- I can analyze how the connections among and distinctions between individuals, events, and ideas in Farewell to Manzanar convey significant ideas and develop my understanding of the text. (RI.8.3)
- I can analyze how the authors' point of view is conveyed in chapter 22 of Farewell to Manzanar. (RI.8.6)
Focus Standards: These are the standards the instruction addresses.
- RI.8.3, RI.8.6
Supporting Standards: These are the standards that are incidental—no direct instruction in this lesson, but practice of these standards occurs as a result of addressing the focus standards.
- RI.8.1, RI.8.10, W.8.10
Daily Learning Targets
Ongoing Assessment
- Work Time A: Gist on sticky note
- Work Time B: Connections and Distinctions: Farewell to Manzanar note-catcher (RI.8.3)
- Closing and Assessment A: Exit Ticket: Unit 2, Lesson 8 (W.8.10)
Agenda
Agenda | Teaching Notes |
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1. Opening A. Engage the Learner - RI.8.3 (10 minutes) 2. Work Time A. Read Farewell to Manzanar, Chapter 22 and Afterword - RI.8.6 (20 minutes) B. Analyze Significant Ideas: Farewell to Manzanar - RI.8.3 (10 minutes) 3. Closing and Assessment A. Exit Ticket - W.8.10 (5 minutes) 4. Homework A. Prepare for Farewell to Manzanar Film Viewing: Students preview the prompts for Film Segment 4 on their Compare Text to Film: Farewell to Manzanar note-catcher and skim chapters 8, 11, 13, 14, 15, 17, and 22 of Farewell to Manzanar to be better able to analyze how effectively the film conveys moments in Film Segment 4. |
Alignment to Assessment Standards and Purpose of Lesson
Opportunities to Extend Learning
How It Builds on Previous Work
Support All Students
Assessment Guidance
Down the Road
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In Advance
- Prepare Exit Ticket: Unit 2, Lesson 8.
- Review Farewell to Manzanar, the rest of chapter 22 and the afterword; the Gist: Farewell to Manzanar anchor chart; and the Text Guide: Farewell to Manzanar to identify potentially challenging vocabulary or plot points and become familiar with important content students discuss in the lesson.
- Post the learning targets and applicable anchor charts (see Materials list).
Tech and Multimedia
- Work Time A: Students may use the audio version of Farewell to Manzanar, if available, to support their comprehension.
- Work Time B: Students may complete their note-catchers using an online word-processing platform such as http://eled.org/0158.
Supporting English Language Learners
Supports guided in part by CA ELD Standards 8.I.B.6, 8.II.A.1, and 8.II.A.2.
Important Points in the Lesson Itself
- To support ELLs, this lesson supports students in reading the final chapters of Farewell to Manzanar and to continue to track connections and distinctions and significant ideas in the text. In the Closing and Assessment of the lesson, students are given a choice of QuickWrite prompts designed to help them reflect on the experience of reading the text. This work supports students in synthesizing their learning through a complex text and serves to prepare them for the work ahead in the second half of the unit, in which they will write a literary argument essay that centers on how the film adaptation of Farewell to Manzanar conveys a significant idea from the text.
- ELLs may find it challenging to answer the open-ended questions during the QuickWrite exit ticket in the Closing and Assessment of the lesson. As time allows, build in space for discussion of each point before students write. This will help ELLs to formulate their ideas before writing and to carefully choose the question they would like to respond to. Meanwhile, it will also offer students a chance to consider their classmates' perspectives to enrich their thinking.
Vocabulary
- defiance, gaiety, placator, rekindled, reprisal, resonance (A)
Key
(A): Academic Vocabulary
(DS): Domain-Specific Vocabulary
Materials from Previous Lessons
Teacher
Student
- Significant Ideas anchor chart (example for teacher reference) (from Module 4, Unit 1, Lesson 3, Opening A)
- Significant Ideas anchor chart (one for display; from Module 4, Unit 1, Lesson 3, Opening A)
- Equity sticks (from Module 1, Unit 1, Lesson 1, Opening A)
- Text Guide: Farewell to Manzanar (for teacher reference) (from Module 4, Unit 1, Lesson 2, Work Time A)
- Gist: Farewell to Manzanar anchor chart (example for teacher reference) (from Module 4, Unit 1, Lesson 2, Work Time A)
- Gist: Farewell to Manzanar anchor chart (one for display; from Module 4, Unit 1, Lesson 2, Work Time A)
- Work to Become Ethical People anchor chart (one for display; from Module 1, Unit 1, Lesson 1, Work Time D)
- Academic word wall (one for display; from Module 1, Unit 1, Lesson 2, Opening A)
- Farewell to Manzanar (text; one per student; from Module 4, Unit 1, Lesson 2, Work Time A)
- Vocabulary logs (one per student; from Module 1, Unit 1, Lesson 2, Opening A)
- Connections and Distinctions: Farewell to Manzanar note-catcher (one per student; from Module 4, Unit 1, Lesson 2, Work Time B)
- Compare Text to Film: Farewell to Manzanar note-catcher (one per student; from Module 4, Unit 1, Lesson 4, Work Time A)
New Materials
Teacher
Student
- N/A
- Sticky note (one per student)
- Synopsis: Farewell to Manzanar, Chapter 22 and Afterword (one per student)
- Exit Ticket: Unit 2, Lesson 8 (one per student)
Assessment
Each unit in the 6-8 Language Arts Curriculum has two standards-based assessments built in, one mid-unit assessment and one end of unit assessment. The module concludes with a performance task at the end of Unit 3 to synthesize students' understanding of what they accomplished through supported, standards-based writing.
Opening
Opening |
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A. Engage the Learner - RI.8.3 (10 minutes)
"Based on your work in the Mid-Unit 2 Assessment with the epigraph and excerpt of chapter 22, what significant ideas are conveyed by the distinctions and connections and by other understandings from the text? What do we need to add to our anchor chart, either as new significant ideas or as evidence for significant ideas we have already identified?" (Jeanne's family found solace and the strength to survive by turning to nature and its lessons of endurance and patience; Jeanne's youth impacts her understanding of events in the text; the effects and impact of being interned were experienced long after the closing of and departure from the camps.)
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Work Time
Work Time | Levels of Support |
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A. Read Farewell to Manzanar, Chapter 22 and Afterword - RI.8.6 (20 minutes)
"I can analyze how the authors' point of view is conveyed in Chapter 22 of Farewell to Manzanar."
"What is the gist of chapter 22?" (As an adult, Jeanne struggled to talk about Manzanar; when she does talk and visit the camp ruins, she can say farewell to the painful memories.) "What is the gist of the afterword?" (According to the authors, the book relates to many readers for many reasons over the years: to Americans processing WWII in the '70s, to children or grandchildren of immigrants and marginalized young adults processing their experience in America, and to people processing the terrorist attacks of September 11.)
"What is Jeanne's point of view toward her father as conveyed by the final memory she shares at the end of chapter 22?" (Responses may vary, but will likely include: Jeanne seems to have a more positive point of view toward her father than she did during the rest of their time in camp. She sees a spark of rebellion and life in him that she hadn't seen for a long time, and she seems to suggest this was an important moment for him, for her and her ambivalence about her identity, and for them as a family.) "Jeanne has felt deep ambivalence about Papa throughout the book. How does she resolve those feelings here at the end of her story?" (Responses will vary, but may include: as shown in the moment when he drives drunk and "crazy" around the camp, Jeanne still sees her father's flaws, but she recognizes his strengths, too, as she begins to feel some of his "bubbly sense of liberation" in his defiance of the imprisonment.) "Why do you think the Houstons chose to end the book in this way?" (Responses will vary, but may include: resolving Jeanne's ambivalence or showing a positive side to her father at the end of the book allows the Houstons to reinforce the significant ideas that internment changed her father and impacted her long after they left the camp, and yet the Wakatsukis survived and live on to retell this story so that others may learn about this dark time in history and its effects.) "What is Jeanne's point of view toward the modern world as conveyed in the afterword?" (Responses may vary, but will likely include: Jeanne seems to be ambivalent about the world she lives in as an adult. On the one hand, she sees signs of hope that the injustice experienced by Japanese Americans by being incarcerated might not be repeated. On the other hand, the events of 9/11 suggested there is the same fear and hatred just below the surface of modern life.)
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For Lighter Support
For Heavier Support
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B. Analyze Significant Ideas: Farewell to Manzanar - RI.8.3 (10 minutes)
"I can analyze how the connections among and distinctions between individuals, events, and ideas in Farewell to Manzanar convey significant ideas and develop my understanding of the text."
"What significant ideas are conveyed in chapter 22 and the afterword? How are they conveyed? What details from the text convey those ideas?" (Responses will vary, but may include: The effects and impact of being interned were experienced long after the closing of and departure from the camps, which is conveyed by details such as Jeanne took "twenty years to accumulate the confidence to deal with" her internment experiences [167] and still she knows that "the traces that remained would always remain, like a needle" [177]. Jeanne's family found solace and the strength to survive by turning to nature and its lessons of endurance and patience, which is conveyed by details such as Jeanne finding strength from the stones that people used to decorate their living spaces while imprisoned in Manzanar. The idea of internment was created out of dangerous and unsupported assumptions, which is conveyed by the details in the afterword about the connection between the causes of internment [dangerous and unsupported assumptions as well as fear and hatred] and many people's response to the terrorist attacks of 9/11 [to blame all Muslim Americans for the act of a few non-Americans].)
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For Lighter Support
For Heavier Support
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Closing & Assessments
Closing |
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A. Exit Ticket - W.8.10 (5 minutes)
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Homework
Homework |
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A. Prepare for Farewell to Manzanar Film Viewing
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