10Th Grade Ela

10Th Grade Ela

10TH GRADE ELA Week of: APRIL 13TH WICHITA PUBLIC SCHOOLS 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th Grades Your child should spend up to 90 minutes over the course of each day on this packet. Consider other family-friendly activities during the day such as: Review your learning or Have a time each day to Make a stop motion movie Problem solve something by learn something new from have a family meeting to with a free stop motion app. fixing or organizing. Khan Academy discuss concerns and notice each other's kindness. Play and make music just Mindful Minute: Take 3 deep Read a historical document Reflect and discuss What search for Chrome Music breathes and focus on the at archives.gov/historical- choices have been made by Lab sounds in the room. docs others that have changed your life since spring break? *All activities are optional. Parents/Guardians please practice responsibility, safety, and supervision. For students with an Individualized Education Program (IEP) who need additional support, Parents/Guardians can refer to the Specialized Instruction and Supports webpage, contact their child’s IEP manager, and/or speak to the special education provider when you are contacted by them. Contact the IEP manager by emailing them directly or by contacting the school. The Specialized Instruction and Supports webpage can be accessed by clicking HERE or by navigating in a web browser to https://www.usd259.org/Page/17540 WICHITA PUBLIC SCHOOLS CONTINUOUS LEARNING HOTLINE AVAILABLE 316-973-4443 MARCH 30 – MAY 21, 2020 MONDAY – FRIDAY 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM ONLY For Multilingual Education Services (MES) support, please call (316) 866-8000 (Spanish and Proprio) or (316) 866-8003 (Vietnamese). The Wichita Public Schools does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, age, veteran status or other legally protected classifications in its programs and activities. 10th Grade English Language Arts Packet Schedule: Week 2 Day 1: 656‐659 Day 2: 660‐662 Day 3: 663‐665 Day 4: 666‐669 Day 5: 670‐672 Narrative (nerәdiv) Collaborate (kәˈlabәˌrāt) Strongholds (strôNGˌhōld) A spoken or written story: Work together on an activity, to A place that has been fortified to produce something. protect it against attack. Reemerge ( re‐ih‐murj ) Amphitheatre (‐am‐fuh‐thee‐ Sophisticated(sәˈfistәˌkādәd) uh‐ter) To come forth or rise open circular or oval building Showing a high level of worldly again. surrounded by seats for the experience and knowledge of presentation fashion and culture. Read Aloud Accommodations are available on the specialized instruction and supports website referenced at the beginning of this packet. ANCHOR TEXT | DRAMA Oedipus the King PART II PART II Sophocles ō translated by Nicholas Rudall SCAN FOR MULTIMEDIA Chorus. Let me walk humble in the paths of righteousness. Let my life be simple and full of awe for things divine. NOTES Let my tongue be free of arrogance. Let me never seek too much. 1. Oblivion (uh BLIHV ee uhn) n. 5 For the gods live high in their imperial grace. condition of being entirely We alone are frail and mortal. HQTIQVVGPGURGEKCNN[KP|FGCVJ They live forever. Oblivion1 will not cloud Their everlasting power. A tyrant is born from a womb of arrogance. CLOSE READ 10 And insolence grows fat, ANNOTATE: In lines 1–14, mark Fed by empty riches. FGVCKNUTGNCVGFVQJWOKNKV[/CTM He scales the dizzying cliffs and grasps the crown. QVJGTFGVCKNUTGNCVGFVQGZEGUUKXG RTKFG But then his foot falters, falters, And he will fall, fall and lie crumpled in the dust. QUESTION:9J[FQGUVJG 15 May the gods protect the man RNC[YTKIJVKPENWFGVJGUG Who loves his country, TGOKPFGTUQHFKXKPGRQYGTCPF JWOCPHTCKNV[! Burns with the flame Of his love for the state. CONCLUDE:*QYFQVJG EQPEGRVURTGUGPVGFKPVJKU God is my eternal hope. URGGEJUGVWRCEQPVGZVHQTVJG 20 In god I trust. In god I wait for death. TGUVQHVJGRNC[oUCEVKQP! © Pearson Education, Inc., or its affiliates. All rights reserved. or its affiliates. Inc., Education, © Pearson But the proud man, The man who spits in the face of justice, The man who scorns the altars of the gods, That man will lose his empty dreams in the whirlwind of god’s fire. 25 Greed will cut him down. 1GFKRWUVJG-KPI2CTV++ 703 For he will never freely touch the divine NOTES With hands that are sullied with money. God’s lightning will strike, Strike the arrogant, strike the sinner. 30 In cities where there is no chorus That will sing god’s truth, Fools will ever honor the wicked. No more will I seek the mystery Buried in the earth’s deep core. 2. Elis (EE lihs) renowned Greek 35 No more will I respect Delphi, Elis,2 or Olympus3 city-state. If god’s truth is not fulfilled on earth. 3. Olympus (uh LIHM puhs) Greek mountain believed to be the O Zeus, reveal your power! throne of the gods and the O king, O lord of all, if that be true, location of their palaces. Reveal your eternal power to us! 40 The prophecies of Laius wither And they die. Apollo is forsaken. Faith and reverence are no more. (enter Jocasta) Jocasta. My lords of Thebes, I have come here with wreaths and incense to visit the shrines of the gods. 45 Oedipus is deeply troubled, haunted by images of terror. He will not trust his reason as before. The new prophecies frighten him as did the old. He listens to anyone who speaks of disaster for our house. Nothing I say will comfort him, and so I turn to you, Lord 50 Apollo, since you are closest to our grief. I bring my prayers and petitions to you. Grant us deliverance from this curse. 4. helmsman (HEHLMZ muhn) n. We are like sailors in a storm when they see their helmsman’s4 person who steers a boat. terror. 55 Oh help us, lord! (enter Messenger) Messenger. Friends, can you direct me to the palace of the king, or better yet to the king himself? Chorus. This is his palace. The king is inside. This is his wife, the mother of his children. 60 Messenger. May the gods bless her and all her house and bring happiness to everyone. Jocasta. Greetings to you! Your kind words deserve a kind reply. Why have you come? What is your news? Messenger. It is good both for the king and the royal house. © Pearson Education, Inc., or its affiliates. All rights reserved. or its affiliates. Inc., Education, © Pearson 65 Jocasta. Then speak. Who sent you? Messenger. I come from Corinth. The words I bring may bring you joy . though they are not without some pain. 704 70+6r$.+0&0'55#0&5+)*6 Jocasta. What is it? How can there be both joy and pain? NOTES Messenger. The people of Corinth have resolved to make 70 Oedipus their king. Jocasta. Is not the aged Polybus still king? Messenger. No, my lady, he is dead and in his grave. Jocasta. The father of Oedipus is dead? Messenger. If I tell a lie may I die myself. 75 Jocasta. Quick! Take this news to my lord. You oracles of the gods, where are you now? oracles (AWR uh kuhlz) Oedipus spent his life running from his father. He was in terror n. people who deliver messages from the gods that he would kill him. And now not his son’s hand but the hand of fate has cut him down. (enter Oedipus) 80 Oedipus. My queen, Jocasta, why have you summoned me from the palace? Jocasta. Hear this man, and as he speaks think of what has become of the solemn prophecies! Oedipus. Who is he? What is his news? 85 Jocasta. He has come from Corinth, and his news is this: Your father, Polybus, is dead. Oedipus. What? Let me hear it, stranger, from your mouth. Messenger. It cannot be said more plainly. Polybus is dead. Oedipus. Did he die by treachery or from disease? 90 Messenger. It takes so little to send an old man to his rest. Oedipus. Then the poor man died of sickness. Messenger. Yes. He had lived a long life. Oedipus. Ha! Oh my wife, where are the oracles now? Why believe in the screams of whirling birds? 95 The Delphic god5 had sworn that I would kill my father. 5. Delphic (DEHL fihk) god Apollo, But he is dead and in his grave! And here I stand, I never drew whose temple was in the Greek city of Delphi. my sword. Perhaps they might argue that he died of grief for his long absent son. 100 But only in that sense could I have killed him. But no . the oracles are dead. Like Polybus, their words are turned to dust. Jocasta. Did I not say that this is how it would be? Oedipus. You did. But my own fear betrayed me. © Pearson Education, Inc., or its affiliates. All rights reserved. or its affiliates. Inc., Education, © Pearson 105 Jocasta. Then never think on it again! Oedipus. But yet . I am afraid of my mother’s bed. Jocasta. You are a mere man . the plaything of fate. You cannot know the future. Oedipus the King, Part II 705 So why be afraid? Live your life from day to day. Have no more NOTES 110 cares. Do not fear this marriage with your mother. How many times have men lain with their mother in their dreams! If you have sense in that head of yours, you will not be troubled by such thoughts. 115 Oedipus. I want to be as confident as you. But my mother is still alive. And so I harbor still some fear.

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