10/17/14 Do Now: -Take out your homework -Take out your character map packet Homework: Study for the quiz Monday. (Vocab and chapters 4-6) Dialectical.

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10/17/14 Do Now: -Take out your homework -Take out your character map packet Homework: Study for the quiz Monday. (Vocab and chapters 4-6) Dialectical Journal for chapters 5- 6 due Sunday 10/19 by 11:59pm. Content Objective: Content Objective: Students will track the major characters traits and connections in order to understand their function in the novel. Students will also review the most important things to know about chapters 4-6. Language Objective: Students will record their textual evidence and analysis on the graphic organizer provided.

Today’s Agenda: Review Homework Complete Character Map and chapter 4-6 study guide. Looking Ahead: Today: Yesterday Dialectical Journal study Today: Chapter 6 Review Sunday: Dialectical Journal Chapters 5-6 Due. Monday: Quiz on Chapters 4-6 and 4-6 Vocab.

"Platonic" refers to Plato's idealistic belief that the "perceptible world is an illusory shadow of some higher realm of transcendent Ideas or Forms." "Perceptible" means what is perceived, what is seen, and "transcendent" is a surpassing of usual limits; exceeding beyond usual human limits. So Plato believed that the world we see was just an illusion, a shadow, of some idea or form beyond what we see. So Gatsby's persona was created from his platonic view of himself: his view that his love for Daisy was more than normal, that it was transcendent, that it surpassed and exceeded usual human limits. He created himself, his image, his reputation, his plan to win Daisy back, etc., out of a belief that his love was special, and that the love between himself and Daisy was special.

English 11Name: BrillDate: Period: The Great Gatsby Character Map Directions: As you read the novel, The Great Gatsby, track the major characters. For each: Identify character traits that would describe the character Prove the traits you choose with evidence from the text (this can just be a small portion of a quote with a page number to reference) Explain the character’s connection to other characters Define the character’s function. In other words, explain Fitzgerald's purpose for including the character in the story Create a symbol that would represent the character

CharacterTraitsEvidence Connection to Gatsby FunctionSymbol Nick Carraway Jay Gatsby Tom Buchanan Daisy Buchanan Jordan Baker English 11Name: BrillDate: Period: The Great Gatsby Character Map

CharacterTraitsEvidence Connection to Gatsby FunctionSymbol Myrtle Wilson George Wilson The “Owl-eyed man” Meyer Wolfsheim Klipspringer

Directions: using the list of characters below, create a web that organizes the characters and explains their relationships. Nick Carraway, Jay Gatsby, Tom Buchanan, Daisy Buchanan, Myrtle Wilson, George Wilson, Jordan Baker, The “Owl-Eyed Man”, Meyer Wolfsheim, and Klipspringer.

CharacterTraitsEvidence Connection to Gatsby FunctionSymbol Dan Cody Chapter 4: Summary of the chapter: What are the five most important things to know about this chapter (Characters, plot points, themes, symbols, etc.)? And why are they important? Chapter 5: Summary of the chapter: What are the five most important things to know about this chapter (Characters, plot points, themes, symbols, etc.)? And why are they important?

Chapter 6: Summary of the chapter: What are the five most important things to know about this chapter (Characters, plot points, themes, symbols, etc.)? And why are they important?