Today is a 'C' Day so we will go to both Library and Technology. Please be sure to sharpen your pencils and order your lunch. Also, hand in any important forms that you have returned to school.
If your shield is not done I would like you to finish that first. If your shield is done please select a book from the fiction section. Then I want you to read independently. Be prepared to share the name of the main character in your book, and what the book is about.
Thank you
Mrs. Sargent & Mr. Trumble
For Lesson #1 - Part 1 |
I can collaborate effectively with my peers.
I can get the gist of the text “Shrouded in Myth."
I can identify unfamiliar vocabulary in “Shrouded in myth.”
Quote:
When Perseus grew up, Polydectes gave him a
series of challenging tasks to complete. Armed
with a sword made by the god Hermes, winged
sandals, and a shiny bronze shield given to
him by the goddess Athena, Perseus slew the
dreaded monster Medusa. This hideous creature
had writhing snakes for hair, elephant-like tusks
for teeth, and blood-red eyes. Whoever looked
at her was instantly turned to stone.
How is this picture of a sculpture connected to the quote? What details made you think this?
A long, long, long time ago,
even before Perseus was born, his grandfather, Acrisios, the king of Argos, was
given a prophecy that he would someday be killed by his grandson. To protect
himself from this fate, the terrified king imprisoned his only daughter, Danae,
in an underground dungeon so that she could never marry or have children.
Certain that he would never be a grandfather, Acrisios relaxed. But Zeus, the
great father of the gods, had other plans.
Zeus had been watching Danae
and thought she was stunning—too beautiful to resist. He turned himself into
golden rain and poured through the bronze bars in the roof of her elaborate
dungeon. As the rain fell upon Danae, its magical powers caused a child to
begin growing within her. Nine months later, she gave birth to a son and named
him Perseus.
Outraged as well as
frightened when he learned of a grandson's birth, Acrisios enclosed mother and
son in a chest, which he flung into the sea. After drifting about for a long
time, the chest finally washed up on a distant island. A fisherman found it and
brought it to his brother, King Polydectes, who took Perseus and his mother
into his palace.
When Perseus grew up,
Polydectes gave him a series of challenging tasks to complete. Armed with a
sword made by the god Hermes, winged sandals, and a shiny bronze shield given
to him by the goddess Athena, Perseus slew the dreaded monster Medusa. This
hideous creature had writhing snakes for hair, elephant-like tusks for teeth,
and blood-red eyes. Whoever looked at her was instantly turned to stone.
As success followed success,
Perseus began to think about the stories he had heard about his grandfather,
Acrisios. So, after a brief visit to his mother, the young hero set sail for
Argos. Before he reached it, however, Acrisios got word that his long-lost
grandson was coming and fled the city, for he still feared the prophecy.
While waiting for Acrisios to
return, Perseus attended festival games being held in a neighboring town. A
skilled athlete, Perseus entered the discus contest. As he prepared to throw
it, he lost control and the heavy disk went hurtling into the crowd, striking a
man and killing him. Alas, the tragic prophecy had proved true—the dead
spectator was Acrisios. Perseus was so troubled about the accident that he
chose to leave Argos and build his own city—the legendary Mycenae.
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