the improvement. By using a portfolio as a body of evidence collected over time, I can show student growth, and also have students reflect on their growth as they review their work over time; a very empowering, confidence
building practice. This alleviates creating a completely new system of assessments and presents more authentic artifact.
Collaboration: Communication is essential to the RTI model. There are three tiers of intervention for students, and each tier must collaborate to decide which level of intervention is needed to guarantee student growth and success. The first tier of intervention takes place in the classroom and is the responsibility of the teacher. She then recommends students who are not responding to her interventions to the second tier, which may recommend the student for Special Education interventions. If these are not successful, the third tier—the most intensive—takes over; staff members here include the school psychologist and the social worker.
Systemic and comprehensive approach to literacy: Perhaps the most important principle of the six, this piece requires a commitment from all levels of the educational environment of the student. Strategies here include establishing common vocabulary and expectations for implementation of the model., and a fidelity to implementation throughout the three tiers of intervention. As department chair, I am well situated to begin this task with the English staff.
I believe in using assessment as an instructional tool to improve standards based student performance.

In today’s data driven world of education, assessment matters. However, didn’t assessment matter before the advent of NCLB and school accountability reports? Of course it did, but in many different forms. I believe assessment always matters in education, because I think assessment data creates a permanent record of student growth and achievement. However, I also believe in assessing the whole student. One standardized, state-mandated assessment does not give an accurate picture of individual achievement. It is how we develop and evaluate a wide range of assessment data to inform our instruction that ensures student success. Common sense, right? Wrong. Too often, students are judged by their all-important CSAP scores: one test, one score, one label. Standardized test data must be combined with other forms of assessment to evaluate student performance accurately. We can assess students as much as we feel is needed, but what are we doing with the data we collect?
To be effective, I believe the assessment process must be circular. Quality standards-based assessments must be created and given, the data from all these assessments must be collected and evaluated, instructional decisions must be based on the data, and finally, new assessments must be created with student achievement in mind.
Assess process as well as product. I believe this to be an important piece of assessing the whole student. while process and product seem opposed to each other, I believe they are two parts of a whole in the assessment of student performance. Why have a process without a product? By combining these two methods of assessment, one gets a better picture of the student’s learning. The process shows assessment for learning, and teaches the students important skills and strategies to use both now and in the future. The product shows assessment of learning, and teaches students presentations and publication skills integral to both college and work force readiness. Seven Zemelman and Harvey Daniels, in their book, A Community of Writers, delineate the effectiveness of the old/traditional writing model and the new/process model. They suggest that the new model, in which the focus is on the process, is the most effective way to teach writing. This model supports collaboration, and the social aspects of writing which I consider essential to the development of quality writers. (Zemelman, & Daniels). I believe that there must be an end goal for students to work toward, and that this is the product.
Another important aspect of any writing project in my classes is the element of student choice. I always offer students several ways to show their learning relating to each unit, and I find that the students take more pride in both the process and the product when they create their own prompts. Combining process and product, and including an element of choice for my students has worked well for me in my classes, with the process model building toward a publication product which can be celebrated by students, teachers, parents, and administrators alike.
Use triangulation to corroborate data and make decisions. All students do learn differently and have different strengths and challenges. Therefore, in order to make decisions regarding student’s assessment data, that data needs to be both authentic and varied. Assessments should range from standardized test scores to in class assessments for learning. Each assessment should be analyzed and the data should be corroborated between the different types of assessments to gain a clear picture of student performance. Assessment data should also be collected throughout the child’s academic career in order to show growth over time as well.
Portfolios are an excellent way to collect and compile all types of data, depending on how one uses this system. Some portfolios only contain a student’s developing work, such as a writing portfolio, and some only show a student’s best work. I use portfolios to collect all kinds of data on my student’s growth. All of their work is kept in a file in the room: daily writing journals, daily in class assignments, diagnostic assessments, and embedded assessments. Some years I even add standardized test score data if it is available. This helps me create a picture of each student’s academic progress over the course of the school year, and becomes an excellent review tool during student and parent conferences. Students in my class interact regularly with the work in their portfolios. They reflect on their own processes, they choose work to revisit and revise, and they eventually choose their best work to include in their final portfolio assessment. For each of their choices, they must write a brief explanation of why they chose each piece and what it means to their own development. Portfolios can also be used in IEP meetings to show student progress in general education classes, and make recommendations as to the placement of students in next semester or year. I also make these portfolios available to administrators who are doing formal and informal evaluations of teaching and learning throughout the building. By triangulating data and using different types of assessments both for and of learning, proper decisions are made for the good of the student.
Portfolio assessments include selected response tests for reading comprehension and vocabulary, weekly reading assignments in the form of reading reports, and final essays. These varied assessments enable me and my students to assess strengths and challenges in their learning. With this data, I can offer choices of assessments that meet all students’ strengths and design instruction to support their weaknesses.
Our instructional decisions must be driven by the collection of quality assessment data.
What constitutes quality assessment data? According to Rick Stiggins, in his book, An Introduction to Student-Involved Assessment for Learning, there are three ways to record and collect data for analysis: the report card, the classroom portfolio, and the standardized test score. The report card is a record of data ranging from daily activities to major assessments and assignments. It serves the purpose of evaluating the student’s success with many types of assessments for learning. The portfolio, at least in my classes, contains the body of evidence that supports the repost card scores and data. These two records combine to become the main data used to make my instructional decisions in the classroom. The standardized test scores, in my experience, merely reflect the strengths and challenges I have already evaluated using the body of authentic student work in each portfolio.
Clarify and use standards in the assessment of reading, writing, speaking, listening, and doing. Currently, I am required to use two different sets of standards when planning effective lessons for my students. I use the Colorado Model Content Standards according to the requirements of the Colorado Department of Education, and I also use the CollegeBoard Standards for Student Success because our mandated curriculum is based on this set. There is a third set of English standards, created by the National Council of Teachers of English. Not only do we over-assess, but we over standardize our students. All of these sets overlap, and say the same things. In my analysis of all three, the Colorado standards best describe the essential learning of my students. Using these standards to build effective lessons is the final step in the effective use of assessments in my classroom, and brings us full circle to the creation of quality assessments. Writing and implementing standards-based assessments is another way to accurately assess and record whole student progress. As I move through the curriculum, I can track student proficiency on each standard for each lesson. This is a essential piece of the data picture, and proof that I am teaching the required skills, strategies, and knowledge for literacy development and for success on standardized tests. Thus, the assessment circle is complete.
I believe in using a variety of approaches to writing instruction to improve student expression and articulation.

In an age of standardized assessment, the opportunities for our students to write authentically become less and less prevalent. It is imperative that we make time in our busy schedules of mandated curricula and test prep to allow our students the time to put their thoughts on the page. I find that when students are given permission to write for their own edification, they are much more apt to engage in the work and make the connections so important in developing their critical thinking skills. Creating a collaborative community of writers not only allows the teacher to engage on a different level with students, it allows students to engage on a different level with each other. The collaborative writing classroom is so much more than the teaching and learning of writing, it is the teaching and learning of life skills essential to student success. That said, this is my “Guide to Teaching Writing in the 21st Century.”
Classroom Climate: The way a classroom looks and feels is an integral part of creating a community of writers. If students enter a cold, bare-walled environment, they have nothing but themselves from which to draw inspiration. I find that having colorful, thought provoking posters and quotes on the walls gives students something to think about as they brainstorm ideas.
Kirby, Kirby and Liner, in their book Inside Out, suggest the following rules for setting up a successful writing environment:
Rule 1: Make a place for student products. This does not mean a portfolio. No one can see student work when it is stuffed in a file on a shelf. Bright colorful bulletin boards which draw attention to the work being celebrated give students a sense of pride in their accomplishments and allow others to see how successful they are.
Rule 2: Arrange the room in way that is comfortable for you. This is a key element in a writer’s classroom. Students and teachers should be able to move about freely, and collaborate with each other easily. Climbing over a row of desks to get to your writing group or to work with a group of students is inconvenient and unsafe ( Kirby, Kirby, and Liner 25).
While these strategies create the physical space necessary for a successful writing classroom, one must not forget the psychological environment. Students absolutely need to know that they are in a safe, secure community where they can take risks, give, and receive support. Creating this community should begin on the first day of class with introductions and community building activities. One of my favorites is called “Who should survive?”
“Who should survive?” is a group activity in which the students are given a list of several people, all of whom have different qualities. They add their names and qualities to the bottom of the list and then must decide which 10 of the 25 people should survive the spaceship wreck. The students get to know each other through the qualities they list for themselves and then discuss the outcome. Each group must then present their rationale to the whole class. It is amazing to see the interactions and engagement on the first day of class. As an exit slip, they write about their process within the group. This is essential in that it establishes the fact that we will write, and write often. I use this piece as a diagnostic assessment to inform my instruction for the first few weeks.
As we continue to build the community, I tend to switch up the groupings according to writing strengths and weaknesses. Pairing and grouping mixed abilities creates mentors and leaders who nurture the less advanced writers in each group. It is amazing to watch a random group of students work together in more supportive ways as the community develops. As we progress, I find that students are kinder to each other, too.
Workshop/Collaboration: Zemelman and Daniels in A Community of Writers, suggest that “A writing workshop is a regularly scheduled, substantial chunk of class time when students work on self-chosen pieces of writing” (Zemelman, & Daniels). But Hashimoto, in his book thirteen weeks, suggests that a workshop involves student participation, involvement, and experimentation through small five to ten minute in-class experiments designed to keep students under a little pressure to think about what they’re doing, work quickly, make small commitments to small ideas, and risk making mistakes” (Hashimoto). While these two ideas seem antithetical, they both actually have a place in the teaching of writing. The extended workshop that Zemelman and Daniels advocate is an excellent routine for the writing classroom. Students should meet regularly to discuss their writing process, make constructive suggestions, and offer support to the other writers in the community. This period should be dedicated to student-centered teaching and learning in which the teacher acts as a facilitator only, teaching a five-minute focus lesson at the beginning, and allowing the work to unfold naturally thereafter.
Unfortunately, this scenario does not happen overnight. Effective workshops start small, as in the Hashimoto example as the community develops. It is only when students feel safe and supported that they begin to take the risks necessary to expand their writing experiences. Smaller, more focused workshop experiences help students develop the collaborative and supportive skills they need for the longer, less structured workshops to be successful and productive. My approach is to set a regular time each week for students to engage in the workshop environment. Block days are an ideal time for this type of activity. I set the task for each session with a mini-lesson, based on the pieces they will be working on. As the students work, I facilitate and keep the focus on the task. After a few weeks of this approach, I gradually increase the workshop time and decrease my involvement, but am always available for guidance and feedback. As the community develops, I begin to bring my own pieces into different groups and allow the students to workshop my writing as well.
Writing to Learn: Writing to learn is an integral part of the writing classroom. All writing to learn activities should be extensions of the content students are working on at the time. These pieces, according to Zemelman and Daniels are defined as “short, spontaneous, unedited, exploratory, personal writing that’s used not to affect an audience but to channel, crystallize, record, direct, or guide a person’s thinking” (Zemelman, & Daniels). This type of writing should happen every day in some form or another. Entrance slips, exit slips, personal responses to a specific reading, or writing about their own writing process are just a few of the ways to ensure that your students are writing early and often. These pieces can be collected in a writer’s notebook, and then used to spark ideas for longer endeavors in the future.
Writing to learn is a powerful tool when related to content. By exploring their responses and feelings about a particular topic or reading, students find relevance and personal connections to the content. This creates engagement, but the student’s way, not the teacher’s way. I have found that this type of exploration has generated some excellent longer pieces on the works we read in class because the students were able to pull their ideas from their own personal responses. Writing to learn also serves another purpose in the writing classroom. These pieces can be used to generate higher-level discussions of a given topic. When students generate their responses and then discuss them with their groups, I find level of discourse to be passionate and focused.
One of the ways to engage students in writing to learn activities is to have them carry a writer’s notebook at all times. They are to put everything they write in the notebook: grocery lists, jottings on the napkin from the coffee shop, reminders they write to themselves, etc. All of their writing to learn goes in to the book as well. At the end of the semester, they are able to see the continuity of their writing to learn, and hopefully their growth as writers for life.
Persuasive Writing: Our students live in a persuasive culture. It is imperative that they know and understand the art of persuasion and its uses in order to become informed citizens of the future. It is not enough for students to be able to identify persuasive tactics and respond appropriately; persuasive writing is also an essential skill. Hashimoto suggests that too often, students are unwilling to take a stand on an issue and risk a commitment to one side or the other. His goal is to teach students to “weigh and evaluate, argue for or against something worth arguing about, clarify or demystify something worth clarifying or demystifying” (Hashimoto124). Unfortunately, students today are afraid to be wrong. They have not been encouraged to take these risks in the course of their education in order to learn. Hashimoto’s objective is for students to be able to write a clear thesis statement. Here is an excellent way to introduce persuasion and argument into the classroom. First, introduce students to the art of persuasion. Ask them where they go for lunch. As they argue for one place over another, point out the fact that their arguments are for or against each place. They have taken their first stance. Now ask them why one place is better than another. They will give you very specific data to support their claims in the form of prices, types of food, quantity, and quality. They are amazed when told they have the beginnings of an argument. Our next steps, after lunch, are to read and analyze persuasive arguments in preparation for writing our own. At this point the writer’s workshop becomes a reader’s workshop for a few sessions, so we can grasp the basic elements of an argument. Then students begin to experiment with their own arguments, incorporating the rhetorical strategies they have identified as effective in pieces they have read.
Research: The information highway is fraught with hazards and wrong turns. Teaching students to navigate the road successfully is one of the essentials of the writing classroom. As more and more students are accused of plagiarism, teaching them how to accurately incorporate other’s work into their own to support their arguments is especially important. Burke quotes Carol Jago in his book Writing Reminders: “Technology has made research sexy. Students who would never delve into tomes of the Reader’s Guide to Periodical Literature now find manipulating a search engine a cool thing to do, not a bit nerdy.” (Burke). While this is undoubtedly true, the availability of such a vast amount of information on any given topic can be overwhelming to students and lead to a copy and paste mentality. Students who conduct research without a clear idea of their own to begin with must resist the temptation to “borrow” work from others and use it as their own. Therefore, it is imperative that we teach our students skills and strategies like paraphrase and summary, and how and when to use the proper citation systems available. More important than properly crediting others for their work, we must teach our students how to think for themselves first, and generate their own ideas and arguments. I start my students with Web Quests. These are structured, focused explorations in cyberspace in which each student on a team has a specific task. With Web Quests, students are able to learn how to navigate the Web and discern reliable and unreliable sources. They are also able to conduct research with a specific purpose in mind, and find the information quickly and accurately. Incorporating this information into their own writing properly is the final step of the process. I find that students who are taught how to use other’s work intentionally to support their own original ideas are much more confident in their ability to write a research paper later in the year.
Grammar/Usage: Amy Martinsen, in her article titled The Tower of Babel and the Teaching of Grammar: Writing Instruction for a New Century, states, “To break a grammar rule is to show the world you are coarse and uneducated” (Martinsen). I believe this to be imminently true, therefore I believe grammar instruction has a huge place in the writing classroom. While I, too, believe grammar should be taught in context, I also agree with Martinsen when she suggests that grammar can be taught using any sentence students read or write. In this way, students can correct their own grammar in context, and see how grammar is used correctly in more professional pieces. Good examples of grammar that is used correctly can and should be pointed out when students are workshopping their writing, and when students are reading models of the genres they are learning at any given time. These models serve as a starting point and as the type of grammar students should try to emulate in their own writing. I do believe that when there is a specific, recurring issue within the context of the student’s writing as a whole, that these issues should be addressed both within context and then practiced in some way. In the case of verb/tense agreement, I see this often and assign several practice activities including writing sentences and basic worksheets to drive the point home. Reverting to this traditional course of instruction seems to help with specific issues, but I do not recommend it for much more that that. In any case, studying, practicing, and incorporating good grammar into his or her own work improves student’s writing dramatically.
Revising and Editing: Revision and Editing are the two most difficult tasks in the writing process to implement successfully. Peer editing is the proscribed technique, but I find that only a few of my students are advanced enough to really offer any significant feedback on their peer’s work. I believe that by shifting the focus in the classroom toward a community of writers, this climate would change for the better. The more comfortable students are with reading and commenting on each other’s work, the more
effective their peer editing exercises become. Shelley Smeade in her article, Interior Design: Revision as Focus, offers some excellent, logical techniques for introducing students to the basics of peer editing. Smeade outlines two steps to the early revision process. The first is to have the students count the words in each of their sentences. In so doing, they become aware of the lack of variation in their sentence structures. At this point, sentence combining and syntax work can begin. The second strategy is for the students to work on incorporating imagery into their writing by naming their nouns more specifically (Smeade). The benefits of this are twofold. First, the students see their own work come alive and become more interesting, but they also begin to see the benefits of reworking their own writing. This second activity works well in a workshop setting as the students try to outdo one another with more and more fantastic nouns. They truly catch what Smeade calls “the vision of revision” (Smeade). Our goal as instructors is to make revision and editing meaningful. By this, I mean that we must treat this process as one of the most important steps to the writing process, possibly by weighting our grade for the final product more heavily on this step than the final production draft. I really believe that Smeade’s success with these revision techniques stems from her ability to teach revision in a concrete way that shows students immediate results. Students get positive results they can then work with to improve their writing. Taking Smeade’s steps further, we can help our students reach their highest potential as writers.
Assignments: In an effective writing classroom, students should write often and intentionally. Our mantra should be to write as if we mean it. Teachers should share in the writing process and workshop situations with their students. In this way, students understand that they are not alone in their struggles to write meaningfully and well. They see that writing is a process that produces a product, and that the process does not have to be painful if we support each other as a community.
Zemelman and Daniels offer several topics for consideration when creating effective writing assignments in A Community of Writers. The first piece they consider is the students. Where are they in their learning? How much leeway can you give them in the decision making process? Are they able to and will they make appropriate and challenging choices if given options? Not considering these issues can derail an assignment faster than a penny on a railroad track. If the assignment is beyond the reach of the student’s ability, frustration will set in and students will disengage. The teacher will spend most of the class time devoted to workshopping the writing teaching students the skills and strategies they need to perform the task. Assignments should be student-friendly, but challenging.
The second thing to consider, according to the authors, is the direction of the writing. This includes addressing topic, purpose, audience and mode. These four elements of the assignment shape the final product and can be decided upon by the students. By allowing them the latitude to choose their topic and purpose, you are guiding them to consider audience and mode of delivery. By turning this aspect over to students, the teacher gives them the autonomy to write on a topic that is personal and relevant, which they have drawn from their writer’s notebook and writing to learn activities. Another benefit to allowing students to choose is that they must think about their writing on a much deeper level in regards to the message they want to convey.
The classroom process, the third consideration from Zemelman and Daniels, is up to the teacher. One must consider structure of the class, starting the process, data mining, support during process, revision, publishing, and finally evaluation. All of these aspects need to be orchestrated by the teacher for the assignment to be successful. Time is always the enemy when coordinating the computer lab and devoting class time to workshop and collaboration, but with forethought and creativity, one can design and implement a successful writing project. (Zemelman, & Daniels).
Students in my writing classroom write to learn every day. They also extend their writing into their private lives through the use of their writer’s notebooks as mentioned earlier. These assignments are the seeds of the products they will create as they grow as writers and thinkers throughout the year. Major papers and literary responses are assigned throughout the year, usually at the end of units of study, but shorter essays and personal responses are required regularly. One research paper is required per semester according to department guidelines, and I find that this is a good number. Too much research takes away from in-class writing and content time.
Evaluation and Responses: Kirby, Kirby and Liner state that “Grading students and evaluating their progress are the toughest jobs in teaching…we find the whole process tiresome, frustrating…” (Kirby, Kirby, & Liner). I have to say that I totally, absolutely agree. They offer a few suggestions to alleviate the pain. One of these is to incorporate more self-evaluation into the program. In this way, students are grading their own and each other’s work. I find that this works only for objective, fact-based activities, but it does lighten the load somewhat. Hashimoto’s suggestion in thirteen weeks is a bit more specific. He suggests that we give students specific criteria by using a rubric. (Hashimoto) I find these to be very beneficial both as checklists for the elements of an assignment, and as a scoring tool for the final product. Burke, in Writing Reminders, makes two very significant suggestions for the evaluation process: check for understanding and growth, and provide timely and useful feedback to student writers (Burke). These seem to be common sense strategies, but sometimes, timely feedback is difficult what with the extensive responsibilities today’s teachers are required to shoulder. I find that if I cannot grade students work in a timely manner, it is essential that I at least talk to them about their progress and process. The three-minute conference works well in this situation. Conferences also serve another intrinsic purpose in a community of writers; they allow students and teachers to engage in a two-sided conversation about the writing. Verbal feedback allows for more latitude and guidance and can take place in a shorter amount of time than written feedback. A few quick notes as you read each paper can turn into a five-minute conversation. Having students come to the conference with some pre-written concerns and goals can also be effective and keep the conference focused on the work.
As far as the written feedback I give students in my classes, I try to say at least one positive thing, and then list up to three things that could use improvement. I have stopped correcting every little punctuation and spelling mistake, but I do still correct
MLA citations and I now focus mostly on the bigger grammatical issues: fluency, ideas, structure and organization, and style. I remind students that spelling, grammar and usage still matter, but they can fix that on their own, as I stress their repeated mistakes by teaching grammar in context in class. Sometimes, I handle students individually as far as comments go. If I feel a student is lacking in confidence, I will add comments that are more positive. If papers come in close to the AP test, I will focus on structure and specificity, which are skills they need for the test. No matter what, I feel that feedback is an integral part of the communication between teachers and students.
Here are just a few final thoughts on teaching writing in general. Teachers must remember that they cannot teach all things to all students. It is important to choose those few skills and strategies you would like your students to master and tailor your instruction accordingly. If you cover too much too broadly, the mastery will be shallow as well. Your task will be to decide what it is you need your students to know and be able to do at whatever grade level you are teaching. Just remember, the community aspect of the writing classroom is the most important idea to take away from this guide. It is as a community of writers that your students will take risks, challenge themselves and each other, and achieve true growth as writers, and people.
I believe in teacher leadership to implement positive change within the educational system.
In today’s demanding educational environment, there is a huge demand for
teacher leaders. These teachers assume roles in their schools that go beyond the
classroom, and they effect change within their buildings through collaboration and
common goals. K Devnaey, in The Lead Teacher: Ways to Begin, an article for the
Carnegies Foundation on Education, published in 1987, defined several key areas where
teacher leaders can make a difference.
Continuing To Teach and Improve One's Own Teaching: Strong content knowledge
is essential for effective teaching. This knowledge comes through excellence in one’s
own academics, and a strong program of continuing education both in content and
professional skill. New teaching methods for all branches of literacy are instructed every
year, and it is the educator’s mission to stay abreast of these new and innovative ways to
affect student engagement. If one does not know that a film is a text, how can one teach
the lesson prescribed? If one has not learned the importance of giving students authentic
writing experiences for grammar development, how will students improve and
understand?
Organizing and Leading Peer Reviews of School Practice: This sounds great in
practice, but in reality committee work is really not as productive as it could be. We have
committees to review our tardy policy, school leadership, marketing and promotion,
eligibility, the list goes on. Most of this work starts in August and stalls somewhere
around Halloween due to lack of time and stamina to see things through to their finish..
For example, our school leadership committee is having us read a book on instructional
Rounds—our group is on chapter three and it is April.
Providing Curriculum Development Knowledge: As with any curriculum, the teacher
has to be an active participant in implementation. With the onset of mandated,
standardized curriculum, and the looming possibility of a national curriculum sometime
in the future, we cannot lose this skill. It is never enough to just teach page after page of
a generic curriculum, by using data and authentic student work, teacher leaders
automatically make adjustments to meet their student’s needs. A collaborative
department is essential here as well. Teachers need to share their ideas and adjustments
with other content teachers to ensure maximum student learning.
Participating in School-Level Decision Making: This can be a tricky position for a
teacher leader. Our school collaborative committee makes decisions based on the budget,
and these days this means deciding which departments can be reduced to save money. I
have seen these teacher leaders snubbed by members of reduced departments. Personnel
committee is another tricky position here. Maintaining and elevating the level of
expertise in your building is crucial to improving scores and reputation of the school.
Leading In-Service Education and Assisting Other Teachers: This essential is where
the real work begins. Collaborating with other experts in the field, participation in
mentoring programs for both teacher candidates and new teachers is really imperative for
our success as a profession. To improve and expand on the general public’s opinion of
teacing as a profession, we must ensure that only the best candidates become teachers.
This requires active participation in mentoring programs, and districts. It is our job to
make sure that only teachers who have the drive, motivation, stamina, content knowledge
and true dedication to educating students enter the classroom.
Conclusion
The field of education is both vast and deep. Here I have outlined a few of the areas I
truly believe make a great teacher. Addressing these issues, and incorporating them into
my daily practice takes time and intention, however, without a system of core beliefs, it is
easy for the educator to become bogged down in too many areas. By choosing these few
beliefs on which to focus, I can make the greatest impact in my school, for my students,
and in my field of study. I hope that by being an agent of change in these areas, I can
make my school a better place for both teaching and learning.

Bibliography
_____. (1996). International reading association mission statement. International
Reading Association. http://www.reading.org/General/AboutIRA/Governance/Mission.aspx

_____. (2002). A New Era: Revitalizing Special Education for Children and their
Families. US Department of Education. http://www.ed.gov/inits/commissionsboards/whspecialeducation/index.html
Burke, Jim. (2003). Writing reminders. Portsmouth, Massachusetts: Heinemann.
Devaney, K. (1987). The lead teacher: Ways to begin. New York: Carnegie Forum on Education and the Economy.
Hashimoto, Irvin Y. (1991). Thirteen weeks: a guide to teaching college writing. Portsmouth, Massachusetts: Boynton/Cook.
Kirby, Dan, Dawn Latta Kirby, and Tom Liner. (2004). Inside out: strategies for teaching writing. 3rd ed. Portsmouth, Massachusetts: Heinemann.
Martinsen, Amy. (2000). The Tower of Babel and the Teaching of Grammar: Writing Instruction for a New Century. English Journal.
Shapiro, Edward. Tiered Instruction/Intervention. RTI Network.
http://www.rtinetwork.org/Essential/TieredInstruction

Smede, Shelley D. (2000). Interior Design: Revision as Focus. English Journal.

Stiggins, Rick. (2008). An introduction to student-involved assessment FOR learning.
Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Education.

Wagner P.A. & Benavente-McEnery L. (2006, Feb). Education: Misunderstood Purpose
and Failed Solutions. Current Issues in Education [On-line], 9(2).Available: http://cie.ed.asu.edu/volume9/number2/

Zemelman, Steven, and Harvey Daniels. (1988). A community of writers. Portsmouth, Massachusetts: Heinemann,

Candide Unit

Voltaire’s Candide: The Presentation of Evil in Self, Society, and the World

Susan E. Stokley

Theory and Methods of Teaching Secondary English

University of Colorado-Denver

Table of Contents

Context…………………………………………………………………………………3

Introduction, Overview and Rationale…………………………………………………5

Explanation and Definition of Key Terms……………………………………………..9

Assessment and Grading Plan………………………………………………………...10

Sequence and Scope…………………………………………………………………..14

Lesson Plan 1…………………………………………………………………15

Lesson Plan 2…………………………………………………………………23

Lesson Pan 3………………………………………………………………….25

Lesson Plan 4…………………………………………………………………28

Lesson Plan 5…………………………………………………………………31

Lesson Plan 6…………………………………………………………………35

Routines and Structures………………………………………………………………37

Differentiated Instruction…………………………………………………………….38

Bibliography………………………………………………………………………….40

Context

Thomas Jefferson High School has a current enrollment of approximately 1150 students. The demographic distribution of students is as follows: White—46%, Black—31%, Hispanic—19%, Asian/Pacific—3%, American Indian—1%. We have few second language learners at Thomas Jefferson, because South High School is the ELL magnet for the district. We do serve a large population of Special Education students at Thomas Jefferson, because we are the district’s Severe and Profound Special Education magnet, and so we have a good reputation for services to this community. We also feature a Computer Magnet Program, funded through the CET department of the district. Both of these internal programs draw students from across the district. Our two main feeder schools are Slavens K-8, and Hamilton Middle School, though we do get some students from Merrill and Place Middle Schools as well. Some of our students live out in Green Valley by the airport, and choose Thomas Jefferson High School over Montebello. Thomas Jefferson is located at I-25and Hampden Boulevard in southeast Denver, in a mixed business and residential neighborhood. While this setting is typical of a suburban neighborhood, Thomas Jefferson is considered an urban school, and has an urban population. Only 34% of the students at Thomas Jefferson qualify for free or reduced lunch, which puts Thomas Jefferson in the middle socio-economic range for high schools in Denver Public Schools.
Test scores at Thomas Jefferson High School have experienced a steady decline in math and 9th grade reading and writing, but increased in 10th grade reading and writing according to the 2009 CSAP scores for the school. The graduation rate for Thomas Jefferson High School is 95%, with 92% of graduates going on to higher education. While these statistics show our strengths and challenges, they also show that we are trending upwards and may soon be off of accredited—on watch status.
Our school improvement plan targets all of these issues and a few more. One of the issues we face is community involvement and relations. With that in mind, a team of administrators and teachers has formed a community outreach committee. One of the goals of this committee is to implement positive community interaction. Recently, students have visited businesses and community centers to assist with promotions, health fairs, and other community events. Another issue is parent involvement in the school community. While Thomas Jefferson has a strong parent group that supports the athletic programs, we do not have parent volunteers and support for the academic aspect of the school. This is partly because so many of our students live in Green Valley and so many of our parents work. The leadership committee has begun an outreach program to these parents in hopes of involving them in their children’s education. In regards to improving test scores, much internal work is being done. The establishment of common planning, and co-curricular groups has been most effective, but we have yet to see positive results from the micro-management of the district home office. For the past three years, Thomas Jefferson High School has participated in an educational grant from the Collegeboard, which requires us to use a standardized curriculum. Ironically, it is during these years that our scores have been their lowest. It is only by editing the curriculum to address the needs of our students, that we have seen a rise in these scores in the English department. Next year, while grades 9 and 10 of this curriculum will be mandated district wide, we will have the opportunity to develop our upper level courses to meet the needs of students in regards to college and workforce readiness.
Introduction, Overview, and Rationale
This unit will be taught in 12th grade Advanced Placement literature. This is the 5th year I have taught this class at Thomas Jefferson High School, but I have never taught this novel. I will teach this unit in the spring of 2010, which is why I chose to write the curriculum for this class. I teach three sections of AP literature, averaging 25 students in each section. As an advocate for access and equity in education, I have an open enrollment policy for this class, and the population has doubled since I arrived in 2005. Another added benefit to open enrollment is that the demographics of my classes match that of the school. One of the district’s goals is to increase enrollment n Advanced Placement classes, and increase AP scores by 3.5% next year. I am looking at an increase in passing scores from 43% to 46.5%, but I think I will exceed this increase by several percentage points by differentiating my instruction to meet the needs of my specific students.
Throughout the course of this unit, students will have the opportunity to apply many different learning strategies to develop the skills they need to become close readers and literary analysts. Some of the work will be done in small groups, some individually, and some as a whole class. This way, all students will be able to participate in ways that are comfortable and engaging for them. Students will transition from a traditional classroom setting with all desks facing the front of the room for ease in viewing multi-media and whole class presentations, to small groups, moving their desks accordingly, to fishbowl discussions held throughout the unit. We will access both the school library and the computer lab for the research portions of the unit, so we will also transition throughout the school.
The overall focus of the unit is to discern how evil is presented in self, society, and the world. The central text is Candide, by Voltaire. The protagonist of the novel is Candide, who believes that this is the best of all possible worlds. Through a series of very unfortunate events, he encounters several examples of the exact opposite, until he finally finds his own best of all possible worlds. As Candide moves through the world, so will my students. They will have the opportunity to decide for themselves what is evil, and how to approach situations in their own lives when evil presents itself in order to make their own decisions. Together, we will explore the philosophy of the Enlightenment, Voltaire’s satirical message, and the social, political, and personal aspects of evil in the novel, and in life.
Instructional Resources

The primary text for this unit is the novel Candide. Written by Voltaire, who was an Enlightenment philosopher, this novel is a parody of the classic adventure/romance novel that was popular at the time, and a scathing satire of the Optimist philosophy of Leibniz that so many people subscribed to during the Enlightenment. The characters in the novel are allegorical, and represent various political, religious, and philosophic figures from that era. Voltaire’s message is that evil exists in many forms, some more insidious and less obvious than others.
Secondary texts for this unit include a poem by William Blake, addressing Voltaire’s mockery of religion, an anti-war poem by Voltaire, several non-fiction texts including critical analysis of the novel, a biography of the author, historical information, and primary texts in the form of a letter from Voltaire and an excerpt from his Dictionary of Philosophy. Students will also use the school library and the computer lab to access various sources both on and off line for the research portion of the unit.
The ability to synthesize several sources to arrive at a statement of author’s purpose is a key component college readiness. Milner & Milner address the challenges of Historical Synthesis in Bridging English as one effective way to enable student writing (Milner & Milner, 2008). Students will have an opportunity to use the sources presented in class and sources they find on their own to create an analysis of the effectiveness of Candide as a vehicle for Voltaire’s message and the philosophies of the Enlightenment. They will also have the opportunity to discuss several of the ideas presented in the book in relation to their own experience in a formal Socratic discussion. In regards to non-print media, students will create a visual representation of Voltaire’s philosophy, and a multimedia travelogue for one of the places Candide travels to in the novel.

Unit Title: Voltaire’s Candide: The Presentation of Evil in Self, Society, and the World


Essential Question: How does evil present itself in the self, society, and the world?

Questions to Consider: (for use in various activities throughout the novel study)
• Do you think Voltaire believed there is only evil in the world or are there redeeming qualities to the characters in Candide?
• Why do many of the characters, including Miss Cunegonde and Pangloss, presumably die and then reappear? Is there significance to their being "brought back to life"? Why is the Anabaptist James the only major character who dies and does not reappear? (Teachervision)
• Voltaire satirized people of every walk of life, every race, religion and occupation. How do the 18th century "victims" of his satirical wit compare to contemporary examples? Are the hypocrisies and social ills that Voltaire identifies similar to or different from ones society faces today?
• Candide goes on a truly epic journey through the course of the novel.
- Do people differ from one another that much over the course of his travels? How? (Bookrags)



Enduring Understandings:

• Students will understand that there are many types of evil in the world, some more insidious and less obvious tan others.
• Students will know how to synthesize sources to create a general analysis of any topic.
• Students will know how to read actively and write analytically.

Skills: (from the Colorado Model Content Standards)

STANDARD 1: Students read and understand a variety of materials. In order to meet this standard, students will
• make connections between their reading and what they already know, and identify what they need to know about a topic before reading about it;
• adjust reading strategies for different purposes such as reading carefully, idea by idea; skimming and scanning; fitting materials into an organizational pattern, such as reading a novel chronologically; finding information to support particular ideas; and finding the sequence of steps in a technical publication.
STANDARD 2: Students write and speak for a variety of purposes and audiences. In order to meet this standard, students will support an opinion using various forms of persuasion (factual or emotional) in speaking and writing.
• support an opinion using various forms of persuasion (factual or emotional) in speaking and writing;
• experiment with stylistic elements such as voice, tone, and style.
STANDARD 3: Students write and speak using conventional grammar, usage, sentence structure, punctuation, capitalization, and spelling. In order to meet this standard, students will
• use pronoun reference correctly in writing
• use phrases and clauses for purposes of modification and parallel structure in writing and speaking;
• use internal capitalization and punctuation of secondary quotations in writing;
• use manuscript forms specified in various style manuals for writing (for example, indenting for extended quotations, precise placement and form of page numbers, appropriate line spacing); and refining spelling and grammatical skills
STANDARD 4:Students apply thinking skills to their reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing. In order to meet this standard, students will
• make predictions, analyze, draw conclusions, and discriminate between fact and opinion in writing, reading, speaking, listening, and viewing;
• identify the purpose, perspective, and historical and cultural influences of a speaker, author, or director.
• recognize an author's point of view, purpose, and historical and cultural context;
• use reading, writing, listening, articulate speaking, and viewing to solve problems;
• know what constitutes literary quality based on elements such as the author's point of view, the author's selection of significant details, theme development, and the author's reflection of events and ideas of his or her lifetime; and
• critique the content of written work and oral presentations.
• recognize an author's point of view, purpose, and historical and cultural context;
• know what constitutes literary quality based on elements such as the author's point of view, the author's selection of significant details, theme development, and the author's reflection of events and ideas of his or her lifetime.
STANDARD 5: Students read to locate, select, and make use of relevant information from a variety of media, reference, and technological sources. In order to meet this standard, students will
• evaluating information in light of what they know and their specific needs;
• using available technology to access information, conduct research, and produce a carefully documented product.
STANDARD 6:Students read and recognize literature as a record of human experience. In order to meet this standard, students will
• read literature to investigate common issues and interests;
• read literature to understand places, people, events, and vocabulary, both familiar and unfamiliar.
• read, respond to, and discuss novels, poetry, short stories, non-fiction, content-area and technical material, plays, essays, and speeches;
• use literary terminology accurately, such as theme, mood, diction, idiom, perspective, style, and point of view.
• understand the common themes in the literature of the world.
• develop and support a thesis about the craft and significance of a classic work of literature.
• understand the common themes in the literature of the world.
(Colorado Department of Education)

Explanation and Definition of Key Terms

Irony - a perception of inconsistency, sometimes humorous, in which the significance and understanding of a statement or event is changed by its context.
Example: The firehouse burned down.

Dramatic Irony - the audience or reader knows more about a character’s situation
than the character does and knows that the character’s understanding is incorrect.
Example: In Medea, Creon asks, “What atrocities could she commit in one day?”
The reader, however, knows Medea will destroy her family and Creon’s by day’s end.

Structural Irony – the use of a naïve hero, whose incorrect perceptions differ from
the reader’s correct ones.
Example: Huck Finn.

Verbal Irony - a discrepancy between what is said and what is really meant;
sarcasm.
Example: A large man whose nickname is “Tiny.”

Satire - using humor to expose something or someone to ridicule.
Examples: Animal Farm; Gulliver’s Travels.

Philosophical Optimism — This is a school of philosophy that believes that everything that happens in the world has some point and, in the end, everything happens for the best.
For example, in the event of a disaster, the “good end” of what seems to be a tragedy
may not be apparent at the moment, but there is good that will come out of the
disaster. Voltaire opposes this point-of-view because he thinks it makes people
complacent and discourages them from working to make things better in the world.

The Problem of Evil — The presence of evil in this world is something philosophers,
theologians, and average people have long grappled with. Philosophers pose this
question: “If God is all good and all knowing, how can He allow such terrible, evil
things to happen in a world that He has created?”

Divine Providence — Allied with the belief in Philosophical Optimism was a religious notion that there is a divine will that guides our fate; that is, everything that happens to us is God’s will. Related to the question of Divine Providence is the question of Free Will. If our lives are ordained by God, are we responsible for choosing good or evil in our lives?
Do we have any control over our lives, or are we simply pawns of fate?

Cause and Effect — This idea is used by philosophers to prove the existence of God. They argue that for every effect there must have been a cause; in tracing this back we
eventually reach the “uncaused cause”: God.

Sufficient Reason — In Leibnitz’s philosophy, the sufficient reason is that which justifies the existence of things. Like the uncaused cause, the ultimate sufficient reason is God (Perfection Learning).

Assessment and Grading Plan
Assessments for this unit will be both formative and summative. Formative assessments will include exit slips, daily class work, discussions, and reading logs. These assessments will be used to inform instruction throughout e course of the unit and to show student understanding of the content, skills, and strategies they encounter and apply. Summative assessments will take place at the end of the unit in the form of the visual representation of Voltaire’s philosophy, the multi-media travelogue, and the in class essays students will write in practice for the essay portion of the AP test in May.
Formative Assessments
• Admit/Exit Slips—these will be reflections on daily discussions an class work.
• Observations of discussions
• Weekly Reading Log—see lesson 2
• Critique of Non-Fiction Text discussion—see lesson 3
• Reading Notes—see lesson 3
• TP-CASTT graphic organizer—see lesson 5
Summative Assessments
• In-class timed essay—see lesson 4
• Analytical essay—see lesson 5
• Visual representation of character—see lesson 6
--Relevance of quotes to character’s philosophy
• Multimedia travelogue—presentations to follow completion of the unit

Grading plan

Grading for formative assessments will be point based and vary according to difficulty and time spent. Entrance/Exit slips will receive 5 points. Observations of discussions will be rubric based. Weekly reading logs will be awarded 30 points each based on thoughtfulness and completion of all sections. Reading notes will be assessed at 30 points as will the TP-CASTT graphic organizer.
Grading for summative assessments will be point based and vary according to difficulty and time spent. The in-class timed essay will be assessed according to the Advanced Placement Rubric created by the Collegeboard with a conversion point scale of 0-100 points. The analytical essay, based on the TP-CASTT graphic organizer will be assessed at 40 points. The visual representation of a character will be assessed with a rubric totaling 75 points, and the multimedia travelogue, which will be completed in groups of four, will be assessed at 100 points per student.
Rubrics for Assessments

Observation of Discussions

ATTRIBUTE 10 15 20
LISTENING Recognizes and responds to others speaking. Uses and practices listening processes regularly. Habitually uses listening processes.
NON-VERBAL COMMUNICATION Eye contact, gestures, posture, facial expression, voice. Comprehends some information from non-verbal cues. Draws accurate conclusions from body language and facial expressions. Able to recognize and use subtle non-verbal communication cues.
CO-OPERATION Sometimes shows ability to wait to give appropriate verbal / non-verbal responses. Usually shows ability to wait to give appropriate verbal / non-verbal responses. Habitually shows ability to wait with openness and awareness to give appropriate verbal / non-verbal responses.
PARTICIPATION Tells thoughts, feelings, ideas so others understand. Rarely talks during the discussion or talk is off the subject. Offers few ideas to the discussion. Shares freely and explains with details. Makes connections to what others say. Talk inspires others. Supports and leads others in discussion.

(Discussion rubric, 2009)

Advanced Placement Essay Rubric

# Description %
9-8 Superior papers are specific in their references, cogent in their definitions, and free of plot summary that is not relevant to the question. These essays need not be without flaws, but they demonstrate the writer's ability to discuss a literary work with insight and understanding and to control a wide range of the elements of effective composition. 100-92
7-6 These papers are less thorough, less perceptive or less specific than 9-8 papers. These essays are well-written but with less maturity and control than the top papers. They demonstrate the writer's ability to analyze a literary work, but they reveal a more limited understanding than do the papers in the 9-8 range. Generally, 6 essays present a less sophisticated analysis and less consistent command of the elements of effective writing than essays scored 7. 91-81
5 Superficiality characterizes these 5 essays. Discussion of meaning may be pedestrian, mechanical, or inadequately related to the chosen details. Typically, these essays reveal simplistic thinking and/or immature writing. They usually demonstrate inconsistent control over the elements of composition and are not as well conceived, organized, or developed as the upper-half papers. On the other hand, the writing is sufficient to convey the writer's ideas. 80-75
4-3 Discussion is likely to be unpersuasive, perfunctory, underdeveloped or misguided. The meaning they deduce may be inaccurate or insubstantial and not clearly related to the question. Part of the question may be omitted altogether. The writing may convey the writer's ideas, but it reveals weak control over such elements as diction, organization, syntax or grammar. Typically, these essays contain significant misinterpretations of the question or the work they discuss; they may also contain little, if any, supporting evidence, and practice paraphrase and plot summary at the expense of analysis. 74-60
2-1 These essays compound the weakness of essays in the 4-3 range and are frequently unacceptably brief. They are poorly written on several counts, including many distracting errors in grammar and mechanics. Although the writer may have made some effort to answer the question, the views presented have little clarity or coherence. 59-25
0 These essays respond with no more than a reference to the task, contain completely off-topic responses, or are blank. 24-0

(AP essay rubric, 2009)

Visual Representation of a Character

CATEGORY 25 20 15 0
Graphics - Originality Several of the graphics used on the poster reflect a exceptional degree of student creativity in their creation and/or display. One or two of the graphics used on the poster reflect student creativity in their creation and/or display. The graphics are made by the student, but are based on the designs or ideas of others. No graphics made by the student are included.
Content - Accuracy At least 10 quotes related to the charcter's beliefs are displayed on the poster. At least 7-9 quotes related to the charcter's beliefs are displayed on the poster. At least 5-7 quotes related to the charcter's beliefs are displayed on the poster. No quotes related to the charcter's beliefs are displayed on the poster.
Graphics - Relevance All graphics are related to the topic and make it easier to understand. All borrowed graphics have a source citation. All graphics are related to the topic and most make it easier to understand. All borrowed graphics have a source citation. All graphics relate to the topic. Most borrowed graphics have a source citation. Graphics do not relate to the topic OR several borrowed graphics do not have a source citation.


Multimedia Travelogue

CATEGORY 70 60 50 40
Presentation Well-rehearsed with smooth delivery that holds audience attention. Rehearsed with fairly smooth delivery that holds audience attention most of the time. Delivery not smooth, but able to maintain interest of the audience most of the time. Delivery not smooth and audience attention often lost.
Sources Source information collected for all graphics, facts and quotes. All documented in desired format. Source information collected for all graphics, facts and quotes. Most documented in desired format. Source information collected for graphics, facts and quotes, but not documented in desired format. Very little or no source information was collected.
Organization Content is well organized using headings or bulleted lists to group related material. Uses headings or bulleted lists to organize, but the overall organization of topics appears flawed. Content is logically organized for the most part. There was no clear or logical organizational structure, just lots of facts.
Oral Presentation Interesting, well-rehearsed with smooth delivery that holds audience attention. Relatively interesting, rehearsed with a fairly smooth delivery that usually holds audience attention. Delivery not smooth, but able to hold audience attention most of the time. Delivery not smooth and audience attention lost.
Originality Product shows a large amount of original thought. Ideas are creative and inventive. Product shows some original thought. Work shows new ideas and insights. Uses other people's ideas (giving them credit), but there is little evidence of original thinking. Uses other people's ideas, but does not give them credit.
Workload The workload is divided and shared equally by all team members. The workload is divided and shared fairly by all team members, though workloads may vary from person to person. The workload was divided, but one person in the group is viewed as not doing his/her fair share of the work. The workload was not divided OR several people in the group are viewed as not doing their fair share of the work.


Scope and Sequence

Four Week Unit—Allowing for Presentations—Modified Block Schedule—One 90 minute block, Three 50 minute periods.

All readings are to be completed on the due date for discussion and review the next day!

FEBRUARY 2010
MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY
8 Weekly Vocab Test
Hand out Unit Packet and review.
Hand out Candide
Read Ch 1 with class
Ch 1-2 9 Opening Lesson 1
Part 1—readings 1&2



Ch 3-4



10 Opening Lesson 1 Part 2—readings 3&4


Ch 5-6
11 Opening Lesson 2
Part 2—readings 3&4



Ch 7-8 12 Weekly Reading Log #1—Lesson 2
Weekly discussion


Ch 9-10
15Weekly Vocab Test
Lesson 3—Critique of Non-fiction
Cornell Notes
Guiding Questions
Ch 11-12 16
Lesson 3—Critique of Non-fiction
Cornell Notes
Guiding Questions
Ch 13-14 17 Lesson 4—In Class Timed Writing
Review Planning/Revision Strategies
Ch 15-16 18 Lesson 4—In Class Timed Writing
Review Planning/Revision Strategies
Ch 17-18 19 Weekly Reading Log #2—Lesson 2
Weekly discussion


Ch 19-20
22Weekly Vocab Test
Lesson 5—Read Poem and complete Graphic Organizer
Model Analytical Essay
Ch 21-22 23 Review criteria for projects/presentation
Allow time for teams to work together today in lab and libary
Ch 23-24 24 Analytical Essays on Poems Due—Lesson 5


Ch 25-26 25 Analytical Essays on Poems Due—Lesson 5


Ch 27-28 26 Weekly Reading Log #3—Lesson 2
Weekly discussion


Ch 29-30
1 March 2010
Final Objective Assessment of Candide 2 Character Visuals 3Multimedia Presentations 4 Multimedia Presentations 5 Character Visuals


Opening Lesson

Novel: Candide Grade Level: 12th grade

Essential Question: How does evil present itself in the self, society, and the world?

Goal/Purpose: In this first lesson, students will be able to understand the historical, social, and personal context of the novel.

Standards: STANDARD 1: Students read and understand a variety of materials. In order to meet this standard, students will
• make connections between their reading and what they already know, and identify what they need to know about a topic before reading about it;
• adjust reading strategies for different purposes such as reading carefully, idea by idea; skimming and scanning; fitting materials into an organizational pattern, such as reading a novel chronologically; finding information to support particular ideas; and finding the sequence of steps in a technical publication.
STANDARD 4:Students apply thinking skills to their reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing. In order to meet this standard, students will
• make predictions, analyze, draw conclusions, and discriminate between fact and opinion in writing, reading, speaking, listening, and viewing;
• identify the purpose, perspective, and historical and cultural influences of a speaker, author, or director.
STANDARD 6:Students read and recognize literature as a record of human experience. In order to meet this standard, students will
• know and use literary terminology;
• read literature to investigate common issues and interests;
• read literature to understand places, people, events, and vocabulary, both familiar and unfamiliar.
Assessment: Admit/Exit Slips
Observations of discussions

Materials: Biography of Voltaire from Lucidcafe.com
Voltaire and Candide by Harry Maugan
Letter on the subject of Candide, to the Journal encyclopédique
15 July 1759 from the Norton Critical Edition of Candide
“Mock On, Mock On, Voltaire, Rousseau” by William Blake with an anonymous response.
Sequence:
5 min Anticipatory Set:
Answer the following question on your index card:
How does evil present itself in the self, society, and the world?

40 min Lesson
Introduce the book and the author. Hand out background material on Voltaire and his philosophy. Have students read each section individually, or read them aloud as a class, annotating for wows and whoas. (See appendices.)
After students have finished each section of the background material, ask them to share their wows and whoas as a whole class.

5 min Exit Slip/Conclusion
Answer the following questions on your index card:
How did Voltaire view his world? How did others view Voltaire? Infer what these perspectives have to do with the exploration of evil in Candide.

Differentiated Instruction: Students will work individually and as a group with a variety of texts. They will annotate as they feel necessary, and participate in whole-class discussion of each piece of the background material. The variety of the materials will appeal to a variety of interests in different genres including satire/humor, poetry, and non-fiction.

Suggestions for Extension: We will revisit the essential questions and the exit slip from today’s lesson frequently throughout the course of our reading of Candide. Students will have the opportunity to respond both orally and in written form to each, and apply these concepts to their own experience on our literary blog.


Appendix 1 Thinking Notes

Thinking Notes help students become more involved in their reading and gives them a way to record their thoughts about the text. The notation system is simple, and not as intrusive to the reading process as a dialectical journal, for example. If students cannot mark the book, they may use small sticky notes to place the symbols.

Some common thinking notes:

Yes agree
X disagree
+ new
! WOW
? I wonder
?? don’t understand
* important

Students may add other thinking notes to their text based on imagery, style, tone, character, etc.

Appendix 2 Biography

Voltaire
Author and Philosopher, 1694 - 1778
Francois Marie Arouet (pen name Voltaire) was born on November 21, 1694 in Paris. Voltaire’s intelligence, wit, and style made him one of France’s greatest writers and philosophers.

Young Francois Marie received his education at “Louis-le-Grand,” a Jesuit college in Paris where he said he learned nothing but “Latin and the Stupidities.” He left school at 17 and soon made friends among the Parisian aristocrats. His humorous verses made him a favorite in society circles. In 1717, his sharp wit got him into trouble with the authorities. He was imprisoned in the Bastille for eleven months for writing a scathing satire of the French government. During his time in prison, Francois Marie wrote “Oedipe” which was to become his first theatrical success, and also adopted his pen name “Voltaire.”

In 1726, Voltaire insulted the powerful young nobleman, “Chevalier De Rohan,” and was given two options: imprisonment or exile. He chose exile and from 1726 to 1729 lived in England. While in England Voltaire was attracted to the philosophy of John Locke and ideas of mathematician and scientist, Sir Isaac Newton. He studied England's Constitutional Monarchy and its religious tolerance. Voltaire was particularly interested in the philosophical rationalism of the time, and in the study of the natural sciences. After returning to Paris he wrote a book praising English customs and institutions. It was interpreted as criticism of the French government, and in 1734 Voltaire was forced to leave Paris again.

At the invitation of a highly-intelligent woman friend, “Marquise du Chatelet,” Voltaire moved into her “Chateau de Cirey” near Luneville in eastern France. They studied the natural sciences together for several years. In 1746, Voltaire was voted into the “Academie Francaise.” In 1749, after the death of “Marquise du Chatelet” and at the invitation of the King of Prussia, “Frederick the Great,” he moved to Potsdam (near Berlin in Germany). In 1753, Voltaire left Potsdam to return to France.

In 1759, Voltaire purchased an estate called “Ferney” near the French-Swiss border where he lived until just before of his death. Ferney soon became the intellectual capital of Europe. Voltaire worked continuously throughout the years, producing a constant flow of books, plays and other publications. He wrote hundreds of letters to his circle of friends. He was always a voice of reason. Voltaire was often an outspoken critic of religious intolerance and persecution.

Voltaire returned to a hero’s welcome in Paris at age 83. The excitement of the trip was too much for him and he died in Paris. Because of his criticism of the church Voltaire was denied burial in church ground. He was finally buried at an abbey in Champagne. In 1791, his remains were moved to a resting place at the Pantheon in Paris.

In 1814, a group of “ultras” (a right-wing religious group) stole Voltaire’s remains and dumped them in a garbage heap. No one was the wiser for some 50 years. His enormous sarcophagus (opposite Rousseau’s) was checked and the remains were gone. (see Orieux, Voltaire, vol. 2 pp. 382-4.) His heart, however, had been removed from his body, and now lies in the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris. His brain was also removed, but after a series of passings-on over 100 years, disappeared after an auction.
(Lucidcafe, 2009)

Appendix 4 Voltaire’s Candide by Harry Maugans
This is a step away from “Technology, BMWs, and Business”, however I just wrote this quick article on Candide and thought I’d share.
Francois Marie Arouet de Voltaire constructed the novella “Candide” partially for the purpose of entertainment, but mostly to satirize the fallacy of Gottfried William von Leibniz’s theory of optimism. Throughout the course of his saga, Voltaire juxtaposes the raw, unrepressed optimism of one character in the story with exaggerated real-world adventures of pessimism and gloom. From gruesome war to disease, sedition, and deceit, Voltaire misses none of the bad in the “best of all possible worlds”.
Leibniz was a German philosopher and mathematician in Voltaire’s time. He argued that our world was the epitome of perfection, and all evils that transpire are for the betterment and evolution of our ideal society. God, he believed, was perfect, and as Earth is the conception of God, it must maintain such sound imperfections. However Voltaire chooses to begin writing on these premises alone to further accentuate his satire, purposefully overlooking the inescapable evil that comes with the “best of all possible worlds”. Leibniz was actually not suggesting our world was perfect, but rather the best of all the worlds available to God. Voltaire disregarded this in “Candide”.
Dr. Pangloss is introduced as the literary symbolic representation of Leibniz’s theory. Conceived early in the novella, the then naive Candide reveres Pangloss as the supreme authority on all philosophical matters and follows his teachings without question. Candide enters the world with this very closed-minded philosophy to further exaggerate Voltaire’s satirical aim, but throughout the story he experiences a fierce internal conflict between his childhood schooling and the realities of society. Voltaire also created the character of Martin, a very pessimistic antagonist acting as the devil whispering palpable cynicism into Candide’s ear. As their journey progresses, Candide finds it harder and harder to support the unyielding raw optimism of Pangloss.
At one point in “Candide”, the characters arrive at Eldorado, a utopia designed to metaphorically represent the perfect society described as “the best of all possible worlds”, a quote used by Leibniz and Pangloss to portray our “perfect” society. This city is “impossible” to find, and is described with details to make it seem as distant from reality as possible. By materializing Leibniz’s ideological perfection without laws, jails, or the need for material goods, Voltaire is showing Leibniz’s theory as laughable. This allows Candide to see for himself the quintessential essence of Pangloss’s teachings, just before being submerged again headfirst into the icy waters of society’s realism when they leave. Eldorado is one of Voltaire’s strongest examples of the philosophical collision in the novella, since it reaches beyond speculation and rumor to show Candide hard, physical evidence of the Atlantistic notion brought forth by Pangloss.
Chapter Nine is a hard hit for Candide’s faith in Pangloss’s teachings. He is forced to murder two men in an attempt to protect his own life and that of his mistress Cunégonde. They die in the exact same way for a nearly identical cause, and still the Grand Inquisitor is given a grand burial while the civilian man is thrown on a dunghill. They were both human beings- were their lives worth different values? Candide questions the ideological perfection of society’s injustice.
Voltaire also adds an interesting touch of satire through his choice of character names. Pangloss is loosely translated as “all tongue” or “windbag”, an ironically fitting name for one who offers no proof to support his claims. Candide is translated to “white”, a slightly deeper translation, but no less fitting. In the beginning of the novella, Candide is a very naive child, innocent and pure. He accepts the teachings of Pangloss, the only philosophy he is exposed to. As he makes his journey all over the world, his purity staggers in parallel with his maturity. He begins to question his personal beliefs, however always remaining true to his honesty, loyalty, and generosity” sparkling associations with the unblemished color white. His continued loyalty is apparent by maintaining his honest oath to always love Cunégonde, even after she grows old and loses her beauty. His generosity is illustrated when Candide offers some riches to the ousted king after hearing his tale from a world far less than the best possible.
In many ways, “Candide” is an allusion to Geoffrey Chaucer’s “The Canterbury Tales”. Voltaire uses “Candide” to poke ridicule, even to the point of criticizing, the endless flaws of the world. From government corruption to inhumane warfare, Voltaire tends focuses more on the issues at large, rather than Chaucer’s focus toward individuals like merchants and friars’ however there truly is no difference. Society is composed of merchants, friars, priests, physicians, knights, and pardoners, so essentially both authors are attacking the same body, but from different angles. Where Chaucer may compare the nun to a prostitute, Voltaire compares the Bordeaux police officer to a common thief. When juxtaposing both works, rather than seeing a contrast, you see a single large picture, seamlessly flowing from one source to the other. One might wonder how much influence Chaucer had on Voltaire.
“Candide” is a remarkable literary work written by the very embodiment of the 18th century enlightenment. Voltaire forever shifted the paradigms of modern satire through a witty, yet pointed assault on Leibniz’s blind theory of optimism. Devouring Leibniz’s premises with colorful, yet blatant, real-world contrasts, Voltaire reflects the sheer lunacy of such a theory. Moral of the story? If Voltaire disagrees with someone, he lets the world know it.
(Maugans, 2006)
Appendix 4 Voltaire Letter
Letter on the subject of Candide, to the Journal encyclopédique
15 July 1759
Voltaire addressed the following letter to the Journal encyclopédique, dating it 1 April 1759. (This may have been a poisson d'avril, an April Fool's joke!) It was not printed in the Journal encyclopédique until 15 July 1759.
In any case, the letter reveals Voltaire's love for disguises and literary games, as well as the controversial nature of Candide. In this letter he disguises himself as the brother of the supposed author of the tale, Captain Demad. (It should be remembered that Voltaire also knew English well enough to make puns of this sort rather frequently.) By adopting this persona, he further displaces authorial responsibility for Candide, which in the original edition had been attributed to the "Docteur Ralph" (see the post-script at the end of the letter and an image of the title page of the first edition). This game of disguises also reminds us that Candide was subject to censorship and that Voltaire did not openly claim it as his own work.
Despite these precautions and strategies of misdirection, Voltaire uses this letter to reaffirm some of the critiques from his tale, notably his denunciation of the Jesuit dominance of Paraguay (chapters 14 and 15) and his ridicule of the doctrine of "all is well."
The Journal encyclopédique was a fairly high-profile periodical at the time. It was largely supportive of the philosophes and of Voltaire in particular. But it had given a negative assessment of Candide.
The English translation of this letter is taken from the Norton Critical edition of Candide, Voltaire, Candide or Optimism, a new Translation, Backgrounds, Criticism, translated and edited by Robert M. Adams (New York: W. W. Norton & Company "A Norton Critical Edition," 1966), p. 175-6.
________________________________________
Gentlemen,
You say, in the March issue of your journal,* that some sort of little novel called Optimism or Candide is attributed to a man known as Monsieur de V . . . I do not know what Monsieur V . . . you mean; but I can tell you that this book was written by my brother, Monsieur Demad, presently a Captain in the Brunswick regiment; and in the matter of the pretended kingdom of the Jesuits in Paraguay, which you call a wretched fable, I tell you in the face of all Europe that nothing is more certain. I served on one of the Spanish vessels sent to Buenos Aires in 1756 to restore reason to the nearby settlement of Saint Sacrement; I spent three months at Assumption; the Jesuits have to my knowledge twenty-nine provinces, which they call "Reductions," and they are absolute masters there, by virtue of eight crowns a head for each father of a family, which they pay to the Governor of Buenos Aires--and yet they only pay for a third of their districts. They will not allow any Spaniard to remain more than three days in their Reductions. They have never wanted their subjects to learn Spanish. They alone teach the Paraguayans the use of firearms; they alone lead them in the field. The Jesuit Thomas Verle, a native of Bavaria, was killed in the attack on the village of Saint Sacrement while mounting to the attack at the head of his Paraguayans in 1737--and not at all in 1735 as the Jesuit Charlevoix has reported; this author is as insipid as he is ignorant. Everyone knows how they waged war on Don Antequera, and defied the orders of the Council in Madrid.
They are so powerful that in 1743 they obtained from Philip the Fifth a confirmation of their authority which no one has been able to shake. I know very well, gentlemen, that they have no such title as King, and therefore you may say it is a wretched fable to talk of the Kingdom of Paraguay. But even though the Dey of Algiers is not a King, he is none the less master of that country. I should not advise my brother the Captain to travel to Paraguay without being sure that he is stronger than the local authorities.
For the rest, gentlemen, I have the honor to inform you that my brother the Captain, who is the best-loved man in his regiment, is an excellent Christian; he amused himself by composing the novel Candidein his winter quarters, having chiefly in mind to convert the Socinians. These heretics are not satisfied with openly denying God necessarily made our world the best of all possible ones, and that everything is well. This idea is manifestly contrary to the doctrine of original sin. These innovators forget that the serpent, who was the subtlest beast of the field, tempted the woman created from Adam's rib; that Adam ate the forbidden fruit; that God cursed the land He had formerly blessed: Cursed is the ground for thy sake: in the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread. Can they be ignorant that all the church fathers without a single exception found the Christian religion on this curse pronounced by God himself, the effects of which we feel every day? The Socinians pretend to exalt providence, and they do not see that we are guilty, tormented beings, who must confess our faults and accept our punishment. Let these heretics take care not to show themselves near my brother the Captain; he'll let them know if everything is well.
I am, gentlemen, your very humble, very obedient servant,
Demad
At Zastron, April first, 1759
P.S. My brother the Captain is the intimate friend of Mr. Ralph, well-known Professor in the Academy of Frankfort-on-Oder, who was of great help to him in writing this profound work of philosophy, and my brother was so modest as actually to call it a mere translation from an original by Mr. Ralph. Such modesty is rare among authors.
*N.B. [Note by the Journal encyclopédique] This letter was lost in the post for a long time; as soon as it reached us, we began trying--unsuccessfully--to discover the existence of Monsieur Demad, Captain of the Brunswick Regiment.
(Voltaire, 1759)

Appendix 5 Blake Poem

Mock on, mock on, Voltaire, Rousseau!
Mock on, mock on – ’Tis all in vain!
You throw the sand against the wind,
And the wind blows it back again.
And every sand becomes a gem
Reflected in the beams divine;
Blown back they blind the mocking eye,
But still in Israel’s paths they shine.
The atoms of Democritus
And Newton’s particles of light
Are sands upon the Red Sea shore,
Where Israel’s tents do shine so bright.
27
Predictably, an anonymous poet replied on Voltaire’s behalf:

Hope on, hope on, Boswell and Blake
Hope on and pray: ’tis all in vain.
You think perhaps the dust that blows
Will someday come to life again?

(Blake, 1804) (Anonymous, 1804)

Reading Strategies with a Novel

Novel: Candide Grade Level: 12th grade

Essential Question: How does evil present itself in the self, society, and the world?

Goal/Purpose: Students will be able to summarize, analyze, and develop higher level questions for use in discussion activities throughout the course of their reading.

Standards:
STANDARD 1: Students read and understand a variety of materials.
In order to meet this standard, students will use a full range of strategies to comprehend essays, speeches, autobiographies, and first-person historical documents in addition to the types of literature mentioned above.
STANDARD 2: Students write and speak for a variety of purposes and audiences. In order to meet this standard, students will support an opinion using various forms of persuasion (factual or emotional) in speaking and writing.
STANDARD 3: Students write and speak using conventional grammar, usage, sentence structure, punctuation, capitalization, and spelling. In order to meet this standard, students will
• use pronoun reference correctly in writing
• use internal capitalization and punctuation of secondary quotations in writing;
• use manuscript forms specified in various style manuals for writing (for example, indenting for extended quotations, precise placement and form of page numbers, appropriate line spacing); and refining spelling and grammatical skills
STANDARD 4:
Students apply thinking skills to their reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing. In order to meet this standard, students will recognize an author's point of view, purpose, and historical and cultural context.
STANDARD 6: Students read and recognize literature as a record of human experience. In order to meet this standard, students will
• read, responding to, and discussing novels, poetry, short stories, non-fiction, content-area and technical material, plays, essays, and speeches;
• use literary terminology accurately, such as theme, mood, diction, idiom, perspective, style, and point of view.
Assessment: Weekly Reading Log Observations of Discussions Reflection/Exit Slip
Materials: Candide Rubric for Weekly Reading Log MLA Style Guide Bloom’s questions reference sheet
Sequence:
10 Minutes: Whole class questions & answer period on weekly reading. Transition into small groups for discussions.
30 Minutes: Small groups share their quotes and responses, as well as their higher-level questions with each other. Groups will sort their questions into categories using the Bloom’s questions reference sheet given in class. Groups will then answer each other’s questions using their copies of the novel to support their responses with textual evidence. Teacher will move between groups facilitating discussions and answering questions as they arise.
10 minutes: Whole Class debrief the process and check for understanding. Written reflection/exit slip: *list three new things you learned about the text *list two things you learned about writing higher-level questions *list one thing you would change about this lesson if you could.
Differentiated Instruction: Because of the variety of tasks in this lesson, many of the multiple intelligences and a variety of learning styles are engaged in different aspects of the process. This enables students to excel where they are strong, and receive support where they are challenged.
Suggestions for Extension: Higher-level questions can be mined for future essay assessments, or used as practice for timed writing exercises in class.
Reading Strategies With Non-Fiction Text

Novel: Candide Grade Level: 12th grade

Essential Question: How does evil present itself in the self, society, and the world?

Goal/Purpose: Students will be able to analyze author’s purpose and the validity of the author’s claims within an argument based on the rhetorical appeals of ethos, pathos, and logos.

Standards:

STANDARD 1: Students read and understand a variety of materials. In order to meet this standard, students will use a full range of strategies to comprehend essays, speeches, autobiographies, and first-person historical documents.

STANDARD 4: Students apply thinking skills to their reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing. In order to meet this standard, students will
• recognize an author's point of view, purpose, and historical and cultural context;
• use reading, writing, listening, articulate speaking, and viewing to solve problems;
• know what constitutes literary quality based on elements such as the author's point of view, the author's selection of significant details, theme development, and the author's reflection of events and ideas of his or her lifetime; and
• critique the content of written work and oral presentations.
Assessment: Critique of Non-Fiction Text discussion Reading Notes
Materials: Tolerance from Voltaire’s Philosophical Dictionary (appendix 1) Cornell Notes Paper Guiding Questions (appendix 2)
Sequence:
10 minutes: Whole class review of Toulmin argument structure, and the definitions of ethos, pathos, and logos. Read and clarify guiding questions.
20 minutes: Students silently read the entry from Voltaire’s Philosophical Dictionary taking Cornell notes on the guiding questions as they read. 20 minutes teaches students to stay on task and expedite quickly in practice for AP test in May.
10 minutes: Think-pair-share your Cornell notes with a partner.
10 minutes: Whole class discussion of analysis emphasizing author’s purpose and validity of argument.
Differentiated Instruction: This task involves reading and note taking, with a final discussion. Therefore, many of the multiple intelligences and differentiation strategies are incorporated.
Suggestions for Extension: Activities for extension would be to turn notes into an in- class timed writing in practice for the AP test. Another extension would be to search Voltaire’s Philosophical Dctionary for other arguments that support or connect and establish Voltaire’s perspective on issues presented in Candide such as politics, religion, love, etc.
Appendix 1
The Philosophical Dictionary
Voltaire
Selected and Translated by H.I. Woolf
New York: Knopf, 1924
Scanned by the Hanover College Department of History in 1995.
Proofread and pages added by Jonathan Perry, March 2001.

Tolerance

WHAT is tolerance? it is the consequence of humanity. We are all formed of frailty and error; let us pardon reciprocally each other's folly--that is the first law of nature.
It is clear that the individual who persecutes a man, his brother, because he is not of the same opinion, is a monster. That admits of no difficulty. But the government! but the magistrates! but the princes! how do they treat those who have another worship than theirs? If they are powerful strangers, it is certain that a prince will make an alliance with them. Franois I., very Christian, will unite with Mussulmans against Charles V., very Catholic. Francois I. will give money to the Lutherans of Germany to support them in their revolt against the emperor; but, in accordance with custom, he will start by having Lutherans burned at home. For political reasons he pays them in Saxony; for political reasons he burns them in Paris. But what will happen? Persecutions make proselytes? Soon France will be full of new Protestants. At first they will let themselves be hanged, later they in their turn will hang. There will be civil wars, then will come the St. Bartholomew; and this corner of the world will be worse than all that the ancients and moderns have ever told of hell.
Madmen, who have never been able to give worship to the God who made you! Miscreants, whom the example of the Noachides, the learned Chinese, the Parsees and all the sages, has never been able to lead! Monsters, who need superstitions as crows' gizzards need carrion! you have been told it already, and there is nothing else to tell you-if you have two religions in your countries, they will cut each other's throat ; if you have thirty religions, they will dwell in peace. Look at the great Turk, he governs Guebres, Banians, Creek Christians, Nestorians, Romans. The first who tried to stir up tumult would be impaled; and everyone is tranquil.
Of all religions, the Christian is without doubt the one which should inspire tolerance most, although up to now the Christians have been the most intolerant of all men. The Christian Church was divided in its cradle, and was divided even in the persecutions which under the first emperors it sometimes endured. Often the martyr was regarded as an apostate by his brethren, and the Carpocratian Christian expired beneath the sword of the Roman executioners, excommunicated by the Ebionite Christian, the which Ebionite was anathema to the Sabellian.
This horrible discord, which has lasted for so many centuries, is a very striking lesson that we should pardon each other's errors; discord is the great ill of mankind; and tolerance is the only remedy for it.
There is nobody who is not in agreement with this truth, whether he meditates soberly in his study, or peaceably examines the truth with his friends. Why then do the same men who admit in private indulgence, kindness, justice, rise in public with so much fury against these virtues? Why? it is that their own interest is their god, and that they sacrifice everything to this monster that they worship.
I possess a dignity and a power founded on ignorance and credulity; I walk on the heads of the men who lie prostrate at my feet; if they should rise and look me in the face, I am lost; I must bind them to the ground, therefore, with iron chains.
Thus have reasoned the men whom centuries of bigotry have made powerful. They have other powerful men beneath them, and these have still others, who all enrich themselves with the spoils of the poor, grow fat on their blood, and laugh at their stupidity. They all detest tolerance, as partisans grown rich at the public expense fear to render their accounts, and as tyrants dread the word liberty. And then, to crown everything, they hire fanatics to cry at the top of their voices : " Respect my master's absurdities, tremble, pay, and keep your mouths shut."
It is thus that a great part of the world long was treated; but today when so many sects make a balance of power, what course to take with them? Every sect, as one knows, is a ground of error; there are no sects of geometers, algebraists, arithmeticians, because all the propositions of geometry, algebra and arithmetic are true. In every other science one may be deceived. What Thomist or Scotist theologian would dare say seriously that he is sure of his case?
If it were permitted to reason consistently in religious matters, it is clear that we all ought to become Jews, because Jesus Christ our Saviour was born a Jew, lived a Jew, died a Jew, and that he said expressly that he was accomplishing, that he was fulfilling the Jewish religion. But it is clearer still that we ought to be tolerant of one another, because we are all weak, inconsistent, liable to fickleness and error. Shall a reed laid low in the mud by the wind say to a fellow reed fallen in the opposite direction : " Crawl as I crawl, wretch, or I shall petiion that you be torn up by the roots and burned? "
Hanover Historical Texts Project
Return to Hanover College Department of History
Please send comments to:
luttmer@hanover.edu
(Voltaire, 1764)

Appendix 2
The critic of nonfiction must question the text for author’s purpose and validity of the argument. Use the questions below to guide your reading of the piece.
• Who is the author? What are his/her credentials in regards to this topic? (ethos)
• What biases might the author bring to the piece? What is the author’s attitude towards the topic and audience? (tone)
• What is the point of the piece? (claim)
• What sources, if any are used? Personal anecdotes? Empirical research? Primary or secondary sources? Examples from life? (data)
• What rhetorical appeals are used in the argument? (pathos) (logos)
• How does the author connect the claim and the data to create a sound argument? (warrant)
• Jot down anything else you think may support the validity of the argument.

Review your notes and identify the major arguments the author puts forth on his/her topic. Check for validity and support.
Jot down any emotional or logical responses you had to any part of the argument.
Be ready to debrief in class discussion using evidence from the text to support your own claims.
Writing

Novel: Candide Grade Level: 12th grade

Essential Question: How does evil present itself in the self, society, and the world?

Goal/Purpose: Students will plan and complete an in-class timed essay using evidence from the text to identify and discuss how Voltaire uses satirical techniques against one of the social or political institutes of is time. Next, students will participate in peer review and reflection of the timed writing process.

Standards:
STANDARD 2: Students write and speak for a variety of purposes and audiences. In order to meet this standard, students will
• support an opinion using various forms of persuasion (factual or emotional) in speaking and writing;
• experiment with stylistic elements such as voice, tone, and style.
STANDARD 3: Students write and speak using conventional grammar, usage, sentence structure, punctuation, capitalization, and spelling. In order to meet this standard, students will
• use pronoun reference correctly in writing and speaking;
• use phrases and clauses for purposes of modification and parallel structure in writing and speaking;
• use internal capitalization and punctuation of secondary quotations in writing;

STANDARD 4: Students apply thinking skills to their reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing. In order to meet this standard, students will
• recognize an author's point of view, purpose, and historical and cultural context;
• know what constitutes literary quality based on elements such as the author's point of view, the author's selection of significant details, theme development, and the author's reflection of events and ideas of his or her lifetime.
Assessment: In-class timed essay.
Materials: Advanced Placement Essay Rubric Copies of Candide AP writing prompt
Sequence: This exercise takes place during a block class session.
10 minutes: Whole class review of Advanced Placement Essay Rubric (appendix 1)
10 minutes: Read and unpack AP writing prompt for skills and strategies needed. (appendix 2)
40 minutes: Plan and write essay.
20 minutes: Students will trade essays with a partner for peer feedback on strengths and challenges.
10 minutes: Whole class reflection of timed writing process.
Differentiated Instruction: Students will complete a classic AP writing task, including planning and reflection. Differentiation of this task is minimal, but students need to practice essays for achievement on the AP test. The reflection portion of this lesson allows students to review and revise their own approaches to this task.
Suggestions for Extension: An excellent extension of this task would be for students to use their peer review and reflection notes to revise and resubmit this essay for evaluation. Another extension of this activity would be to extend the analysis into a summative paper on Voltaire’s use of satire throughout the whole novel.
Appendix 1

Advanced Placement Essay Rubric

# Description %
9-8 Superior papers are specific in their references, cogent in their definitions, and free of plot summary that is not relevant to the question. These essays need not be without flaws, but they demonstrate the writer's ability to discuss a literary work with insight and understanding and to control a wide range of the elements of effective composition. 100-92
7-6 These papers are less thorough, less perceptive or less specific than 9-8 papers. These essays are well-written but with less maturity and control than the top papers. They demonstrate the writer's ability to analyze a literary work, but they reveal a more limited understanding than do the papers in the 9-8 range. Generally, 6 essays present a less sophisticated analysis and less consistent command of the elements of effective writing than essays scored 7. 91-81
5 Superficiality characterizes these 5 essays. Discussion of meaning may be pedestrian, mechanical, or inadequately related to the chosen details. Typically, these essays reveal simplistic thinking and/or immature writing. They usually demonstrate inconsistent control over the elements of composition and are not as well conceived, organized, or developed as the upper-half papers. On the other hand, the writing is sufficient to convey the writer's ideas. 80-75
4-3 Discussion is likely to be unpersuasive, perfunctory, underdeveloped or misguided. The meaning they deduce may be inaccurate or insubstantial and not clearly related to the question. Part of the question may be omitted altogether. The writing may convey the writer's ideas, but it reveals weak control over such elements as diction, organization, syntax or grammar. Typically, these essays contain significant misinterpretations of the question or the work they discuss; they may also contain little, if any, supporting evidence, and practice paraphrase and plot summary at the expense of analysis. 74-60
2-1 These essays compound the weakness of essays in the 4-3 range and are frequently unacceptably brief. They are poorly written on several counts, including many distracting errors in grammar and mechanics. Although the writer may have made some effort to answer the question, the views presented have little clarity or coherence. 59-25
0 These essays respond with no more than a reference to the task, contain completely off-topic responses, or are blank. 24-0

(AP essay rubric, 2009)

Appendix 2

AP Literature In-Class Essay/Timed Writing Prompt—Candide

1987—Some novels and plays seem to advocate changes in social or political attitudes or in traditions. Choose such a novel or play and note briefly the particular attitudes or traditions that the author apparently wishes to modify. Then analyze the satirical techniques the author uses to influence the reader's or audience's views. Avoid plot summary.

AP Literature In-Class Essay/Timed Writing Prompt—Candide

1987—Some novels and plays seem to advocate changes in social or political attitudes or in traditions. Choose such a novel or play and note briefly the particular attitudes or traditions that the author apparently wishes to modify. Then analyze the satirical techniques the author uses to influence the reader's or audience's views. Avoid plot summary.

AP Literature In-Class Essay/Timed Writing Prompt—Candide

1987—Some novels and plays seem to advocate changes in social or political attitudes or in traditions. Choose such a novel or play and note briefly the particular attitudes or traditions that the author apparently wishes to modify. Then analyze the satirical techniques the author uses to influence the reader's or audience's views. Avoid plot summary.

(Open-ended questions for AP literature, 1987)

Poetry

Novel: Candide Grade Level: 12th grade

Essential Question: How does evil present itself in the self, society, and the world?

Goal/Purpose: Students will complete a TP-CASTT analysis of the anti-war poem “In Camp Before Philipsburg” by Voltaire and compose an analytical essay which discusses Voltaire’s stance on war.

Standards:
STANDARD 2: Students write and speak for a variety of purposes and audiences. In order to meet this standard, students will
• support an opinion using various forms of persuasion (factual or emotional) in speaking and writing;
• experiment with stylistic elements such as voice, tone, and style.
STANDARD 3: Students write and speak using conventional grammar, usage, sentence structure, punctuation, capitalization, and spelling. In order to meet this standard, students will
• use pronoun reference correctly in writing and speaking;
• use phrases and clauses for purposes of modification and parallel structure in writing and speaking;
• use internal capitalization and punctuation of secondary quotations in writing;

STANDARD 4: Students apply thinking skills to their reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing. In order to meet this standard, students will
• recognize an author's point of view, purpose, and historical and cultural context;
• know what constitutes literary quality based on elements such as the author's point of view, the author's selection of significant details, theme development, and the author's reflection of events and ideas of his or her lifetime.
STANDARD 6: Students read and recognize literature as a record of human experience. In order to meet this standard, students will
• read, respond to, and discuss poetry
• use literary terminology accurately, such as theme, connotation, tone, point of view, figurative language, imagery
• develop and support a thesis about the craft and significance of a classic work of literature.
• understand the common themes in the literature of the world.
Assessment: TP-CASTT graphic organizer. Analytical essay.
Materials: TP-CASTT graphic organizer (appendix 1) copies of “In Camp Before Phillipsburg” (appendix 2)
Sequence: This exercise takes place during a 50-minute class session.
5 minutes: Whole class review of TP-CASTT graphic organizer, including clarification of terminology and expectations for thoughtful completion.
10 minutes: Read poem while students annotate to facilitate Think- Pair-Share of annotations.
30 minutes: Plan and write essay. This is another opportunity to practice writing on demand as required on the AP Literature test in May.
5 minutes: Whole class reflection on efficacy of lesson.
Differentiated Instruction: The use of a graphic organizer to organize information needed to be successful with the writing piece of the lesson accommodates different learning styles and affords students an opportunity to practice planning; an important part of the writing process. Differentiation of this task is minimal, but may occur by modifying the length requirements of the assignment based on student IEP accommodations or modifications. Either way, students need to practice essays for achievement on the AP test. The reflection portion of this lesson allows students to review and revise their own approaches to this task.
Suggestions for Extension: One extension of this task would be for students to apply the TP-CASTT strategy to other poems we study for use in a variety of essays such as comparing and contrasting two poems based on their TP-CASTT elements. Another extension would be to analyze Voltaire’s stance on war in the novel Candide and compose an essay discussing the similarities and differences in the treatment of war in both the novel and the poem.

Appendix 1

TP-CASTT
Title Ponder the title before reading the poem

Paraphrase Translate the poem into your own word s

Connotation Contemplate the poem for meaning beyond the literal (Interpretation)

Attitude Observe both the speaker’s and the poet’s attitude (tone, diction, images, mood, etc.)

Shifts Note shifts in speakers and in attitudes (are there changes?)

Title Examine the title again, this time on an interpretive level

Theme Determine what the poet is saying

(Cassel, 2009)
Appendix 2
In Camp Before Philippsburg
Without a bed we now sleep sound
And take our meals upon the ground;
And though the blazing atmosphere
Must dreadful to the eye appear,
The air though roaring cannons rend
While warriors with fierce rage contend,
The thoughtless French drink, laugh, and sing,
And with their mirth the heavens ring;
The walls of Philippsburg shall burn,
And all her towers to ashes turn
By fifty thousand Alexanders,
Who all deserve to be commanders,
Though they receive the paltry pay
Of only four poor sous a day.
Lavish of life, with high delight
I see them rushing to the fight;
They all appear both gay and jolly,
Quite covered o'er with fame and folly.
The Phantom, which we Glory name,
Spurs them to the pursuit of fame;
With threat'ning eye, and front all o'er
Bedusted, marching still before,
She holds a trumpet in her hand
To sound to arms, and cheer the band,
And loudly sings, with voice sonorous,
Catches, which they repeat in chorus.
Oh! people brilliant, gay, and vain,
Who drag with patience glory's chain,
'Tis great, an honorable grave
To seek, Eugene and death to brave.
But what will be your mighty prize?
What from your prowess will arise?
Regret your blood, in vain you spilt it;
At Paris cuckolded, or jilted.
(Voltaire, 1734)
Non-Text Lesson

Novel: Candide Grade Level: 12th grade

Essential Question: How does evil present itself in the self, society, and the world?

Goal/Purpose: Students will create a visual representation of a character from the novel that incorporates ten quotes from the text. These quotes will serve to illuminate the character’s philosophy as outlined through their actions and dialogue with other characters. Students will explain the relevancy of their quotes to the character in a presentation to the class.

Standards:

STANDARD 4: Students apply thinking skills to their reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing. In order to meet this standard, students will
• recognize an author's point of view, purpose, and historical and cultural context;
• know what constitutes literary quality based on elements such as the author's point of view, the author's selection of significant details, theme development, and the author's reflection of events and ideas of his or her lifetime.
STANDARD 6: Students read and recognize literature as a record of human experience. In order to meet this standard, students will
• read, respond to, and discuss poetry
• use literary terminology accurately, such as theme, connotation, tone, point of view, figurative language, imagery
• develop and support a thesis about the craft and significance of a classic work of literature.
• understand the common themes in the literature of the world.
Assessment: Visual representation of character Relevance of quotes to character’s philosophy
Materials: Copies of Candide Student’s choice of artistic materials to create representation of character.
Sequence: This exercise takes place after reading, as a mini-lesson in class. Project to be completed as homework, presentations due the next class meeting.
10 minutes: Whole class review of main characters in Candide
10 minutes: Explanation of project and presentation, showing of model—completed by teacher—Q & A.
35 minutes: Recap of novel, philosophies, whole class discussion of what it means to cultivate your own garden.
Differentiated Instruction: This project accommodates many different learning styles, and is therefore conducive to differentiate instruction. Students have a lot of choice as to how they would like to visually represent their character, and also which quotes they choose. The presentation can range from dressing like the character, making a video, to a simple poster so all students can be successful.
Suggestions for Extension: One extension of this task would be for students to film or re-enact a scene from the novel in a group presentation for the class.
Rubric: Visual Representation of a Character

CATEGORY 25 20 15 0
Graphics - Originality Several of the graphics used on the poster reflect a exceptional degree of student creativity in their creation and/or display. One or two of the graphics used on the poster reflect student creativity in their creation and/or display. The graphics are made by the student, but are based on the designs or ideas of others. No graphics made by the student are included.
Content - Accuracy At least 10 quotes related to the charcter's beliefs are displayed on the poster. At least 7-9 quotes related to the charcter's beliefs are displayed on the poster. At least 5-7 quotes related to the charcter's beliefs are displayed on the poster. No quotes related to the charcter's beliefs are displayed on the poster.
Graphics - Relevance All graphics are related to the topic and make it easier to understand. All borrowed graphics have a source citation. All graphics are related to the topic and most make it easier to understand. All borrowed graphics have a source citation. All graphics relate to the topic. Most borrowed graphics have a source citation. Graphics do not relate to the topic OR several borrowed graphics do not have a source citation.
Routines and Structures
By February, the students will be used to several routines and structures in the classroom. The first of these is the weekly vocabulary test that I have made time for in my scope and sequence. Scaffolded vocabulary instruction is new to Thomas Jefferson High School this year, after many years of absence. We believe that this added, context based vocabulary curriculum will benefit our students by increasing their exposure to new words, and allowing them to apply these words in their own writing. Another routine they are familiar with is the cycle of instruction I employ each day. The first part of class introduces them to the material and lesson for the day. Then, we move into the second, longer part of the cycle in which they have an opportunity to practice and apply what they have learned. Finally, we close the lesson with a quick reflection—exit slip—and review their homework for the next day. Wednesday and Thursday are block days at Thomas Jefferson High School. With that in mind, I try to plan two or three activities or instructional modes to keep the students engaged. At least one of these modes involves some kind of small group work. We use this section of the block as writer’s workshop, or for small group discussion, or to analyze different components of the AP test. For test analysis, the students focus on one of the three essays, or a section of the multiple-choice part of the exam. Each Friday, I reserve the majority of the class period for discussion and a question on that week’s reading. We analyze style, imagery, author’s purpose, character development and motivation, irony and satire if applicable. These discussions are usually rich, and have become a regular part of the weekly routine. Differentiated Instruction According to Milner and Milner, differentiation “acknowledges the diversity of learners in any classroom and accommodates those differences by offering a variety of curricular, instructional and assessment options.” (Milner & Milner, 2008). With this in mind, I have created several instructional strategies that address and engage the diverse learning styles of my students. There are opportunities for students to practice peer instruction, and receive direct instruction as needed. When students are working in small groups, I circulate the classroom checking for understanding, clarifying instructions, and keeping students on task. These interactions are an important part of my day, and help me adjust my instruction to their needs. In regards to curriculum, while we are reading a novel as our primary text for this unit, we are also incorporating non-fiction texts and poetry. This will enable students who enjoy a variety of genres to remain engaged in the unit while they explore the philosophies in Candide. The students will be assessed in many different ways in this unit, as they are for each unit. Assessments range from informal discussions to formal multimedia presentations and a creative project. These assessments are high interest, and engaging, but the students also have some more traditional assessments as well. These traditional assessments are the in class timed writing in preparation for the AP test in May, and the analytical essay based on the poetry analysis strategy they learned in class. Admit and exit slips give students a chance to reflect on their own progress, which is a meta-cognitive form of assessment. Differentiation promotes problem solving and critical thinking, as well as teaching effective group interactions and productivity; all of which are important skills for the 21st century.
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