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Four Square

Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

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Page 1: Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

Four Square

Page 2: Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

Fold Paper  Divide the paper into four Squares.

 O.k., it may be four rectangles, but work with me, people.

Page 3: Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

Visualize  Close your eyes and visualize the most powerful image you remember from what you read

 Then . . .

Page 4: Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

Upper Left Box

 Draw a picture of a powerful image for what you have read. Must be in color.

Page 5: Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

Upper Right Box

 Put the picture you drew into words by explaining its significance in the story.

Page 6: Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

Lower Left Box  Imagine you are an English professor lecturing to a college class on the scene you just described from what was read. Now, write your lecture.

Page 7: Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

Lower Right Box

 Write a poem, create a word collage, follow a stream of conscious- ness, or in any other way respond to the scene you have drawn.

Page 8: Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

Rubric   Picture captures a significant moment from what you read

 Artistic effort and message counts, not artistic ability

 Written work is analytical and captures the meaning of the drawing and significant moment of what was read with the upper right box at least 50 words long and the lower left box at least 70 words long.

Page 9: Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

How to Grade a Four Square

Page 10: Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

 1 Significant Image = 25 Points   Upper Left Corner

 1 50+ Word Analysis = 25 Points   Upper Right Corner   Student Point of View

 1 75+ Word Analysis = 25 Points   Lower Left Corner   Teacher Point of View

 1 Poem/Word Collage = 25 Points   25 = Excellent   21= Above Average   18 = Average   15 = Below Average

Score/100

110 Maximum Score

(.5 pt per word)

(.33 pt per word)

Page 11: Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

 Write a two sentence evaluation of what you did correctly and what needs

to be improved or corrected.

 Be sure you have your name, date, period, assignment #, title, and

chapter written on the back

Page 12: Reading Response-Four Square - Southcorner Barbermrmattson.weebly.com/.../reading_response_-_four_square.pdfReading Response-Four Square.ppt Author Rob Mattson Created Date 1/4/2012

In the beginning of the story we notice that Winston ran into the poster saying “ Big Brother is Watching you” in the building where he lives. Later on, he sees same poster with the same caption, all over the London streets and buildings. In this chapter he visit’s Mrs. Parson and he again sees this image in her apartment. This poster shows which people are the supporters of Big Brother and which people belong to the “Party.”

What emerges in this chapter is an external conflict between the protagonist, Winston Smith, and the potential antagonist, as represented by the totalitarian regime of Big Brother. Complicating the conflict is the pervasiveness of Big Brother’s indoctrination of the general populous. Winston’s every movement, conversation, and action is under the surveillance of Big Brother or his minions. Winston’s desire for freedom is under constant attack.

Be Aware Look at the crawly eyes.

They follow you, Like a dog follows his master.

Be aware! They want to play with your life Using the strategy of Monopoly.

Be aware! They want to enslave you

And hold you down under control. Be aware, be aware

“Big Brother is Watching You” He is watching every move you make

Every breath you take..