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Reread pages 244–264
Answer the following question in your response journal.
How does the hospital show a truth about war?
solemn (adj.)—to be very serious and not at all happy in appearance, feeling or speech
Create a timeline for pages 244–264 of All Quiet on the Western Front (from “Our stretchers stand on the platform” to “And what shall come out of us?”).
Star incidents that show psychological effects.
Add evidence to your timeline that supports your starred annotations of the incidents and shows the psychological effects of war.
Based on the discussion from the previous lesson, how did you know which incidents to choose and evidence to identify?
Write a three to five key ideas that respond to the following question, using bullet points rather than full sentences: “How do incidents in chapter 10 develop the psychological effect of war?”
Get up and mingle with your classmates.
Give one response to a classmate, get one response from your classmate.
Reply to your classmate’s response with a short reply that compares ideas, disagrees, or reports. State your reply to your classmate, and record your sentence on the blank side of the index card.
Have your chear “Move On,” find a different classmate and repeat your exchange and discussion.
Reflection:How do your peers’ key ideas help you develop new insights or understandings?
Albert’s amputation in All Quiet on the Western Front develops the psychological effect of depression.
Paul’s reflections about his generation in All Quiet on the Western Front shows the devastating impact of depression on a large group of people.
Paul’s description of Kemmrich after his amputation in All Quiet on the Western Front shows the psychological effect of depression on a young soldier.
Use these topic sentences to create three different thesis statements that use a broad category.
Write at least one “Setting the Stage” and one “Defines the Significance of a Category” thesis statement.
Which piece of evidence from your timeline most effectively shows the psychological effects of war?
Read pages 268–269 of All Quiet on the Western Front, from “After a few weeks” to “But a man gets used to that sort of thing in the army,” and answer the following questions in their Response Journals:
“How does Paul’s reaction to leaving Albert compare with leaving his mother on page 185? What does this comparison reveal about his character?”