English 9 Q3 1 - .DIFFERENTIATING BIASES FROM PREJUDICES
English 9 Q3 1 - .DIFFERENTIATING BIASES FROM PREJUDICES
English 9 Q3 1 - .DIFFERENTIATING BIASES FROM PREJUDICES
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Activity 1
choose 1 that you like
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Activity 1
choose 1 that you like
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Activity 1
choose 1 that you like
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Activity 1
choose 1 that you like
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Can you recall an experience where
you are wrongly judged by other
people around you?
(1) We will not let her join our group because she is not
part of our circle of friends and we don’t know her. It will
be better for her to look for another group.
DISLIKE UNFAIR
WRONG
RACISM FAVORITISM ISOLATION REJECTION
JUDGEMENT
BIAS PREJUDICE
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Look at the following word web below, can you think of
words that you could associate with prejudice and bias?
DISLIKE
WRONG
RACISM UNFAIR FAVORITISM ISOLATION REJECTION
JUDGEMENT
BIAS PREJUDICE
UNFAIR FAVORITISM DISLIKE RACISM
ISOLATION REJECTION
WRONG
JUDGEMENT
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HOW CAN YOU EASILY
DIFFERENTIATE bias from prejudice?
Bias or Prejudice 15
Let’s try
Bias or Prejudice 16
Let’s try
Bias or Prejudice 17
Let’s try
An online news outlet’s biggest sponsor was
a major airline so, the outlet headlines stories
pertaining to incidents on other airlines and
hold back stories that made other airline look
bad.
Bias or Prejudice 18
ACTIVITY
Directions: Create a visual organizer to help you
understand the concept of bias and prejudice.
Definition
Characteristics
(own words)
BIAS
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ACTIVITY
Directions: Create a visual organizer to help you
understand the concept of bias and prejudice.
Definition
Characteristics
(own words)
prejudice
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ASSIGNMENT:
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Topics:
School bullying because of racism
Favoritism in school
CONTENT / FOCUS 10
ORGANIZATION OF IDEAS 5
MECHANICS 5
TOTAL POINTS 20
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Assignment
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Answer the following guide questions on your answer sheet.
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Activity 3:
Unlocking of
Unfamiliar words
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A bulwark is a wall built for protection or defense. If you and your pals build a
secret fort for girls only, you might want to build a bulwark to surround it —
with a "No Boys Allowed" sign posted prominently.
Someone who flees or runs away from the police to avoid capture is
a fugitive. "Authorities were looking for three men who escaped from prison
today. Authorities believe the three fugitives may be disguised as nuns and
advise the public to be careful."
During the Salem witch trials in the late 1600s, women accused of witchcraft
were executed by hanging, a gruesome process that involves a gallows, or
wooden frame from which a person is hung by a rope.
Ire is another word for "anger." So if you routinely steal your neighbor's
newspaper, don't be surprised to be on the receiving end of his ire.
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3While the Danes retire to safer sleeping quarters, Beowulf
and the Geats bed down in Heorot, fully aware that Grendel
will visit them. He does. Angered by the joy of the men in the
mead-hall, the ogre furiously bursts in on the Geats, killing
one and then reaching for Beowulf. Beowulf knows that no
weapons forged by mortals can destroy Grendel, so he will
fight the monster using his bare hands. With the strength of
thirty men in his hand-grip, Beowulf seizes the ogre's claw
and does not let go. The ensuing battle nearly destroys the
great hall, but Beowulf emerges victorious as he rips
Grendel's claw from its shoulder socket, sending the mortally
wounded beast fleeing to his mere (pool). The claw trophy
hangs high under the roof of Heorot. 32
4The Danes celebrate the next day with a huge feast
featuring entertainment by Hrothgar's scop
(pronounced "shop"), a professional bard who
accompanies himself on a harp and sings or chants
traditional lays such as an account of the Danes'
victory at Finnsburh. This bard also improvises a song
about Beowulf's victory. Hrothgar's wife, Queen
Wealhtheow, proves to be a perfect hostess, offering
Beowulf a gold collar and her gratitude. Filled with
mead, wine, and great food, the entire party retires for
what they expect to be the first peaceful night in years.
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5But Grendel's mother — not quite as powerful as her son
but highly motivated — climbs to Heorot that night, retrieves
her son's claw, and murderously abducts one of the
Scyldings, Aeschere, who is King Hrothgar’s wisest
councellor, while Beowulf sleeps elsewhere. The next
morning, Hrothgar, Beowulf, and a retinue of Scyldings and
Geats follow the mother's tracks into a dark, forbidding
swamp and to the edge of her mere. The slaughtered
Aeschere's head sits on a cliff by the lake, which hides the
ogres' underground cave. Carrying a sword called Hrunting, a
gift from the chastised Unferth, Beowulf dives into the mere to
seek the mother monster.
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6Near the bottom of the lake, Grendel's mother attacks and
hauls the Geat warrior to her dimly lit cave. Beowulf fights
back once inside the dry cavern, but the gift sword, Hrunting,
strong as it is, fails to penetrate the ogre's hide. The mother
moves to kill Beowulf with her knife, but his armor, made by
the legendary blacksmith Weland, protects him. Suddenly
Beowulf spots a magical, giant sword and uses it to cut
through the mother's spine at the neck, killing her. A blessed
light unexplainably illuminates the cavern, disclosing
Grendel's corpse and a great deal of treasure. Beowulf
decapitates the corpse. The magic sword melts to its hilt.
Beowulf returns to the lake's surface carrying the head and
hilt but leaving the treasure. 35
7After more celebration and gifts and a sermon
by King Hrothgar warning of the dangers of
pride and the mutability of time, Beowulf and
his men return to Geatland. There he serves
his king well until Hygelac is killed in battle and
his son dies in a feud. Beowulf is then named
king and rules successfully for fifty years. Like
Hrothgar, however, his peace is shattered in his
declining years. Beowulf must battle one more
demon.
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8A fiery dragon has become enraged because a lone fugitive has
inadvertently discovered the dragon's treasure-trove and stolen a
valuable cup. The dragon terrorizes the countryside at night, burning
several homes, including Beowulf's. Led by the fugitive, Beowulf and
eleven of his men seek out the dragon's barrow. Beowulf insists on
taking on the dragon alone, but his own sword, Naegling, is no match
for the monster. Seeing his king in trouble, one thane, Wiglaf, goes to
his assistance. The others flee to the woods. Together, Wiglaf and
Beowulf kill the dragon, but the mighty king is mortally wounded. Dying,
Beowulf leaves his kingdom to Wiglaf and requests that his body be
cremated in a funeral pyre and buried high on a seaside cliff where
passing sailors might see the barrow. The dragon's treasure-hoard is
buried with him. It is said that they lie there still.
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Quiz # 2
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A. Arrange the following events in “Beowulf” in chronological
order. Write numbers 1 to 5 on the blanks provided.