Compare and contrast IO prep

16th 18th & 23rd March 
Income inequality further input and food for thought 
Working with extracts to compare and contrast 
Choosing your The Great Gatsby extract to use in your mock IO 
All this work to be completed by 25th March and uploaded to your portfolio

Welcome
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16th 18th & 23rd March 
Income inequality further input and food for thought 
Working with extracts to compare and contrast 
Choosing your The Great Gatsby extract to use in your mock IO 
All this work to be completed by 25th March and uploaded to your portfolio

Welcome

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Does Economic Inequality Harm Individuals and Societies?
We now turn our attention to another TED talk. This time, the talk is given by Richard Wilkinson. Professor Wilkinson is, with Professor Kate Pickett, the author of the highly influential (and controversial) book, The Spirit Level: Why Equality is Better for Everyone (2009). 
The title of the book seems to speak for itself.
Make notes while you are watching using the questions on the next slide. 

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23rd March 2020 
IO mock preparation 
Listening to a mock 
Giving feedback and grading an IO 

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Preparing for IO
1. Read the extract from The Great Gatsby  attached to this email.
2. Study the image.
3. Use the prompts (following slides) to make an initial analysis of the two texts. 
4. The global issue is 'income inequality' for this practice.

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Preparing for the Individual Oral: Generic Prompts for Thinking About Texts and Works
Possible considerations – Ask yourself and record in your OneNote Portfolio under the tab Politics, Power and Justice the following:
- What is the connection between text/extract and the global issue of your choice?
- Why did you choose this text/extract? What is significant about it?
- What connections exist between the text/extract and the wider work you have studied? To what extent is the text/extract typical of the wider work you have studied?

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Image 
- Consider content – what is in the image?
- Consider composition – how are the elements in the image framed and
arranged? What techniques or methods has the photographer used? How have lighting, angle, scale and perspective been used? What is in the foreground, middle ground, and background, and what effects does this create?
- Consider context – Where and when was the image taken? Why do you think the photographer took it? Has the photograph been published or exhibited?
- Comment – What does the photograph encourage you to feel and think? What do you feel and think? To what extent do you like or dislike the image?

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Prose fiction 
- What happens in the extract? Where does the extract take place? When does the extract take place (consider both narrative time and chronological time)?
- What broader themes and ideas are revealed in the extract?
- Who narrates the extract? What other voices and perspectives do we hear?
- What seems significant about the word choice and the sentence structure?
- What images and motifs are established? What other examples of figurative
language (e.g. simile, hyperbole, and personification) seem to stand out?
- What patterns develop and how do they contribute to meaning?
- How are you encouraged to feel and think? What do you feel and think?

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Now let's move on to your preparation for your mock Individual Oral 

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Find an extract
Find an extract in The Great Gatsby  that is 40 lines or less that you feel you can link through a global issue that you define to your image. 
It may help to look again at the ideas on slides 3 and 4.

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Outline #4
Your teachers have decided that we will use the template #4 to use as the structure for your Mock IO.
Use the outline #4 attached to the email to make a detailed preparatory analysis for your IO. Place this in your OneNote portfolio in the global issue tab that pertains to your choice. 
Also attached to this email is a Lauren Greenfield information sheet which gives contextual information of the images we shared in class. Your image has been taken from one of the eight collections of photographs that Lauren exhibited. It can be very useful to consider which your image comes from for contextual background 

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Listen to the IO
During the IO make notes on these: 
What does the student do well? 
What does the student do less well?
What is unclear? 
What requires more detail or expansion? 
 You will be sharing your notes when the IO is complete, so make clear notes. 

What marks would you give the IO? 
See assessment sheet in OneNote

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Slide 18 - Lien

What does the student do well?

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What does the student do less well ?

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What is unclear?

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What requires more detail or expansion?

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Assessment criteria in OneNote 
Give your grades for the IO on the next page 

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Criterion A

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Criterion B

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Criterion C

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Criterion D

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IO video mock 
  • 10 minutes long 
  • use your bullet point sheet and clean copy of your two texts
  • upload your video to OneDrive 
  • Share with r.nusser@rijnlands...
  • Inform me of the general global issue you have chosen
  • Upload your extract and image to OneNote individual portfolio under the global issue tab


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10th June 2020 
IO requirements = check the planning, content and timings 
Support materials and lesson planning 

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Philpot pgs 321 - 337 
Assessment rubric pg xxv - xxvi
information pg xix
The oral must: 
' Examine the ways in which the global issue of your choice is presented through the content and form of one of the works and one of the texts that you have studied' (IBDP Guide on Language A: Language and Literature) 

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Choices 
The Great Gatsby - Scott F. Fitzgerald 
Things Fall Apart - Chinua Achebe 

Opinion columns - David Shariatmadari 
The Examined Life (extracts) - Stephen Grosz 
Generation Wealth (extracts) - Lauren Greenfield 
Benetton print advertising - Oliviero Toscani 

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Dates & requirements 
  1. orals - 29th, 30th June & 3rd July 
  2. Draft feedback 10th - 19th June 
  3. Final choice of two extracts. Clean copy, line numbered,  scanned (digitalized) & emailed to teacher - 19th June 13:00 
  4. IO outline (in class notebook & files) - emailed to teacher - 19th June 13:00 
  5. Limited feedback - before 24th June 


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Your IO preparation 
Choose and narrow down your global issue 
Use template #4 form in OneNote  to prepare for your analysis. 
After you have done that make a 10 point bullet point overview that you will want to bring into the IO. 
Example and clean copy in OneNote 

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Support 
Philpot 
Your portfolio 
content library IO preparation 
LessonUp shared 
PPTs in OneNote 

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Lessons & work June 
Online lessons (45min) research and prep- 10th, 12th, 17th & 19th (hand in)
Online lesson (45min) practice - 24th 
@ school (45min) 10th, 17th, 24th - questions and practice 
Make a plan for your time

Online = always log in to the lesson 

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Slide 36 - Vidéo

IO prompt 
“Examine the ways in which the global issue of your choice is presented through the content and form of one of the works and one of the texts you have studied.”

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requirements 
Students need to demonstrate the relationship between the textual construction of ideas and the global issue. Students should give roughly equal attention to both of their chosen extracts and text/work as a whole. That is why a body of work is necessary in the study of non-literary texts. 
IB 30% SL 
IB 20% HL 
PTA 20% VWO

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