6th Grade

Curriculum

An Overview


In 6th Grade, students will dive deeply into classic literature. In doing so we learn to describe and connect essential ideas, arguments, and perspectives in the literature of ancient cultures.


Students will read 5 Classic Novels together in class and 4 novels outside of class. The independent novels are chosen by the students but are linked by a commonality - theme, genre, or period of history.


We begin with the oldest known Epic tale known to us: The Epic of Gilgamesh, followed by myths and folktales from ancient cultures, and then begin exploring text that coincides with our units in Social Studies including Ancient Rome, Greece, China, Egypt, Africa, South America and the Middle East. Titles may vary from year to year but each novel notable, award-winning, and is worth its salt. They stand up to the test of time and in doing so become a Socratic Exploration using authentic questioning because:

 If you are answering questions - that is an assignment

 If you are questioning answers - that is literature.

Literature is a deep dive - asking questions that do not have simple answers. The canned response of searching for what the teacher thinks is not authentic or 


Written Response: All essays are written in Google Docs and submitted on the appropriate classroom page unless otherwise noted by Mrs. Mancini





Shared InQuiry Method and Authentic Response: 

Reading Classic Literature requires a working knowledge of universally understood literary terms: character, plot, foreshadowing, conflict, denouement, hubris, protagonist, theme, climax, tragic flaw, mood, tone, and a classic vocabulary using our Latin and Greek roots.  These are the tools of the trade but there is so much more. Each novel is unique and we must respond to it individually with an authentic response because the deepest scholarship is the most human scholarship.


The reader's non-Taxonomy

Literature is not simply terms and devices - it is a social/emotional experience. It is a balance of process and content.

In order to address this balance we are using a list of thinking/feeling skills created by Michael Clay Thompson who was influenced by Barbara Clark's research on developing student potential and then synthesized with Bloom's Taxonomy of human cognition:

Memory: Recall

Cognition: Comprehension

Reason: Avoiding logical errors

Synthesis: Combining or connecting ideas

Divergence: Thinking of alternatives

Convergence: Choosing one idea

Evaluation: Deciding value by criteria

Ethics: Deciding moral value

Analysis: Studying components

Application: Using ideas

Intuition: Ideas from the blue

Imagination: Seeing mental images

Emotion: Feelings

Aesthetics: Artistic/sensory feelings

Dissassumption: Escaping false assumptions

Teaching students to use these cognitive processes we are able to dive deeper into literature and students become stronger critical thinkers.