Category Archives: Humanities

Liberation At Reach – France – Johnson’s Revolutionary Journal

Henriette Salomon is a French revolutionist hating the monarch government with a burning passion. In the sway/journal below, the reader gets to explore the life of Henriette and take a look at his journey. Turning the French government from a monarch to a yet another monarch. When given a chance to enjoy riches, he slowly turned into what he once hated. Ultimately, when Henriette looked back on his life, he found nothing except the sweetest memories.

 

 

Humanities Common Craft Video – French Revolution

French’s Road to Liberty

 

The video embedded shares a the major events that occurred in the French revolution. Including the estates general, execution of the king, reign of terror, and all about Napoleon. For many, the French revolution was a success, changing many lives of France forever. Not only did the revolution liberate France, the rest of Europe got heavily influenced and later overthrown their monarch governments as well. In many’s opinions, the French revolutions was one of the events the ended the middle ages. Overall, the French revolution was worth it, bringing the whole world of societies one more step towards equality.

 

Citations:

Title image from wikipedia:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Revolution

All Thirteen – Humanities Notebook Summative

In the most current unit in humanities, we learned about literary non-fiction. A genre of books that tells real stories of people who experienced great lives, or events that shaped our world, and impacts our lives in every aspect! In this unit we dived deep, not only were we simply reading to understand the text, but also we engaged thoroughly with background knowledge that led to further the understanding the complicated issues and how our world operates. 

My Notebook Pages:

  1. This is one of the humanities summative assessments in this unit. The goal was to let construct a claim to explain central idea in our books, and use 4 pieces of evidence/quotes from the book to support the claim. In this assessment, my claim was communication and collaboration ultimately led to the success of the rescue mission. And I supported it with 4 strong pieces of claim throughout the book. The rescue team communicated And even took it to the next level by using an example from Chinese history of how 3 countries communicating and collaborating with one another lead to peace and wealth. Overall, the central idea assessment is my synthesis page where I summed up all of the pieces of ideas from different lessons and combined them into one page. I also did a reflection on my summary on the townhall debate notebook page.
  2. Before the central ideas assessment, there was a townhall debate, which every bookclub presented its book and one argumentative claim about it. Our group decided it would make a great argument if we listed all the possibilities for the rescue mission, and argue that the way that the rescue team used in the end was the best strategy. Also on the page was a reflection I did 10 days after the debate. It was after the central ideas assessment, where I concluded that the 2 major reasons of the rescue mission’s success was communication and collaboration. When I looked back at my own team’s debate, I realized that we also lacked a lot of communication and collaboration, and how the two simple words are so hard to follow.
  3. On this page records my notes of descriptive passages. I first did an example on “Hidden Figures”, the sample text in class. Then I got to work myself, finding many sections in the book where descriptive language was used. The two chosen ones that were written on the notebook because they were the ones that described the setting and scene of the story most to me. Overall, I think “All Thirteen” had great descriptions of setting and environment, paired with the pictures, I can get a big picture and fully understand how the rescue mission is going throughout the storyline.
  4. This page is about expecting and tracking complexity (combined into one lesson), and I first did this by writing about where and when to expect complexity in the book. After that, I made a web diagram myself to track the storyline and sequence of events that occurred. Additionally, I added another section of the diagram that shows what would happen if the rescue team arrived late. There could’ve been a lot more possibilities to the story, but I think this is the best one to record down because it proves how communication was important all throughout the story.

Intro of All Thirteen:

All Thirteen

“All Thirteen” by Christina Soontornvat, is my bookclub book and how I learned about literary non-fiction. The story is based on the Thai Soccer team that got stuck in a local cave in 2018. Although many of us know about the rescue and are familiar with the news titles. “All Thirteen” gave an overall summary, analysis, and storyline look of the rescue mission. The key question are: how did the soccer team managed to survive inside the cave for almost 2 weeks without food? And how did the rescue team come up with a hyper effective and efficient plan to rescue the boys from the cave?

Humanities 8 – 2 Johnson Chiu – Found Poem – Yes Maam

“Yes Maam” by Langston Hughes 1958

The conflict in the story is both internal and external. Because in the story, the boy or protagonist of our story attempted to steal Mrs. Jones’ purse, but Mrs. Jones’ is not the antagonist she helped the protagonist learn a lesson afterwards.. Which is the external conflict, a person vs person type of conflict. For the internal conflict, the protagonist struggles with his desire for suede shoes, or a person vs society conflict.

I selected many words from the story. I chose words that described what happened throughout the story to make the reader better understand what is going on, even if they hadn’t read the story. I chose words that symbolizes the lesson in the story. For example I chose words like: “Ashamed, frightened, willow-wild, behave, mistrusted, and mistake.”

The 4 icons I chose for my graphic designs are: a purse, which I chose because that’s where the conflict started. A pair of suede shoes and a hand, indicating someone wants shoes. An outline of a thief, as robbery was the the lesson being taught to the protagonist in the story. And an lightbulb, which shows how the protagonist has understood at last and learnt his lesson.

 

Hyperlinks:

Whole story + my original highlights:

https://isbdragons-my.sharepoint.com/:w:/r/personal/johnson_chiu_student_isb_bj_edu_cn/_layouts/15/doc2.aspx?sourcedoc=%7B1DE0884F-734E-44DA-81BD-28A53ACBABEA%7D&file=Thank%20You%20Maam.docx&action=default&mobileredirect=true&DefaultItemOpen=1&ct=1693267978091&wdOrigin=OFFICECOM-WEB.MAIN.REC&cid=fbda47ca-8db1-487c-b95e-e63e33ac0b82&wdPreviousSessionSrc=HarmonyWeb&wdPreviousSession=4fcf0ad2-e27b-4c1e-9919-1b164a6c2239

All about Langston Hughes (author of “Yes Maam”):

https://poets.org/poet/langston-hughes