
Malcolm X: Point of View
Presentation
•
English
•
6th - 12th Grade
•
Medium
+43
Standards-aligned
Tamika Roy
Used 1+ times
FREE Resource
9 Slides • 26 Questions
1
2
Open Ended
Think about what it means to be an effective speaker. In your opinion, is it most beneficial to be a speaker with a "straightforward" tone or one that is more "sugarcoated"? USE THIRD PERSON POINT OF VIEW IN YOUR RESPONSE.
After you have submitted your response, take a look at today's agenda on the board.
Feel free to open StudySync in a separate tab if you are a student who works independently.
3
Standards
ELA.6.R.1.3: Explain the influence of multiple narrators and/or shifts in point of view in a literary text
ELA.6.3.1: Explain the influence of figurative language (simile, metaphor, hyperbole) on meaning/tone
4
Multiple Choice
True or False: Rick Riordan, the author of "Percy Jackson" mostly maintains first person POV
True
False
5
Essential Question
How can authors utilize P.O.V and figurative language to impact meaning/tone?
Subject | Subject
Some text here about the topic of discussion
6
Multiple Select
Objectives! SELECT ALL!!!!!
Identify/Analyze the influence of shifts in POV on meaning/tone
Identify/Analyze the influence of figurative language on meaning/tone
Respond to the Essential Question following ACES writing structure
7
Warm-Up
Review/HK
Notes: Latin prefixes, P.O.V.
First Read
"How Malcolm Leaned to Read" Video
Post-Reading Quiz
Online Rotations
Agenda!
8
BENE = Good/well
(beneficial/benevolent)
MAN = Hand
SCRIB/SCRIPT = To Write
NEW LATIN PREFIXES
9
Match
Match the following Latin prefixes with their corresponding meanings:
Bene
Scrib/Script
Man
Re
Un/Im/In/A/An/Dis
Well/Good
To Write
Hand
Again
Not
Well/Good
To Write
Hand
Again
Not
10
Multiple Choice
Point of view is... (select best option)
1st, 2nd, and/or 3rd
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Multiple Choice
12
Multiple Choice
13
Multiple Choice
14
Multiple Choice
15
Multiple Choice
16
Multiple Choice
True or False: A character can also be a narrator
True
False
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Multiple Choice
You should tell me the truth.
FIRST
SECOND, but shift to first
THIRD
18
Poll
Have you ever heard or been taught about the historical figure Malcolm X? (No right answer--just a poll)
Yes
No
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1. As a class, we will watch a short clip
of the famous historical figure, Malcolm X,
delivering some of his most famous quotes.
2. Then, you will independently complete your
"How Malcolm Learned to Read" FIRSTREAD along with the questions.
3. Write on a separate sheet, or on the handout, whichever you prefer.
We will take a test on today's material after.
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21
Write down two key details that could help frame our understanding as we read.
YOU ARE BEING TIMED. COMPLETE THE FIRST READ ALONG WITH THE QUIZ.
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Visually, what stands out?
Three stanzas.
PAY ATTENTION
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Drag and Drop
24
Multiple Choice
Trace
decreasing
to discover the course of something
to hold in place firmly
engrave
25
Multiple Choice
Fleeting
brief
lasting only a short time
Firmly
the write
26
Multiple Choice
What does writing provide Malcolm X while he is in prison?
I think dwindling means “gradually decreasing in size or amount.”
The reader notes that the change from third to first person means that the thoughts of the character get revealed.
Malcolm X finds asylum, or refuge, in the written word. Writing seems to give him both comfort and a sense of freedom
The speaker is addressing Malcolm X, but he is also wondering aloud. He wants to know if Malcolm X had a similar experience of being defined by his words
27
Multiple Choice
Whom is the speaker addressing in the final lines of the poem? Why?
It is about how Malcolm X learned new words by copying the dictionary in priso
The speaker is addressing Malcolm X, but he is also wondering aloud. He wants to know if Malcolm X had a similar experience of being defined by his words.
” The speaker of the poem is discussing how he and Malcolm X used writing to achieve “something new,” so that definition makes sense.
Malcolm X is spending all night writing in his prison cell with a lead pencil
28
Multiple Choice
Inscribe
place firmly
short time
Brief
to write, engrave, or print on or in something
29
Multiple Choice
Anchor
lasting only a short time
to discover the course of something
to hold in place firmly
print on or in something
30
Multiple Choice
Who and what are the subjects of this poem? What is the setting? Use evidence from the text to support your response.
The poem’s two subjects are Malcolm X and the speaker himself. Both of them found comfort and freedom through the written word. While Malcolm X started writing in prison, the speaker’s setting seems to be public. I know this because he refers to “stages” and “applause from strangers.
The line must be a quote from Malcolm X. I know this because of the previous stanza. It is about how Malcolm X learned new words by copying the dictionary in prison.
Like Malcolm X, the speaker has used writing to improve his life. He says, “Malcolm, I, too, have tried to inscribe my way to something new.” He also says that, like Malcolm, he has used writing “to leave behind the man I wasn’t proud to be.”
31
Multiple Choice
What do the speaker and Malcolm have in common? Explain, using evidence from the poem.
I think dwindling means “gradually decreasing in size or amount.” Malcolm X is spending all night writing in his prison cell with a lead pencil. All that writing would make the pencil get smaller and smaller.
Like Malcolm X, the speaker has used writing to improve his life. He says, “Malcolm, I, too, have tried to inscribe my way to something new.” He also says that, like Malcolm, he has used writing “to leave behind the man I wasn’t proud to be.”
The word inscribe must mean “to write.” The speaker of the poem is discussing how he and Malcolm X used writing to achieve “something new,” so that definition makes sense.
32
Multiple Choice
In the final stanza, the narrator talks directly to Malcolm X. What is the purpose of this shift in narration? Support your answer with evidence from the poem
The narrator asks Malcolm X these questions, but it also seems like the narrator is talking about himself. Talking directly to Malcolm X is a way for the narrator to think about himself.
The narrator says that he started writing to become a new person. He wasn’t happy with who he was, so he wrote to be someone he felt proud to be.
This is a simile where the light is being compared to a little kid who won’t listen.
33
Multiple Select
Select two examples of figurative language used in today's text.
The narrator says that he started writing to become a new person. He wasn’t happy with who he was, so he wrote to be someone he felt proud to be.
There is a simile where the light is being compared to a little kid who won’t listen. Malcolm X needs the light so he can keep reading the dictionary. But this is probably against the rules to stay up all night reading, so the light in the hallway is not doing what it should because it should be dark
Malcolm X learns to read to make himself a better person in jail. The narrator says that he also used language to try to be a better person. The narrator wasn’t in prison, but he wasn’t proud of who he was, so he tried to change.
34
Multiple Choice
The Latin word inscribere means “to write.” With this information in mind, write your best definition of the word inscribe as it is used in this context.
The line must be a quote from Malcolm X. I know this because of the previous stanza. It is about how Malcolm X learned new words by copying the dictionary in prison.
The word inscribe must mean “to write.” The speaker of the poem is discussing how he and Malcolm X used writing to achieve “something new,” so that definition makes sense.
The poem’s two subjects are Malcolm X and the speaker himself. Both of them found comfort and freedom through the written word. While Malcolm X started writing in prison, the speaker’s setting seems to be public. I know this because he refers to “stages” and “applause from strangers
35
Open Ended
Pass an Exact Path activity during this time, or, take cornell notes of POV and Figurative Language while reading "The Lightning Thief"
Show answer
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