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Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.

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1 Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Place any late homework on your desk. Read the following sentences. Then, answer the questions below. Thomas had almost reached the front door of the shack and the small group of boys congregating there when he was hit by a sudden and surprise rush of anger. 1.What words or phrases in the sentences might be context clues that help determine the meaning of “congregating”? 2. What do you think the word “congregating” means?

2 Congregating: Gathering in a group.

3 Congregating Gathering in a group Term: Story: Picture Definition:
 Congregating Story: Picture Definition: Gathering in a group Reminding Word:

4 Obtain: to get something (to come in to possession of something)
Ultimate: the final or best Intense: exciting and scary Corrupt: bad; not doing the right thing Destination: a place one is going to Migrant: Someone who goes to one country to live from another country Panting: Breathing very heavily Refugee: Someone who leaves one country for another in order to be safe. Persecute: to treat someone terribly (especially because of religion, race, gender, etc.) 10. Desert: to leave someone and not go back to them 11. Poverty: a state of being poor 12. Harbor: to hold someone for safety 13. Limitation: Something that keeps you from doing what you want to do 14. Resolve: to decide to do something; to determine that you will do something 15. Intervene: To get in the middle of; to come between two things 16. Meager: Lacking in amount or condition. Or, Lacking in quantity or quality. 17. Agonizing: Causing great mental pain. 18. Murky: Dark and gloomy. 19. Vulnerable: Weak and able to be attacked.

5 Residency: the right to be able to say you officially live in the U.S..
Artifact: an item of historical value. Diversity: the state of having people of different backgrounds and cultures. Intrude: to interfere or cut in. Integrity: The quality of being an honest and strong moral person Heritage: Your upbringing. Your traditions and culture. Memoir: A diary, a biography, a record of events that someone writes about their life. Banter: talking in a joking or teasing manner. Condolences: words of sympathy or sorry for someone who is suffering Ambitious: Puts forth a lot of effort to reach goals. Complex: Complicated. Resentful: Hateful Vow: to promise Economist: Someone who studies how much stuff is being sold or bought in a country so the country can make money. Innovation: The act of creating or starting something new. Prestigious: Something that has a great reputation and is well-respected Pall: anything that covers with darkness or gloom Impersonate: Pretend to be another person Veil: A covering, normally over the face Turbulent: Rough and destructive

6 Ascend: to move upward. Consumed: to be filled up with (or, to be overcome by) Disorienting: filling with confusion Dilapidated: falling apart; run-down and damaged Malicious: wicked or harmful Congregating: Gathering in a group

7 Agenda Objective: Primary: I can analyze how particular elements of a story interact (RL.1.3). Secondary: I can cite several pieces of textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text (RL.1.1). I can determine a central idea of a text and analyze its development over the course of the text; provide an objective summary of the text (RL.1.2). Essential Question: How does the setting of The Maze Runner impact the main character’s mood in chapter one through nine? Warm-Up: Context Clues: congregating Vocabulary: congregating (LINCS Strategy) Whole Group: Review Stations Review answering a higher order thinking question: Do Chuck and Thomas have anything in common? Use at least two pieces of evidence to support your answer. Stations: 1. Achieve: Achieve 3000 (Pay Up!, Remember When?) 2. The Maze Runner, Chapters 3-4, Book-Mind-Heart, HOTQ 3. Independent reading (fill out a “book” for books you have finished reading) 4. Teacher-led: Differentiated instruction Closing: Vocabulary Review

8 Answering a higher order thinking question:
Do Chuck and Thomas have anything in common? Use at least two pieces of evidence to support your answer.

9 Answering a higher order thinking question:
Do Chuck and Thomas have anything in common? Use at least two pieces of evidence to support your answer. Chuck and Thomas have a couple of things in common. Neither of them can remember more than their first names. Also, they are the two newest boys to come to the Glade.

10 Answering a higher order thinking question:
Do Chuck and Thomas have anything in common? Use at least two pieces of evidence to support your answer. Chuck and Thomas have a couple of things in common. Neither of them can remember more than their first names. Also, they are the two newest boys to come to the Glade. On page 16, the narrator tells us that Thomas noticed that Chuck remembered his first name, but not anything else. He thinks, “They all remembered their names. Why not their parents’ names? Why not a friends’ name?” Also, on page … (we do)

11 High Order Thinking Question: Why do you think it is necessary for the boys to be so rude to Thomas? Use at least two pieces of evidence from the text to support your answer. Topic Sentence: Evidence #1 (give the page # also): Evidence #2 (give the page # also):

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15 Station Groups Pd 5 TL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Ivan Paige Jaden Aiden Jazmine
Jayden P. Kefrain Adri Duncan Joshua Kayla Xavier Yahsir Montana Mercedes Jatavia Jonah Kris

16 Whole Group Discussion:
Book: Who is telling the story? What does the author want you to know? What did you notice about how the author told this story?

17 Whole Group Discussion:
Mind: What surprised you? What connections did you make? What images were most important to you? What lines created the surprise or connection?

18 Whole Group Discussion:
Heart: What did you discover about yourself? What matters most to you in this text or in your conversation? What did you take to heart?

19 Higher Order Thinking Question (Chapters 3-4)
Why do you think it is necessary for the boys to be so rude to Thomas? Use at least two pieces of evidence from the text to support your answer.

20 Primary Conversation Topics from Book-Mind-Heart:
Student-Led Book Talk Primary Conversation Topics from Book-Mind-Heart: What does the author want you to know? What surprised you? Is it necessary for the boys to be so mean to Thomas? Why or why not? Group Leader Keep the conversation moving. Ensure people are letting each other speak. Ensure the conversation is civil. A goal is to get everyone to talk. Hot Seat Evaluators Speakers Speakers Evaluators

21 Socratic Seminar Norms
Don’t raise hands but use sensitivity to take turns and not interrupt others Listen carefully Address one another respectfully (Yes, sir/ma’am. No, sir/ma’am.) Use statements such as, “I understand what Joseph is saying, but…”) Base any opinions on the text Address comments to the group (no side conversations) Be courageous in presenting your own thoughts and reasoning, but be flexible and willing to change your mind in the face of new and compelling evidence If you are an observer, listen, understand, take notes, evaluate. Hot Seat: If you are an observer/evaluator and you would like to make a comment, you may move to the “hot seat” to engage in the conversation.

22 Closing Name three things that might become dilapidated with time.


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