Showing posts with label From the diary of Anne Frank. Show all posts
Showing posts with label From the diary of Anne Frank. Show all posts

Sunday, March 7, 2021

From the Diary of Anne Frank


 Oral Comprehension Check Page 51

3. What makes writing in a diary a strange experience for Anne Frank?

Writing in a diary was a strange experience for Anne Frank as she never had a diary. It was a gift on her 13th birthday. She considered it her best friend. She shared everything with it.

4. Why does Anne want to keep a diary?

Anne always feels lonely and distressed.  She wants to keep a diary to get off all the burden and pain. She finds a true friend in her diary as she has hardly any real friends.

5. Why did Anne think she could confide more in her diary than in people?

Anne felt that paper had more patience than people to listen to her plight. So, it was easier for her to write all kind of thoughts. Her personal diary was not meant for anyone else to read.

6. Why does Anne provide a brief sketch of her life?

By providing the brief sketch of her life, Anne wants to give an introduction of her family. This is to help the reader to develop a connection with the author.

7. What tells you that Anne loved her grandmother?

Anne lived with her grandmother for some time while her parents moved to Holland. She was very close to her Grandmother. She writes in her diary. “No one knows how often I think of her and still love her”. On her 13th birthday by lightening up one candle for Grandmother, she shows her love for her.

Page 54

8. Why was Mr. Keesing annoyed with Anne? What did he ask her to do?

Mr. Keesing was annoyed with Anne because she was very talkative. He punished her by giving her extra homework to write essays. The topics were related to her nature.

9. How did Anne justify her being a chatterbox in her essay?

Anne explained in her essay that her mother was very talkative and she had inherited the trait from her mother. She also wrote that talking is a right of a student. Thus she justified her being a chatterbox.

10. Do you think Mr. Keesing was a strict teacher?

No, Mr. Keesing was not a strict teacher. Any teacher would be annoyed if children keep on talking in the class. He had laughed at Anne’s funny arguments. At last he allowed her to herself in his class.

11. What made Mr. Keesing allow Anne to talk in class?

Anne’s last essay in the form of a poem showed Mr. Keesing the lighter side of a naughty child. He took it as a joke and laughed. From then onwards, he allowed Anne to talk in his class.

Thinking about the Text (Page 54)

1. Was Anne right when she said that the world would not be interested in the musings of a 13 year old girl?

Yes, Anne was right when she said so because most of the people don’t want to give importance to a child’s perspective toward the world. It is because they are too immature for the world. But Anne Frank has become one of the most discussed of all holocaust victims. Her ‘diary’ has been translated into many languages.

2. There are some examples of diary or journal entries in the ‘Before You Read’ section. Compare these with what Anne writes in her diary. What language was the diary originally written in? In what way is Anne’s diary different?

Anne’s diary was entirely different from most of the examples given before the text. It was somewhere closer to the memoir in which the name of Raj Kapoor has been mentioned. It was originally written in Dutch language. It has informal tone and it brings out the careful nature of a teenager.

3. Why does Anne need to give a brief sketch about her family? Does she treat ‘Kitty’ as an insider or an outsider?

Anne gave an introduction of her family in the ‘diary’ because it was hard to make others realize that a 13 years old teenager could write about her loneliness. Kitty was an ‘outsider’ which was gifted by her parents on her 13th birthday but she considered it her best friend and treated it as an insider.

4. How does Anne feel about her father, her grandmother, Mrs. Kuperus and Mr. Keesing? What do these tell you about her?

Anne has fond of memories of her father, grandmother, Mrs. Kuperus and Mr. Keesing, who have left indelible impressions on her mind and affected her life a lot. The way she represents all of them in her diary reveals that Anne was very good at understanding people and at developing interpersonal relations.

5. What does Anne write in her first essay?

Mr. Keesing asked her to write an essay on the topic ‘A Chatterbox’ as punishment. In the essay, she accepted the drawbacks of being talkative but argued that it was in her genes as her mother was also very talkative. It was difficult to give up the habit and it was also a student’s trait.

6. Anne says teachers are most unpredictable. Is Mr. Keesing unpredictable?

Initially, Mr. Keesing took Anne’s talkativeness seriously and gave her punishment. The punishment was to write an essay on a chatterbox. He laughs after reading the essay. His asked her to write another essay. When she wrote the essay in poetic form. He had taken it as a joke and he let her talk in her class.

7. What do these statements tell you about Anne Frank as a person?

1. We don’t seem to be able to get any closer and that’s the problem. Maybe it’s my fault that we don’t confide in each other.

2. I don’t want to write down the facts in this diary the way most people would, but I want the diary to be my friend.

3. Margot went to Holland in December and I followed in February, when I was plunked down on the table as a birthday present for Margot.

4. If you ask me, there are so many dummies that about a quarter of the class should be kept back, but teachers are the most unpredictable creatures on Earth.

5. Anyone could ramble on and leave big spaces between the words, but the trick was to come up with convincing arguments to prove the necessity of talking.

1.A. Anne is reserved.

2.A. She is self-confident and inventive.

3.A. She is humorous as well.

4.A. Anne is intelligent.

5.A. She has a sense of propriety and convincing attitude.

 

Wednesday, July 1, 2020

From the diary of Anne Frank



Introduction:

This lesson is taken from “Diary of a Young Girl” also known as “The Diary of Anne Frank”. It is an autobiography that was first published in 1947. In this, Anne, a teenage girl expresses her thoughts in a diary. The diary was written in a hardbound book that was gifted to her on her thirteenth birthday. She names the diary “Kitty”. She considers Kitty as her only true friend. She mentions her childhood, her family, and several other things that she shared with no one else.

Summary:

Anne writes about being lonely. She says that she is having no one to share her feelings even though she is surrounded by her family. She has around 30 friends also. So, she starts writing her feelings in a diary. She says that it is unusual for her to write in a diary as she never wrote anything like this and nobody would be interested to read it. As she is really in need of a true friend, she names her diary “Kitty”.

she doesn’t want to write just facts in her diary as most people do. She starts her diary by giving some background information. She feels that it is easier to understand her diary better. She writes about her family and early childhood, their migration, her early schooling, the death of her grandmother.

Later, she comes to the present day. She describes the day on which results are announced. Everyone in the class is nervous about their result. Some of them are even making bets. Anne is quite sure about herself and her friends. Her relationship with all the teachers is good. Her mathematics teacher, Mr. Keesing is an exception. He is annoyed because of her talking habit. He gives her punishment to write essays on weird topics such as “Chatterbox”. She writes an essay explaining that talking is a quality that she inherited from her mother and talking is a trait of students. He goes on giving her essays until she writes a funny poem with the help of a friend.  After that third and last assignment, Mr. Keesing laughs it off and never minds her talking.

Meanings:

Musings- a period of reflection or thought

Listless- with no energy or interest

Brooding- engaged in or showing deep thought about something that makes one sad, angry, or worried.

Prompted- provoke

Confide- to tell personal things privately to a person that one trusts

Liable- likely (here)

Enhance- intensify, increase, or further improve the quality, value, or extent of.

Plunge- jump or dive quickly

Adorable- lovable, cute

Emigrated- leave one's own country in order to settle permanently in another.

Plunked- to put down

Farewell- an act of parting or of making someone’s departure

Intended- planned

Solemn- characterized by deep sincerity

Dedication- commitment

Quaking- shake or tremble

Stake- to bet, chanced (doing something despite the uncertain outcome)

Pleading- to make an emotional appeal

Glances- take a brief or hurried look

Outbursts- a sudden release of strong emotion

Dummies- an object designed to resemble and serve as a substitute for the real or usual one

Unpredictable- not able to be predicted; changeable

Not to lose heart- not be discouraged

Old fogey- an old fashioned person

Annoyed- slightly angry; irritated

Chatterbox- a person who likes to chatter; talkative

Jotted- write (something) quickly

Ramble- to talk or write at length in confused or inconsequential ways

Convincing- capable of causing someone to believe that something is true or real; powerful

Trait- quality

Inherited- derived genetically from one's parents or ancestors.

Proceeded- to begin a course of action

Incorrigible- not able to be changed

Mistress- a woman in a position of authority or control

Roared- laughed (here)

Exhausted- completely used up

Ingenuity- the quality of being clever, original and inventive

Verse- writing arranged with a metrical rhythm, typically having a rhyme

Ridiculous- deserving or inviting derision or mockery; absurd (derision means making fun, jeering)

Contrary- opposite in nature, direction, or meaning

 

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