Curriculum / ELA / 10th Grade / Unit 5: Reading as Resistance: Reading Lolita in Tehran / Lesson 26
ELA
Unit 5
10th Grade
Lesson 26 of 29
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Brainstorm ideas for a personal narrative essay and complete a graphic organizer for the chosen topic.
Resource: Personal Narrative Brainstorm Graphic Organizer (G10, U5, L26)
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Tasks that represents the peak thinking of the lesson - mastery will indicate whether or not objective was achieved.
Complete the graphic organizer for your personal narrative essay topic in preparation for the following prompt:
You and your classmates have just finished reading Azar Nafisi's memoir Reading Lolita in Tehran in which she recounts her experiences living and teaching in Tehran during and after the Iranian revolution as well as the experiences of her female students in the reading group. Drawing inspiration from Nafisi, you will embark on your own journey of storytelling and reflection by crafting a personal narrative around a significant moment in your life.
Choose one of the following prompts to respond to:
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Suggestions for teachers to help them teach this lesson
Be sure to tell students that during the writing process and for a final peer review, they will be sharing their personal narratives with their classmates. Knowing this, students should choose a moment that they would feel comfortable with having a peer read and provide feedback on. Also, tell students that they will have the option to choose their peer reviewer so that it is someone they are comfortable with reading their personal piece of writing.
Reading and/or task to be completed at home in preparation for the next lesson.
Finish your Personal Narrative Brainstorm Graphic Organizer if you need more time.
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W.9-10.4 — Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization, and style are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience.
Standards that are practiced daily but are not priority standards of the unit
W.9-10.3 — Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, well-chosen details, and well-structured event sequences.
W.9-10.5 — Develop and strengthen writing as needed by planning, revising, editing, rewriting, or trying a new approach, focusing on addressing what is most significant for a specific purpose and audience.
W.9-10.10 — Write routinely over extended time frames (time for research, reflection, and revision) and shorter time frames (a single sitting or a day or two) for a range of discipline-specific tasks, purposes, and audiences.
Next
Complete an outline for a personal narrative.
Develop questions for a research topic, gather and evaluate the credibility of sources, and begin to take notes for research.
Standards
W.9-10.7W.9-10.8
Create an outline for a slideshow presentation.
W.9-10.5W.9-10.8
Design and build an information slideshow presentation, complete with clear bullet points images, and a written paragraph in the speaker notes.
SL.9-10.4SL.9-10.5W.9-10.2W.9-10.2.aW.9-10.2.bW.9-10.2.cW.9-10.6
Build background knowledge about the Iranian Revolution in preparation for Reading Lolita in Tehran.
RI.9-10.2SL.9-10.1
Analyze how Nafisi opens her memoir and what events led her to create a reading group.
RI.9-10.3RI.9-10.5
Analyze how certain events and anecdotes further develop Nafiisi's ideas about life in Tehran.
RI.9-10.3RI.9-10.4
Analyze how the reading group develops Nafisi's ideas about insubordination.
RI.9-10.3RI.9-10.4RI.9-10.5
Analyze Rushdie's purpose and rhetorical choices in his essay "On Censorship."
RI.9-10.2RI.9-10.4RI.9-10.6
Analyze the impact of the reading group on the girls' identities and how that relates to Nafisi's theme of individuality.
RI.9-10.2RI.9-10.3RI.9-10.5
Study a mentor text and plan a scene in which you describe your journey from school to home.
RI.9-10.4RI.9-10.5W.9-10.3
Write a scene describing your journey from school to home using Nafisi's structure as well as descriptive details, figurative language, and other stylistic elements.
W.9-10.3
Analyze how and why Nafisi uses flashbacks to structure her memoir.
Analyze the shifting mood of the revolution and how it impacts life at the university.
RI.9-10.2RI.9-10.3
Analyze Lorraine Ali's purpose in her article "Behind the Veil."
RI.9-10.4RI.9-10.6
Analyze how the Gatsby trial further develops Nafisi's theme about the importance of literature.
RI.9-10.2RI.9-10.6
Analyze how individuals show resistance to the government's cultural revolution as it impacts the University of Tehran.
RI.9-10.2RI.9-10.3RI.9-10.4RI.9-10.5
Analyze how Nafisi grapples with the moral dilemma of complying with wearing the veil to return to teaching.
Analyze how Nafisi develops the theme of the importance of art to individuals and to a community.
RI.9-10.2RI.9-10.5
Analyze how Rumi conveys meaning through imagery and figurative language.
L.9-10.5RL.9-10.2RL.9-10.4SL.9-10.1
Analyze the role of imagination and courage in our relationship to others and our society.
Analyze the mood and structure at the start of Part 4.
RI.9-10.2RI.9-10.4RI.9-10.5
Write a short descriptive scene that establishes mood through diction and imagery.
RI.9-10.4W.9-10.3
Analyze the internal and external conflicts the women and Nafisi face over the decision to leave Iran.
Analyze how the final anecdotes of the memoir develop Nafisi's themes about choice, freedom, and fiction.
Engage in a Socratic seminar about Reading Lolita in Tehran by supporting arguments with strong textual evidence.
SL.9-10.1SL.9-10.1.aSL.9-10.1.bSL.9-10.1.cSL.9-10.1.dSL.9-10.4
W.9-10.4
W.9-10.4W.9-10.5
Complete a draft of a personal narrative.
W.9-10.3.aW.9-10.3.bW.9-10.3.cW.9-10.3.dW.9-10.5
Provide feedback on a classmate's personal narrative and revise one's own personal narrative using suggestions from a peer review.
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