Archive of ‘Mrs. McGriff’ category

Week at a Glance: October 11 – 15

Monday

Field trip follow-up.  It is important to thank people who have provided you with a gift of service.  Many people helped make our field trip a success.  Write a thank you note to one of the people who helped us.  Be sure to thank the person for their specific contribution and add a sentence or two about what you learned or enjoyed from the trip.   Six-Word Memoirs:  In the tradition of Smith Magazine and gravestone epitaphs, write your life story in exactly six words.  Need inspiration?  Want to sumbit your contribution?  Check out the six word memoir website at Smith magazine
HOMEWORK:  Read 30 minutes–memoir first.  Choose five words for Weekly Word Study. 

Tuesday

Check out my comments on your narrative leads on your blogs.  Then read at least three of your classmates leads and leave comments for them.  A good comment should point out something specific that works well in the lead and/or ask questions about what you want to know more about.  Comments that say “good lead” and nothing else won’t cound toward pages of writing. 
HOMEWORK:  Read 30 minutes

Wednesday

Show, not tell.  As you draft your memoir, play it like a movie in your mind and capture all the sights and sounds on the page.  Rather than just telling what happened, show your reader the action.  Check out this blog post writing tip from Books, Boys, and Buzz for examples on how using body language can show your character’s (that’s you!) feelings. 
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Homework:  Read 30 minutes

Thursday

The Rule of Thoughts and feelings.  Good memoirs explore why an experience matters and create a theme or “so what.”  One way to achieve this is to add your thoughts and feelings.  Where can you add thoughts and feelings to your memoir? 
HOMEWORK:  Word Study due today.  Three-five pages of writing due today!  Read 30 minutes.  Get your reading log signed.

Friday

You did a great job on your discussions last week, but I want you to do even better.  What does a good discussion look like and sound like?  Brainstorm ideas in your groups.  One thing that good discussions have in common is lots to talk about.  While I check your Reading Logs, gather ideas you want to talk about from the middle section of your memoir:  questions, connections, pictures, important passages, author’s craft.  Discuss the last of your memoirs.  Start thinking about how you could create a book trailer for this book.   
HOMEWORK:   Reading Log due TODAY.  Read over the weekend.

Incarceron by Catherine Fisher

Both inside and outside Incarceron–a living, thinking prison–nothing is what it seems.  The ancient Sapients designed Incarceron to be a perfect paradise to hold all the undesirables of the world–the poor, the criminal, the dissident.  Inside, Finn and his friends desperately seek a way out from the brutal life they experience.  Outside, Claudia is just as trapped by the life laid out for her by her father, the Warden of Incarceron.  She is to marry the Prince of the land and become Queen of a land trapped in the trappings of the past.  Through equally desperate measures, both Finn and Claudia find keys to Incarceron that allow them to talk with each other.  Will they find each other–and a way out of their respective prisons–before it is too late?

Catherine Fisher has created a deeply layered world in Incarceron that raises questions that still echo through my mind.  What does it mean to be imprisoned or free?  What are the walls of the prisons that trap each of us?  Do we worry too much about where we are rather than who we are? 

I am more than ready for the second installment, Sapphique, which comes out December 28.  I know what I’m spending my Christmas money on.  How about you?

A Dickens of a Cat and Other Stories of the Cats We Love

I miss my cat now.  Callie Smith Grant gathered stories of cats who have wriggled and purred their ways into our lives and hearts.  Some snuggle up close while others keep their distance, but either way these cats changed their humans for the better.  Some even saved lives–nothing as dramatic as pulling someone out of a burning house, but saved lives none-the-less. 

This collection of stories is a must-read for any cat-lovers.  For those of you who are not cat people, these stories might change your mind.

Narrative Leads

Here are three different leads for my driving test memoir.  Which do you think works the best?  Why?

ACTION: 

I slowly slid into the seat of my mom’s 1976 Toyota Corolla station wagon and gripped the steering wheel.  I followed the examiner’s instructions:  click the left turn signal, then right turn signal, tap the brakes.  I took a deep breath and reached behind me for the seat belt.  I glanced over at the examiner who had taken her place on the passenger side and was already busy taking notes on her clipboard.  She didn’t have her seatbelt on.  Should I ask her to put on her seatbelt?  Was this part of the test?  Or would she be offended?  I didn’t want to get off to a bad start.

Dialogue:   

        “Would you please put on your seat belt?”  I nervously asked the examiner who was getting ready to give me the driving test for my driver’s license.  I wasn’t sure whether or not I should ask her.  She might get offended or she might expect me to as her as part of the test.

        “I don’t wear a seatbelt while giving a driving test,” she icily replied.

        Uh-oh.  It looked like I was off to a bad start.

 Reaction:

        I felt pretty confident about the written part of my driving test.  I always had been good at tests at school, and I had studied for this one.  It was the next part that I was worried about—the driving test.  I glanced at the examiner sitting next to me.  She wasn’t wearing her seat belt!  I wondered if I should ask her to put it on.  She might get offended, or she might be expecting me to ask her to put it on as part of the test.

Now post your narrative leads for your memoir.  Comment on at least three of your classmates’ leads.  Keep comments positive.  Point out what works well.  Ask questions about what you want to know.

Peter and the Shadow Thieves by Dave Barry, Ridley Pearson & Greg Call

I went back and listened to the second book in Dave Barry’s Star Catcher series, which gives the story before the story of Peter Pan.  Peter and his Lost Boys are enjoying life on Mollusk Island.  Peter loves nothing more than taunting the fierce pirate captain, Black Stash (known for his bushy mustache) with his new nickname, Captain Hook.  Captain Hook is determined to have his revenge on the flying boy, but both their plans are interrupted with the arrival of a ship with a mysterious passenger.  This cloaked shadow holds the Mollusk princess hostage to learn where the shipment of star stuff is hidden on the island.  When Lord Umbra learns that the Star Catchers took it away from the island, he threatens to kidnap Molly and hold her in exchange for it.  Peter cannot sit by while his friend Molly is in danger, so he and Tinkerbell stow away on the ship for its journey to London.  Peter is desperate to find and warn Molly before it is too late,  but he is hopelessly lost around London.  With the help of Tinkerbell and Molly’s friend George, Peter and Molly set off to rescue her mother from Lord Umbra and warn her father of the danger the star stuff is in.

Just like the other books in the series, this one is a rip-roaring adventure that explains many of the things that came to be in the story of Peter Pan.  My favorite scene?  A cameo appearance by James Barrie himself, who rescues Peter from one of the more frightening creatures of London’s street life.  Oh yes, Barrie is helped by a large St. Bernard.

Adam Canfield, Watch Your Back! by Michael Winerap

I want student writers like Adam Canfield and his coeditor of the school paper, Jennifer.  These two reporters and editors won’t rest until they get the truth and publish it in The Slash, their elementary/middle school newspaper.  In their previous adventure, their investigative reporting led to the firing of their principal for misuse of school funds.  Now Adam is determined to reveal the truth behind the school science fair:  the parents of the winning students do most of the work.  Pushed by Adam, Jennifer is working to uncover the real story behind the renaming of a street in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr., the powerful people who want to “clean up” their town by forcing those they don’t like to move out.  To top it all off, Adam must now cope with being the news story after he is mugged for $40 of snow-shoveling earnings. 

Adam and Jennifer are way to good to be true, but I thoroughly enjoyed reading about their adventures.  If you have a nose for news, or at least a good mystery, this is the book for you.  In the course of their reporting, Adam and Jennifer find The Slash is threatened on all sides.  Will they get the story without getting expelled?  Will the truth win out in the end?  You can get the rest of the story with Michael Canfield of the Slash and Michael Canfield: The Last Reporter.

Wicked by Gregory Maguire

I picked up a new copy of Wicked by Gregor Maguire to reread before going with the choir to see the musical in December.  Now that I’ve finished it, I am more than ready to see the characters come to life on the stage–with music. 

Maguire’s Oz is very different from the techni-color version presented in the original movie.  This Oz is darker and filled with more conflict.  Munchkinland, the breadbasket of Oz, faces a drought through much of the book.  People are drifting in the religious beliefs:  Should they follow the ancient goddes Lurline, stick with the traditional Unionist teachings of the Unnamed God, or enjoy the distractions of the pleasure faith and tiktokism?  When the Wizard come to power, he holds Oz under strict control.  He tolerates no dissent and systemmaticly removes Animals from public life in Oz and destroys the Quadlings to mine their rubies.

Elphaba is born into this troubled world with a distinct disadvantage:  bright green skin, shark-like teeth, and an aversion to water.  While at the University in Shiz, she becomes an agitator for Animan rights and plots against the Wizard.  Her path crosses with those of the other “witches” of Oz:  her sister Nessarose, who grows up to lead Munchkinland as the Wicked Witch of the East, and Glinda, a society girl who outwardly is concerned only with clothes and gossip.  The “Good Witch of the North” is decidedly not so good in this Oz.  Elphaba struggles to find her place in this world until a house from another world crashes on and kills her sister.  As Elphaba’s path crosses that of Dorothy’s (she just wants the shoes), a series of misunderstandings lead to the inevitable end.  I miss Elphaba.

September books read

68) Peter and the Secret of Rundoon by Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson – an exciting conclusion to the prequel of Peter Pan

69) Listening Is an Act of Love ed. by Dave Isay – a collection of interview transcrips across America. If you doubt the power of words and story, this collection  will make a believer out of you.

70) Finding Stinko by Michael de Guzman – quick read about life on the streets for Newboy, determined to escape foster care

71) Savvy by Ingrid Law – What’s your savvy?  Mibs Beaumount finds out that not everything, including her own special savvy, is what is first appears.

72) Linger by Maggie Steifvator – a haunting, beautiful continuation of Sam and Grace’s love story.  My favorite character-Cole.

73) Wicked by Gregory Maguire – a reread before seeing the musical in December, still good.

74) Adam Canfield Watch Your Back by Michael Winerip – I want students like these two middle school reporters:  They never rest until they get the ful story.

75) Peter and the Shadow Thieves by Dave Barry Ridley Pearson and Greg Call – another rip-snorting adventure as Peter rescues Molly and her family.  My favorite scene – a cameo by James Barrie.

Week at a Glance: October 4 – 8

Monday

Good memoirs have a focus on the most important part of the experience.  Choose one of your memories from your list of Memoir-Worthy Experiences.  List the main actions of that experience.  What is the heart of your story–the important moment?  That is what you want to focus on.  Narratives (a memoir is a type of narrative or story) have a beginning, middle, and end.  Now think about that important moment.  Where does it begin?  What happens in the middle?  How does it end?  Sketch out the beginning, middle, and end of your story.  Share with the people in your book group. 
HOMEWORK:  Read 30 minutes–memoir first.  Choose five words for Weekly Word Study. 

Tuesday

Good memoirs pull together lots of characteristics:  sensory details, thoughts & feelings, setting and characters, actions.  Use the Personal Narrative Organizer to help you collect ideas before you begin writing.  Once you have completed it, start drafting your memoir. 
HOMEWORK:  Read 30 minutes

Wednesday

Good memoirs start with a good lead.  There are techniques that writers use to draw you into a story.  Look over the draft you started yesterday or your sketch from Monday.  Where is the best place to begin?  Craft three different leads that focus on that moment.  Use the examples from your notes to help you.
Homework:  Read 30 minutes

Thursday

Type your three leads in a blog post.  Which lead do you like best?  Why?  Once you have posted your leads, read at least three of your classmates leads.  Give them feedback on which lead you find most invititing.  Keep comments positive.  Ask questions if you want to know more about something. 
HOMEWORK:  Word Study due today.  Three-five pages of writing due today!  Read 30 minutes.  Get your reading log signed.

Friday

You did a great job on your discussions last week, but I want you to do even better.  What does a good discussion look like and sound like?  Brainstorm ideas in your groups.  One thing that good discussions have in common is lots to talk about.  While I check your Reading Logs, gather ideas you want to talk about from the middle section of your memoir:  questions, connections, pictures, important passages, author’s craft. 
HOMEWORK:   Reading Log due TODAY.  Read over the weekend.

September Sky

Here is the new and improved version of my memoir.  What makes this one an effective piece of writing? 

    “Where did I put that stack of papers?” I muttered to myself as I looked for the copies of the handouts I needed to give my first class of the day.  “There they are!” I seemed to always be scrounging at the last minute to find what I needed for class.  When would I ever get organized?

     “Mrs. McGriff, did you hear what happened?  A plane ran into the World Trade Center!”  Josh told me as he came into homeroom that morning. 

     I looked at Josh in disbelief.  “Josh, you can’t believe everything you hear.  That’s how rumors get started.”  I was always amazed at how quickly news traveled around the middle school.  Somehow without radios or televisions, my students seemed to know what had happened as soon as it happened.  Of course, by the time the news made the rounds of the school, it had often changed quite a bit.  I knew from past experience that Josh–like many middle school students–was quick to pass on news, but did not often check the accuracy of what he heard first. 

     Soon homeroom was over, and students in my second period class came into the room.  Small groups of students stood around the desks, talking and laughing befroe beginning the work of the day.  I hastily checked one more time for the handouts on using commas that we would go over in a few minutes. 

     “Hey, Mrs. McGriff, did you hear that a plane ran into the World Trade Center?”  Cory asked just as the bell rang.  Several other students looked at me.

     Oh no, I thought.  Would this story not ever go away today?  But still, Cory was generally a pretty responsible student.  There was only one way to put an end to this and get on with class.

     “All right, class,”  I said.  “Let’s turn on the television.  If something like this really happened, it will be on all the channels.”  I couldn’t imagine an airplane running into the World Trade Center in New York.  It’s not like the pilot couldn’t see them from a long ways off.  And besides, I knew from my experience as a private pilot that small planes couldn’t just ride over New York and buzz the tops of apartment buildings.  With as many airplanes as flew into and out of New York, small planes weren’t even allowed without meeting specific guidelines.  I never imagined someone would deliberately fly an airplane into a building. 

     I turned on the classroom television, hoping to put an end to this latest rumor floating around school.  Little did I know that my whole world was about to change because Josh and Cory had been right.  I stepped back from the television, expecting to see one of the morning talk shows.  Instead, the somber faces of Peter Jennings and other reporters filled the screen.  The classroom grew silent as the reporters related that a plane had crashed into the World Trade Center.

     Over and over again we watched the video play of the second airplane crashing into the other tower.  Plumes of white smoke poured into the bright blue sky.  I struggled to grasp the enormity of what had happened.  Before our eyes first one tower collapsed and then the other.  There was no hope for the people left inside.  The twin towers had their own zip code.  How many thousands of people were killed when the towers crashed?  What was it like for the people on the plane, knowing that they were going to crash into a building?  Did they know what was coming?  Not even the news reporters seemed sure of what was going on.  I could not get my mind around the fact that terrorists had hijacked two, three, four airplanes and deliberately crashed them into buildings.  Every time I thought of what it must have been like for the passengers on those planes, my mind ran into a brick wall.  It couldn’t be possible.

    Fear began to fill the room as other news reports filtered in.  A plane had struck the Pentagon in Washington.  Another plane was headed for the White House.  A plane crashed in Pennsylvania.  All airplanes had been ordered to land at the nearest airport.  Where was my brother?  He was a flight attendant for Delta.  Had he been working on one of the planes that crashed?

     Several students began to cry.  I looked around the classroom.  My students’ faces reflected the questions in my own mind.  I was the teacher.  I was supposed to have the answers to their questions, to know how to lead them through this crisis.  But I didn’t have the answers.  I didn’t know what to do.  All I had was more questions.  Could I cry in front of my students?  How could I listen to their questions when my mind was racing with unanswered questions of my own?  I struggled to think of what to tell them could help them cope with what was happening.

     All through the rest of the day, I watched news reports with my classes.  I still didn’t have any answers to their or my questions.  I still don’t have answers today.  I don’t know why anyone would hate our country so much that they would be willing to die and to kill so many innocent people.  As I seek to find a sense of peace and safety in a world that has been changed forever, I echo the prayer my daughter repeated before dinner each night for months after this day:  God please be with the people on the airplane and in the building.

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