Wednesday, March 30, 2016

The Stranger Philosophical Journal

As you read The Stranger, by Albert Camus, you will keep a philosophical journal. You may get a special notebook or use notebook paper and staple the entries together. Each entry should be at least a half a page of standard size notebook paper; if you use a smaller notebook, adjust accordingly. Write each entry on a separate page. There will be 13 entries, including three separate entries over one weekend. Journal entries will be posted on the board each day. The entire list is as follows:
1.Read chapter two of The Stranger. On pg. 21, Meursault says, "I don't like Sundays." Compare how you feel on a Friday afternoon with how you feel on a Sunday afternoon. Is there a difference? What is it?
2.On pg. 21, Meursault says, "I cut out an advertisement for Kruschen Salts and stuck it in an old notebook where I put things from the papers that interest me." Cut out pictures, ads, articles that interest you from a newspaper or magazine and paste them on a separate page in your journal.
3. Read chapter three of The Stranger. On pages 27-28, Salamano says, "He's always there." Comment on the love/hate relationship in your life. (sibling, computer, etc.)
4. On page 39, Meursault realizes the sound he hears is Salamano crying. If you heard someone crying (neighbor, friend, stranger), what would you do?
5. Read chapters four and five of The Stranger. Choose one of the following journal entries:
Have you ever been disappointed in a goal? What did you do? Give up or try again?
Does adversity make you stronger?
Is marriage a serious thing? What does marriage mean to you?
What is your impression of Paris? Do you want to visit there?
What is your impression of old age?
What is your best physical quality? What if you lost it?
6, 7, and 8: Read chapter six of The Stranger. Keep a diary for the weekend. You must have at least an entry for Friday afternoon, Saturday and Sunday. (see weekend entries file in the box for complete instructions.)
9. Read part II, chapter 2. "There are some things I've never liked talking about." (pg. 72) What are the things you don't like talking about? Why? If nothing, why are you able to talk about everything?
10. Read part II, chapter 3. "It was just chance." (pg. 95) Comment on the role chance has played in your life.
11. Read part II, chapter 4. "My fate was being decided without anyone so much as asking my opinion." (pg.98) Have you ever felt this way? Explain.
12. Read part II, chapter 5. "Maman used to say you can always find something to be happy about." (pg. 113) How do you find things to be happy about? What makes you happy?
13. Read Albert Camus's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech. "Each generation feels called upon to reform the world." (handout pg. 526) Does this observation apply to your generation? Why or why not?

Thursday, March 10, 2016

Midterm Exam: Portfolio Review

The final step in the Senior Project is your portfolio. It is due on or before Thursday, March 17.

Your portfolio may be in a three-ring binder or a folder where you can turn the pages. Do not attempt to show me a bunch of loose papers stapled together. Alternately, it may be in a Google Docs folder that you share with me.
After reviewing your portfolio, I will return it to you.

Here is what you need:
Table of contents
Letter of intent
Research paper
20 hour log
One or more score sheets
Typed reflection of the entire semester

Optional:
A cover page
Artifacts (photos, copies of survey, etc.)

Creating Infographics

You may want to check this out for creating your presentation slides. https://piktochart.com