- I can determine a central idea and analyze its development over the course of a text about Japanese American internment. (RI.8.2)
- I can analyze how the authors' point of view is conveyed and differs from other points of view in a text about Japanese American internment. (RI.8.6)
Focus Standards: These are the standards the instruction addresses.
- RI.8.1, RI.8.2, 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.8.4, RI.8.10, W.8.10, L.8.4
Daily Learning Targets
Ongoing Assessment
- Opening A: Entrance Ticket: Unit 3, Lesson 1 (RI.8.1)
- Work Time A: "Seeking Redress" annotations (RI.8.2, RI.8.6)
- Work Time B: "The Simplest Lesson of Internment" annotations (RI.8.6)
Agenda
Agenda | Teaching Notes |
---|---|
1. Opening A. Engage the Learner - RI.8.1 (5 minutes) 2. Work Time A. Read and Annotate "Seeking Redress" - RI.8.2, RI.8.6 (20 minutes) B. Read and Annotate "The Simplest Lesson of Internment" - RI.8.6 (15 minutes) 3. Closing and Assessment A. Reflection (5 minutes) 4. Homework A. Analyze Connections and Distinctions: Students analyze how the articles read in class make connections and distinctions among individuals, ideas, and events as compared to Farewell to Manzanar to complete Homework: Connections and Distinctions across Texts. B. Independent Research Reading: Students read for at least 20 minutes in their independent research reading text. Then they select a prompt and write a response in their independent reading journal. |
Alignment to Assessment Standards and Purpose of Lesson
My name is _______, and I am a Grade 8 ELA instructor at _______. My students have been studying Japanese American internment, focusing on the overarching lessons, or enduring understandings, that can be learned from this dark time in history. These lessons include “Upholding the rights of other human beings is critical work” and “It is wrong to view entire populations as homogeneous.” Now, we turn to their own community. In groups, students will conduct research about local organizations that, in their own way and with their own target populations, embody these enduring understandings and contribute to a better world. I am writing to see if you or someone from your organization might be available for a phone interview with one of these groups of eighth-graders. They will ask you questions about the work your organization does and how it connects to these enduring understandings that they have identified. Students will be conducting some of their own research into local organizations, but I am hoping to make a few prevetted organizations available to them, including yours. If students were to call, it would be on _______ [date] at around _______ [time]. The interview should take no more than 5 minutes. Students will then use your answers to participate in a class discussion about the best ways to apply these lessons to activist work in their own community. Please let me know if you (or someone in your organization) are available to be an interviewee for a group of students. Thank you!
Opportunities to Extend Learning
How It Builds on Previous Work
Support All Students
Assessment Guidance
Down the Road
|
In Advance
- Prepare:
- Text: "Seeking Redress"
- Text: "The Simplest Lesson of Internment"
- Ensure there is a copy of Entrance Ticket: Unit 3, Lesson 1 at each student's workspace.
- A think-aloud is used in Work Time A of this lesson. Rehearse the think-aloud, emphasizing the steps that are likely to be most challenging for students, to sound natural and reflect the actual metacognitive process in which students will engage.
- Review the student tasks and example answers to get familiar with what students will be required to do in the lesson. Consider annotating both articles, "Seeking Redress" and "The Simplest Lesson of Internment," in preparation for guiding students in annotation.
- Post the learning targets and applicable anchor charts (see Materials list).
Tech and Multimedia
- Continue to use the technology tools recommended throughout previous modules to create anchor charts to share with families; to record students as they participate in discussions and protocols to review with students later and to share with families; and for students to listen to and annotate text, record ideas on note-catchers, and word-process writing.
Supporting English Language Learners
Supports guided in part by CA ELD Standards 8.I.B.6, 8.I.B.8, 8.II.A.1, and 8.II.A.2.
Important Points in the Lesson Itself
- To support ELLs, this lesson supports students in understanding an informational text about the Japanese American internment redress movement and lessons from Japanese American internment. Students engage in supported in-class reading, guided annotation work, and collaborative exchanges. The sequence of the lesson follows a gradual-release approach in which students annotate a text together and then work more independently to annotate a second text. Work in this lesson helps to prepare students for the Mid-Unit 3 Assessment, in which they will discuss lessons from Japanese American internment; time to reflect in the closing of the lessons invites students to make connections between the articles they read in this lesson and the module topic.
- ELLs may find it challenging to navigate the information in the texts in this lesson and to annotate these texts effectively within a short period of time. Some students may need heavier support with annotating the texts. Consider using home language grouping in this lesson to allow for rich exchanges around the ideas and information presented in the text to help ELLs comprehend the information.
Vocabulary
- annotate (A)
- concentration camp, pilgrimage, redress, reparations, wartime hysteria (DS)
Key
(A): Academic Vocabulary
(DS): Domain-Specific Vocabulary
Materials from Previous Lessons
Teacher
Student
- Academic word wall (one for display; from Module 1, Unit 1, Lesson 2, Opening A)
- Close Readers Do These Things anchor chart (one for display; from Module 1, Unit 1, Lesson 4, Opening B)
- Domain-specific word wall (one for display; from Module 1, Unit 1, Lesson 2, Opening A)
- Equity sticks (from Module 1, Unit 1, Lesson 1, Opening A)
- Vocabulary logs (one per student; from Module 1, Unit 1, Lesson 2, Opening A)
- Independent reading journal (one per student; begun in Module 1, Unit 1, Lesson 6, Work Time B)
New Materials
Teacher
Student
- Entrance Ticket: Unit 3, Lesson 1 (example for teacher reference)
- Homework: Connections and Distinctions across Texts (example for teacher reference) (see Homework Resources)
- Entrance Ticket: Unit 3, Lesson 1 (one per student)
- Text: "Seeking Redress" (one per student and one for display)
- Text: "The Simplest Lesson of Internment" (one per student and one for display)
- Homework: Connections and Distinctions across Texts (one per student; see Homework Resources)
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 |
---|
A. Engage the Learner - RI.8.1 (5 minutes)
"What root word do you see in the word annotate?" (note) "When we annotate a text, what do we do to it?" (We add notes and comments to it.) "Why can it be helpful to take the time to annotate a text?" (Taking notes on a text helps us engage with the text and see what we understand and what we have questions about.)
|
Work Time
Work Time | Levels of Support |
---|---|
A. Read and Annotate "Seeking Redress" - RI.8.2, RI.8.6 (20 minutes)
"I can determine a central idea and analyze its development over the course of a text about Japanese American internment." "I can analyze how the authors' point of view is conveyed and differs from other points of view in a text about Japanese American internment."
"What habits of character do you need to exhibit to be successful in this activity?" (Responses will vary, but may include: respect, collaboration, initiative, and responsibility.)
"What would you say is the central idea of this text?" (Responses will vary, but may include: the US government finally did take some steps to both acknowledge the wrongs committed against and compensate people of Japanese descent who were unjustly incarcerated.)
"According to your annotations, what would you say is the author's point of view toward internment? Toward the redress actions undertaken? What evidence from the article shows this point of view?" (Responses will vary, but may include: The author's point of view toward internment is that the incarceration was a grave injustice, using words like "suffering" (1) and "ordeal of imprisonment" (5); the author's point of view toward the redress actions seems to be that they were an important step, but that in some ways it was too little and too late, showing the perspective of some Japanese Americans: "They argued that no amount of money could heal the ordeal of imprisonment during World War Two" (5). The author also suggests a link toward the kinds of attitudes that permitted the incarceration in concentration camps to some current attitudes toward other groups of people in the United States: "They speak out in defense of other minorities that have come under attack. That includes American Muslims since 9/11 and other immigrant groups in the era of Donald Trump" (9).) "According to your annotations, how does the author differentiate between their point of view and other points of view?" (Responses will vary, but may include: the author indicates that some people thought redress movements would increase anti-Japanese sentiment.)
|
For Lighter Support
For Heavier Support
|
B. Read and Annotate "The Simplest Lesson of Internment" - RI.8.6 (15 minutes)
|
For Lighter Support
For Heavier Support
|
Closing & Assessments
Closing |
---|
A. Reflection (5 minutes)
"What do these two texts add to your understanding of our module topic?" (Responses will vary.)
|
Homework
Homework |
---|
A. Analyze Connections and Distinctions
B. Independent Research Reading
|
Copyright © 2013-2024 by EL Education, New York, NY.