A Wrinkle in Time Study Guide. Chapters 5 & 6. Write down the meaning of the following words. Then use each word in a sentence of your own.

Similar documents
First Grade Summer Reading Assignment

Ancient Greece Greek Mythology

AWrinkle in. by Madeleine L Engle

Act I. Vocabulary: Scrambled Quotation: Write the letter of the definition on the right in the blank next the the word it defines.

spirit, than he who captures a city.

How to Do a Synthetic Bible Study

Fall Expository Essay 12/7-11/2015. Instructions:

Emotional Intelligence

God s Little Storybook About Art/Creation. This is a one month curriculum plan for art/vocabulary and scripture inspired by God s Creation.

Favorite Things Nouns and Adjectives

NAME: Study Guide Language Arts Part I: Directions: Read the poem below and answer the questions that follow it. Type vs.

Make Your Words Count

Uncle Tom s Cabin Study Guide. Chapters 6 7

Text: Temple, Charles, et al. Children's Books in Children's Hands: An Introduction to Their Literature, 3rd ed. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 2005.

Oliver Twist. More? Nobody asks for more! Ungrateful little brat! Get out of here! What you starin at? Haven t you never seen a toff?

Aloni Gabriel and Butterfly

Lesson 13 / August 26, 2018 Sing a New Song

Fountas-Pinnell Level J Fantasy. by Rob Arego

XSEED Summative Assessment Test 2. English, Test 2. XSEED Education English Grade 4 1

Literary Terms Glossary with examples from A Wrinkle in Time LITERARY ELEMENTS Characters are people or animals who take part in the action of a

This is a vocabulary test. Please select the option a, b, c, or d which has the closest meaning to the word in bold.

Feelings & Fears. Kids Activities

Handouts to Teach Theme & Imagery Included! Comprehension Questions & Open-Ended Response Questions Included!

Infographic: Would You Want a Robot for a Friend? p. 2. Nonfiction: The Snake That s Eating Florida, p. 4

The Basketball Game We had our game on Friday. We won against the other team. I was happy to win because we are undefeated. The coach was proud of us.

Form and Analysis Project

A Curriculum Guide to. Trapped! By James Ponti

LARGE GROUP. Treasure Hunt! Lesson 3 June 24/25 1

Literary Vocabulary. Literary terms you need to know!

Shakespeare s Last Stand LITERARY ESSAY. What Should I Call It? How do You Start? 11/9/2010. English 621 Shakespearean Study

EIGHTH GRADE RELIGION

Really it was like hearing Emily Post explain proper etiquette. It s important, but truth be told, it s a little boring.

Expressing Feelings. More Practice With I STOP D (Ice and Nice) 3 Cs F. Preparation. Vocabulary. Lesson at a Glance

The Black Book Series: The Lost Art of Magical Charisma (The Unreleased Volume: Beyond The 4 Ingredients)

Theater Workshop Choose any or all of the following activities, depending on time. All materials are located in the classroom.

GLOSSARY OF TERMS. It may be mostly objective or show some bias. Key details help the reader decide an author s point of view.

BIG CHICO'S MOVIE BLOG Loving Movies Since 1973

My Writing Handbook. 5th Grade

Art Criticisni and Aesthetic Judgn1ent

MLA Review for Academic Fair

What do Book Band levels mean?

Idle Talk or Gossip. 1. Have you ever heard someone say: Can you keep a secret? A. When I hear those words it gives me an uneasy feeling inside.

ELA/Literacy Released Item Grade 6 Narrative Writing Task Alice s Point of View 3845

A Christmas Eve Play

Fountas-Pinnell Level N Folktale

GREAT NEW ADVENTURE ADVENTURE IN WONDERLAND 100% MACHINE LANGUAGE

Final Exam Review. World Literature I and English 10

Why is it that we are never 100% satisfied with the ending of a book, play, poem, movie,

Antigone by Sophocles

Nebraska State Assessment

Summer Reading Writing Assignment for 6th Going into 7th Grade

The Greatest Showman of Earth

Alice in Wonderland. Great Illustrated Classics Reading Comprehension Worksheets. Sample file

Music and The Underground Railroad

Kid Friendly Florida ELA Text Based Writing Rubrics

PARKER S PROBLEM. by Rachel W. Brookes illustrated by Bruce MacPherson HOUGHTON MIFFLIN

Sound ID directions p. 6 video online at bitly.com/ SoundID. How Are You Listening? directions p. 7 Listening Stories p. 9 Listening Cards p.

Christian Storytelling 1

6-Point Rubrics. for Books A H

N. J. & Les Lindquist

T f. en s. UNIT 1 Great Ideas 29. UNIT 2 Experiences 65. Introduction to Get Set for Reading...5 Reading Literary Text. Reading Informational Text

How the Squirrel Got His Stripes

The Road to Health ACT I. MRS. JACKSON: Well, I think we better have the doctor, although I don t know how I can pay him.

ATOMIC ENERGY EDUCATION SOCIETY TERM I EXAMINATION ( ) Date of Exam - 18 Sept SUBJECT ENGLISH Marks 80

!! The!Wave! by#morton#rhue# # # # # # # Students #handout# # # #

Welcome to the Paulo Freire School 10 th Grade Summer Reading Exploration Project!

Rhetorical Analysis Strategies and Assignments Randy S. Gingrich, Ph.D. Fulton County Schools

Every Lesson: Three lesson plans plus a song that emphasize the power of a smile! When You Smile 2016 All for KIDZ 2:09 mins.

SUMMER READING ASSIGNMENTS 2018

1/14/2019. How to prepare a paper for final format. V4 Seminars for Young Scientists on Publishing Techniques in the Field of Engineering Science

We read a story in class from Whootie Owl's Test Prep Storytime Series for Level 2

With prompting and support, ask and answer questions about key details in a text. Grade 1 Ask and answer questions about key details in a text.

Maniac Magee. Chapters Maniac loved almost everything about his new life. But everything did not love him back.

Student Team Literature Standardized Reading Practice Test A Wrinkle in Time (A Yearling Book, 1973) 5. Simultaneous events occur. 6.

Essay Analysis. English 621. Purpose. Audience. Subject Matter. The purpose is what the essay tries to accomplish.

Proverbs 31 : Mark 9 : Sermon

The Crucible. Remedial Activities

AP ENGLISH IV: SUMMER WORK

Rising 6 th Grade Summer Reading 2016

Plot Summary (think Freytag s Pyramid): Do not cut/paste from a website, which is a form of plagiarism.

March 3-4, Obsessed Journey: No worries! We can choose to trust Jesus instead of worrying! Matthew 6:25-34

A Tell-Tale Tale. The Stories And Poems Of Edgar Allan Poe

Thank You for Arguing (Jay Heinrichs) you will read this book BEFORE completing the

Four skits on. Getting Along. By Kathy Applebee

Teaching Resources for The Story Smashup Webcast

Lesson Objectives. Core Content Objectives. Language Arts Objectives

The jar of marmalade

1 P a g e N a m e : P e r i o d : Names:. Period:. Lord of the Flies Chapters 2 & 3 - Small Group Questions

Narrative Reading Learning Progression

LESSON 23 Jesus Rescues the Lost

AP Literature and Composition Summer Reading Assignment

adapted from

AP Literature & Composition Summer Reading Assignment & Instructions

BPS Interim Assessments SY Grade 2 ELA

MLA Annotated Bibliography Basic MLA Format for an annotated bibliography Frankenstein Annotated Bibliography - Format and Argumentation Overview.

Table of Contents. Introduction... 3 Time Soldiers Summaries... 4 Book Levels... 6

Forgetting the Words By W.M. Akers

Curriculum Map: Academic English 10 Meadville Area Senior High School

Performances. Feel free to contact Tim Popp directly with any questions by ing

Transcription:

Chapters 5 & 6 Vocabulary: Write down the meaning of the following words. Then use each word in a sentence of your own. 1. substantial 2. stifle 3. arrogance 4. illuminate 30 2002 Progeny Press

5. anticlimax 6. nondescript 7. myopic 8. aberration 9. plaintively 10. propitious 2002 Progeny Press 31

11. chink 12. dissolution Dimensions: Mrs. Who s description of traveling by tesseract might seem awfully confusing. Perhaps the following might help. A point has no dimension. It has neither length nor width nor height. We might even think of it as the zero or null dimension. The first dimension is a line. It has only length. If you imagine a one-dimensional world, then the inhabitants of that world would all appear to each other as points. Any person there would only be able to see the front (or back) of his neighbor to the left or the right. For an example, imagine yourself as a very small pebble lodged in the middle of a drinking straw. You would only be able to move in two directions. If there were any other pebbles in the drinking straw with you, you would only see the ones to the left or the right of you. Even if there were one hundred pebbles in the straw, you would only be able to see two of them. You wouldn t be able to move around your neighbors to visit other pebbles. You could never even be sure that more pebbles existed. This example is somewhat flawed because even a drinking straw has more than one dimension. A line does not. 32 2002 Progeny Press

The second dimension is a plane. It has length and width, but no height. Try this example: use a large sheet of paper as a representation of a two dimensional world. Cut a number of small circles from another sheet of paper and place them on this world. Imagine that these circles are the inhabitants of the two-dimensional world. Assuming that they have some means of mobility, it s easy to see that these circles have much more freedom of movement than the residents of a one-dimensional world. They could conceivably move around and visit all their neighbors. Without the dimension of height, imagine how these circles must appear to each other. Now imagine a threedimensional object, such as a sphere, intersecting this twodimensional world. To any of the circles living in that world, a sphere would appear as just another circle. (Fig. 1) But as the sphere moved down through their world, it would seem to mysteriously change its size. (Fig. 2, 3). Perhaps this is the reason Mrs. Whatsit can easily change her shape: she is a being from a higher dimension, but appears merely three-dimensional when she enters our three-dimensional world. 1 2 3 Now pick up one of the circles and put it down someplace else on the twodimensional world. From the point of view of one of those inhabitants their circular friend would have seemed to disappear from one location only to magically reappear in another. Though this movement through space is completely normal to you, to 2002 Progeny Press 33

the inhabitants of a two-dimensional world, it is virtually impossible because they have no conception of up or down. In the same way, Mrs. Which, Mrs. Who, and Mrs. Whatsit use a higher dimension to easily transport Meg, Charles, and Calvin to another planet. Like the circle you moved, Meg, Charles, and Calvin moved through a dimension they did not understand to arrive at a location far from their starting point. Allusion: An allusion is a brief reference to a literary or historical person or event with which the reader is assumed to be familiar. Authors can add meaning to a story by drawing upon the thoughts and feelings a reader associates with the allusion. Identify the original source the author alludes to in the following passages from A Wrinkle in Time. 1. When shall we three meet again, / In thunder, lightning, or in rain, came Mrs. Who s voice. (Chapter 4) 2. The resonant voice rose and the words seemed to be all around them so that Meg felt that she could almost reach out and touch them: Sing unto the Lord a new song, and his praise from the end of the earth,... (Chapter 4) 3. Mrs. Who seemed to evaporate until there was nothing but the glasses, and then the glasses, too, disappeared. It reminded Meg of the Cheshire Cat. (Chapter 5) 4. Mrs. Who s spectacles shone out at them triumphantly, And the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not. (Chapter 5) 34 2002 Progeny Press

5. One white-faced man in a dark suit looked directly at the children, said, Oh, dear, I shall be late, and flickered into the building. He s like the white rabbit, Meg giggled nervously. (Chapter 6) Questions: 1. What is The Black Thing? 2. Why did Meg feel flattened-out on the second planet they visited? 3. How did the three Mrs. Ws take precautions so Mrs. Murry would not be worried about her children? 4. According to Mrs. Whatsit, why is the earth such a troubled planet? 2002 Progeny Press 35

5. What do the children see in the crystal ball that reveals the true nature of Mrs. Whatsit? Thinking About the Story: 6. Personification is a literary technique in which animals, objects, or even abstract concepts are given human qualities and characteristics. Though the Happy Medium is a character in the novel, in what way does she personify the concept of a happy medium? How does the Happy Medium s planet also reflect the concept of medium? 7. How does Meg react to seeing Calvin s mother in the crystal ball? How did it alter her feelings for Calvin? 8. How does seeing a picture of her own mother give Meg renewed energy? 36 2002 Progeny Press

9. What gifts did each of the three Mrs. Ws give to the children? Complete the table below by listing each gift in the appropriate space. Calvin Meg Charles Wallace Mrs. Whatsit Mrs. Who Mrs. Which 10. Why does Mrs. Whatsit say that the danger is greatest for Charles Wallace? 11. In general terms, describe the appearance of the town on Camazotz and the behavior of its citizens. What is unusual about the boy bouncing the rubber ball? 12. What is the mother s reaction when the children knock at the door to return the rubber ball? 2002 Progeny Press 37

13. Describe the other interactions with the inhabitants living on Camazotz for example, the paperboy and people on the street. 14. The paper boy tells Charles Wallace, We are the most oriented city on the planet. There has been no trouble of any kind for centuries. All Camazotz knows our record. That is why we are the capital city of Camazotz. That is why CENTRAL Central Intelligence is located here. That is why IT makes ITs home here. What do you think IT is? Dig Deeper: 15. When talking about being chosen for this mission, Mrs. Whatsit confides to Calvin and Meg: But of course we can t take credit for out talents. It s how we use them that counts. What do you think she means by saying that we can t take credit for our talents? 38 2002 Progeny Press

16. Read Matthew 25:14 28. The term talent found this parable was originally a unit of weight and then later became a monetary unit. The modern-day usage of talent to refer to one s innate abilities is derived from this original usage. What does this parable teach about how we should use our talents? 17. What talents do you think you have? If you aren t sure, ask your parents or friends. How can you use your talents in a way that is pleasing to God? 18. Meg tells the Happy Medium that her anger helps her, because when she s mad she hasn t got room to be afraid. Later Mrs. Whatsit tells Meg, Stay angry you will need all your anger now. Can you think of a situation where being angry helped you? Can you think of another time when being angry was harmful? Write about these situations in two or three paragraphs. 19. Read Proverbs 16:32, Proverbs 29:11, Ecclesiastes 7:9, Romans 12:16 21, Ephesians 4:26 27. In one paragraph, summarize what these verses taken together teach about anger. 2002 Progeny Press 39

20. Read each of the passages below, and then write down what caused the anger of the person (or persons) shown. a. Exodus 32:1 20 (God, Moses) b. 1 Kings 11:4 13 (God) c. Job 42:7 (God) d. John 2:13 16 (Jesus) 21. What do the examples above suggest about anger as a proper response? 22. In Chapter 5, when Mrs. Whatsit talks about the battle against evil, she prompts the children to think of the fighters on their own planet. Charles Wallace immediately says Jesus. Then the children list others, including artists, scientists, and religious figures. Read this section again. By including Jesus in this list, do you think the author is suggesting that the others mentioned are equal to Jesus? Explain your answer. 40 2002 Progeny Press

23. Read Colossians 1:15 23. What does this passage tell us about the uniqueness of Jesus? 2002 Progeny Press 41