The Giver Curriculum Unit

$24.99

span style=”font-size: medium;”Performance Outcomes and Deliverables/spanStudents write journals, letters, and persuasive essays; study the novel’s emphasis on precise language; participate in cooperative learning activities; and complete vocabulary exercises. They also examine themes, reenact a pivotal scene in the novel, and react to the conclusion of the novel.The final lesson includes a two-part assessment with quotation analysis and essay questions. Supplementary materials feature optional activities. Unit includes 10 Lesson Plans, 35 Handouts, 68 Pages. Grades 6-9, middle schooldivp style=”text-align: left;” align=”center”strong style=”text-align: left;”br /p style=”text-align: left;” align=”center”span style=”font-size: large;”strong style=”text-align: left;”Literary Form/span/divAmerican Novelspan style=”font-size: large;”21st-Century Skills/spanCollaborationCritical thinkingInitiative and self-directionProductivity and accountabilityspan style=”font-size: large;”Overview/spanSet in a futuristic utopia, The Giver/em points to the possible dangers of government control and the pursuit of perfect individuals and a perfect lifestyle. The novel tells of a journey into a society that has overcome social ills including hunger, crime, divorce, and racism. The social ills, however, are addressed by an inhumane system of punishment, and limited freedom. Jonas, the main character, serves in the capacity of bearing the memories of past generations. After he has received the memories, full of emotion and color, Jonas is unable to return to the emotionless society. The novel promotes freedom of thought and action.

SKU: 1216525484 Category:

Description

span style=”font-size: medium;”Performance Outcomes and Deliverables/spanStudents write journals, letters, and persuasive essays; study the novel’s emphasis on precise language; participate in cooperative learning activities; and complete vocabulary exercises. They also examine themes, reenact a pivotal scene in the novel, and react to the conclusion of the novel.The final lesson includes a two-part assessment with quotation analysis and essay questions. Supplementary materials feature optional activities. Unit includes 10 Lesson Plans, 35 Handouts, 68 Pages. Grades 6-9, middle schooldivp style=”text-align: left;” align=”center”strong style=”text-align: left;”br /p style=”text-align: left;” align=”center”span style=”font-size: large;”strong style=”text-align: left;”Literary Form/span/divAmerican Novelspan style=”font-size: large;”21st-Century Skills/spanCollaborationCritical thinkingInitiative and self-directionProductivity and accountabilityspan style=”font-size: large;”Overview/spanSet in a futuristic utopia, The Giver/em points to the possible dangers of government control and the pursuit of perfect individuals and a perfect lifestyle. The novel tells of a journey into a society that has overcome social ills including hunger, crime, divorce, and racism. The social ills, however, are addressed by an inhumane system of punishment, and limited freedom. Jonas, the main character, serves in the capacity of bearing the memories of past generations. After he has received the memories, full of emotion and color, Jonas is unable to return to the emotionless society. The novel promotes freedom of thought and action.