I'm reposting your summer reading assignment here, and you should leave your blog posts attached to this entry.
Over the
summer, each of you will select one book of choice that you will read, and you
will be held accountable for that text when we return in August. The chart below lists your choices. There will be no output associated with the
book of choice, although there will be meetings in the fall to discuss
them. There will also be incentives (re:
prizes) for anyone who manages to read all seven books independently over the
course of the 2017-18 school year.
Teacher
|
Book Title
|
Author
|
Dougherty
|
The Sun is Also a Star
|
Nicola Yoon
|
Hennessey
|
So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed
|
Jon Ronson
|
Landsman
|
Assassin’s Apprentice
|
Robin Hobb
|
Meadows
|
All the Pretty Horses
|
Cormac McCarthy
|
Rayburn
|
The Golem and the Jinni
|
Helene Wecker
|
Sheridan
|
Ready Player One
|
Ernest Cline
|
You
will also read Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption by Bryan
Stevenson. For this text you will have a
written assignment, and its requirements are below.
BEFORE reading, please thoughtfully address
the following:
·
What
are the arguments for and against capital punishment (the death penalty)?
·
Research.
How do the laws regarding capital punishment vary from state to state in our
country? How do other countries around
the world punish the worst offenders?
Analyze and evaluate statistics regarding age, gender, race,
socioeconomic status, and so on.
·
What
is your stance on capital punishment?
AFTER reading (and in the same paper),
please thoughtfully address the following:
·
What
do Stevenson identify as the primary problems associated with the current
American justice system? In your written
response, take a stance that includes a proposed solution to addressing the
problems you feel are most pertinent.
·
Whose
story did you find most compelling in Stevenson’s text? Why?
·
How
has reading this text shaped, changed, or reinforced your opinions about
capital punishment?
·
Thorough
annotations of Just Mercy.
·
A
written response to Bryan Stevenson’s TED talk, We Need to Talk About an Injustice, on Rayburn’s blog (no matter
which English teacher you are assigned), www.rayburnenglish.blogspot.com, by 10 p.m. on Wednesday, August 9,
2016. This should be a minimum of 250
words.
·
A
paper between 750-1,000 words that addresses the elements listed in the box on
the previous side. This will be due on the first day of school and must be
submitted in hard copy.
·
Intelligent
conversations about both your readings when we return to school in August.