Thursday, May 1, 2014

8th Grade Book Project Directions and Example - 4th Quarter

Fourth Quarter Book Project
“Theme in a Bottle”
Due:  Friday, May 30th
Reminder:  Book Projects are NOT accepted for late credit.  Automatic extra credit for any student who reads and completes the book project on The Diary of Anne Frank (the actual diary, not the play).


Project Summary:  A character in your novel wants to express and share what he/she has learned from his/her experiences to help others understand important life lessons.  The character has decided to send a message in a bottle. 

Objectives:  symbolism; major and minor literary themes; character perspective, voice, tone

Requirements:
1.      Decorate a completely rinsed and dried clear bottle with 3 or more symbols that relate to the main character’s life lessons (plastic soda bottles work best).  Example:  In Watsons Go To Birmingham, Byron learns a life lesson about what life is “really like” in the South during the Civil Rights Movement.  On the outside of a bottle, I would draw or glue on a cross to represent the Baptist church that was bombed and a heart to represent the love and strength of the Watson family.

2.      On the outside of the bottle also include the title (underlined), author, your first and last name, and class period neatly decorated or typed.

3.      Type a letter from a main character’s point of view (use first person, I).  The letter should express your feelings about the life lessons you have learned throughout the novel.  What big lessons have you (as the character) learned?  Summarize those lessons and teach others by describing the thematic topics and how they apply to you as the character.  See example of a letter on back side.

4.      Letter requirements:  typed, single or double spaced, 12 point font size, no cursive or curly font styles, 1 page minimum. Rubber-band the letter so that it is smaller than the bottle’s opening and type your first and last name, class period, and title/author  in the upper right corner.




Mrs. Rice, 2*
Number the Stars by Lois Lowery

May 1945
To Whoever Finds This Bottle:
            My name is Annemarie Johansen, and I am a twelve-year-old girl who lives in Copenhagen, Denmark.  Today the war ended, and the Nazis have been defeated.  All over Denmark people are celebrating and bells are ringing.  Finally, we are free!
            In the last two years, I have learned so much.  Encountering the Nazi soldiers and their dogs taught me that real courage means facing your fears and moving through them to do what your heart tells you is right and just.  Because the Danish people followed their hearts, we saved thousands of lives by hiding and transporting our Jewish friends to safety.
            I’ve also learned how devastating and hideous war is.  My heart ripped apart when a Nazi military car ran over my sister Lise.  My friends as well as my family suffered grievously.  My best friend, Ellen Rosen, and her parents had to leave their home and country just because they were Jewish.  The Nazis were killing the Jews by the thousands, so we had to protect our friends by helping them escape.  Then Lise’s fiancé Peter, who saved hundreds of Jews’ lives, was captured and executed in the public square at Ryvangen.  I wept for days and woke up screaming from nightmares in which I relived Peter’s and Lise’s tragic deaths.  I pray for an end to man’s inhumanity to man.
            But even in the face of the evil and horror that surrounded us, love and goodness prevailed because we acted with justice, compassion, courage, and conviction.  Each of us listened to that still, small voice within us that guides us toward the light, and today the light conquered the darkness.
            If you find this letter, read it to your friends and family.  Pass it from house to house.  Let people hear my message and create a world where peace, justice, and human kindness prevail.
Love,
Annemarie Johansen