Dissecting Marginalization Unit2
Dissecting Marginalization Unit2
Dissecting Marginalization Unit2
Unit Overview
Unit Goals
This unit is centered upon teaching students to be critically aware of how certain
peoples face oppression or marginalization in various contexts and become voices
of truth to shed light upon such injustices. They will learn define and dissect
marginalization as it occurs in both their school context and in a young adult literary
text of their choosing, in which theyll collaborate in small groups to examine,
discuss and form logical arguments about. Students will engage in the
argumentative writing process, being equipped with both theory and practical
writing tools to employ strong persuasive writing. Students will also be trained to
be grammatically effective writers in the structural alignment and transition of ideas
in their papers.
Standards
Common Core State Standards addressed & expected to have been met by
students:
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.9-10.2
Determine a theme or central idea of a text and analyze in detail its development
over the course of the text, including how it emerges and is shaped and refined by
specific details; provide an objective summary of the text.
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.9-10.1
Cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says
explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text.
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.1
Write arguments to support claims in an analysis of substantive topics or texts,
using valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient evidence.
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.1.B
Develop claim(s) and counterclaims fairly, supplying evidence for each while
pointing out the strengths and limitations of both in a manner that anticipates the
audience's knowledge level and concerns.
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.4
Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization, and
style are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience. (Grade-specific expectations
for writing types are defined in standards 1-3 above.)
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.7
Conduct short as well as more sustained research projects to answer a question
(including a self-generated question) or solve a problem; narrow or broaden the
inquiry when appropriate; synthesize multiple sources on the subject,
demonstrating understanding of the subject under investigation.
Unit Rationale
I believe its extremely valuable for students to have a clear vision of the
manifestations of marginalization in the world around them. There are
disempowered, vilified and hurting people groups all over the world and all too often
they are sadly unseen, disenfranchised and underrepresented by the general public.
My underlying goal is for students to see the importance and become part of
proactively building a more equitable world. I want my students become intolerant
of marginalization upon seeing it in their futures. In addition, by meeting in
literature circles students will practice the collaborative work necessary for the
demands of college and their careers, as well as being able to read texts closely and
critically. The work of dissecting marginalization will take on a real-life relevance as
students investigate their own school communities to shed light on such injustices.
Lastly, because argumentative communication is the most common form of
message-giving in societyfrom books to newspapers to debates to movies to
conversations, arguments are everywhereand its high demand in academia,
students need to become grounded and well-rounded persuasive communicators to
navigate their way successfully through the world.
Prior Knowledge
Students will have experience in various cub-communities within their school (such
as gym class, student-council, the wrestling team, book club, peer-groups, ect.),
which will each come with literacies of their own. For example, for peer groups,
they will know that students clump together according to interest and personality
types, and there are various types of groups such as jock, nerd, popular, and
loner. Theyll have a basic social understanding of their school. Students will have
already engaged in activities and assignments that are argumentative in nature.
Students will have read young adult novels before, and most likely read stories
where people groups have faced marginalization.
Unit Assessment
Students will write a 3-4 paged argumentative paper answering the question how
does marginalization occur in this young adult literature novel? Students will be
assessed on their inclusion of the elements of an argument, including claim,
evidence, counterarguments and warrant, to make for a stronger paper. They will
also be assessed on how well they defined and included the concept of
marginalization in their work and its existence in the text. Students will display a
thoughtful understanding of the text they are engaged in. In sum, the close reading
of this text and the introducing of and developing a claim about marginalization will
teach students to be critical inquirers of social injustices. As displayed in the Rubric
for the Final Argumentative Essay, students will also be assessed for their ability to
argue a well-developed argument about marginalization, including claims, counterclaims, evidences, and warrants. Their papers will be assessed also for their
capacity to be grammatically accurate in having structural flow, alignment, and
effective transitional phrases between both sentences and paragraphs. Students
will be equipped to reach these goals by aid of lesson plans throughout the unit.
Unit Sequence
The unit begins by building students foundational content knowledge by defining
what marginalization is and what it looks like in real-life examples. They will
achieve this analyzing How It Is to Be Colored Me and writing marginalized-accounts
from personal experiences. From the beginning of the unit until the end students
will gather content knowledge from their outside of class reading of a multi-cultural
novel and the who/how/why journal they fill out on marginalizations appearance
throughout that text. This will be the basis for many structured literature-circle
small group discussions as well as the final argumentative paper. More content
knowledge will be gained about how marginalization works by critically reading
Freires Pedagogy of the Oppressed. Students will begin to learn the procedural
knowledge of form by studying how arguments are framed and crafted within both
Pedagogy of the Oppressed and Letter to a Birmingham Jail. They will analyze the
choices the authors make to craft strong arguments, as well as identifying, defining
and discussing the argumentative elements within the texts. In order for students
to become Voices for the Marginalized in their own societies, students will
continue to learn the procedural knowledge of thinking critically about social
inequities within the school contexts, and framing arguments in classroom
discussions (with their claims, evidences, warrants and counter-arguments) to bring
these real-life instances of marginalization into the light. Students will then begin to
write their final argumentative papers, taking the structured process of writing by
developing a thesis, outline, arranging a coherent structure, drafting, peerreviewing, editing, conferencing with the teacher and rewriting again for the final
draft. Lessons on grammar and mechanics will aid students ability to write their
papers effectively. They will learn how to properly transition ideas on a sentence
level (coordinating conjunctions), as well as a body-paragraph level. They will learn
how to align everything back to the thesis for a unified and thus stronger argument.
These grammar lessons give students the procedures needed to write a terrific
argumentative paper.
Calendar of Events
Key Elements of Unit:
Technology
students become critically aware whats happening in the text and will sufficiently
prepare them for material to base their final argument papers upon.
Day 3: Pedagogy of the Oppressed
Objective: develop close reading skills and further develop a theoretical knowledge
of what marginalization is and how it works through Edward Saids Pedagogy of the
Oppressed. Students will begin to analyze as a class how Freire frames and crafts
his argument, introducing to students to the argument of process.
Activity: Do a whole class and then small group close reading and discussion of
excerpts of Pedagogy of the Oppressed; then grapple into the question how does
Said define social marginalization and oppression? Students will deepen their
understanding of what marginalization is, according to Saids famous work. Second,
students will be questioned to observe how Freire crafts his argument, what makes
it particularly strong and effective?
corrections with you. Lastly, have students find sentences in their own papers that
need to be modified in order to meet these grammar rules, and adjust accordingly.
Students will have time to edit their papers to be more have a higher grammatical
accuracy and flow.
Day 13: A Day of Revision
Objective: Students will practice critically reviewing their peers papers to improve
their writing and think more meta-cognitively on what makes a strong
argumentative paper. Having finished their drafts coming into the class, by the
end of the class (by their peers comments) they will have a much stronger sense of
how their work can be revised to be a much stronger written argument.
Activity: Students pair up to peer review each others papers. They follow a
worksheet that lays out the criteria-expectations of the argumentative paper
(elements of argument, structural alignment, grammar, effective thesis, supporting
evidence from literary novel, ect.), and give positive-constructive feedback to their
peers. For homework, students are to apply the modifications recommended by
their peers to strengthen their drafts, and submit their final drafts online on the 14th
day of the unit.
you want within the novel, as long as it displays that you understand what marginalization is
and how it is manifested in the text. You may pull from the ideas you had already recorded
throughout the unit in your triple-entry who-why-how journal. By your inclusion of these
textual examples, you will need to display a thoughtful understanding of the text you are
engaged in.
For the sake of a strong argument, you will want to have a strong and clear thesis statement
that is supported throughout the paper. You will be assessed on your ability to include the
following elements of argument: claim, evidences, warrant and counterargument. For each
claim you make to support your thesis, you will need to provide evidences and warrants to
give it support and strength. Lastly, your papers should display a cohesive structure of body
paragraphs which point back to the thesis and sentences which transition smoothly.
Rubric 1 (incomplete); 1 (poor); 2 (needs work); 3 (adequate/good); 4 (mature); 5 (excellent)
Thesis: The work contains a clear and thoughtful thesis statement about how
marginalization is occurring within the literary text.
1
2
3
4
5
Textual Engagement: Through multiple examples, ideas and analyses the student displays
a thoughtful understanding of the literary text in focus.
1
2
3
4
5
Marginalization: Student displays in the paper a definitive understanding of what
marginalization is and uniquely how it is working in the text.
1
2
3
4
5
Elements of Argument: Various claims, evidences, warrants and counter-arguments are
working together throughout the piece to create a logical and thoughtful argument.
1
2
3
4
5
Structural Flow: The paper contains sentences that grammatically and conceptually flow
in a cohesive and comprehensive manner. The audience can follow the arguments
movement without trouble or confusion. Contains adequate transition sentences.
1
2
3
4
5
Structural Alignment: The body paragraphs point back to the thesis to support it logically
and cohesively. Evidences and supporting textual examples align with claims in body
paragraphs.
1
2
3
4
5