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  1. Mutiny (Chapter 9, Shipwreck at the Bottom of the World)

  2. One of the most infamous stories of polar e xplora t ion is Sir John

  3. Franklin's doomed doomed search for the Nortbwest Passage . In 18 4 5 ,

  4. Franklin took two Royal Navy s hips , Erebusand Terror, and a crew of 129

s into the Arctic to search for a sea route between the North Atlantic and

  1. the Pa cif ic . They never ret ur ne d. Years lat e r , a record of the fateful voyage

  2. was discovered among some artifacts in Arctic Canada . Mut iny, insa nit y,

  3. dese rt ion, cannibalism-dreadful things were whispered about the members

  4. of the Franklin exped it ion. More than forty rescue missions were sent from

  5. Eng la nd, at least ten of them financed by Lady Franklin, the leader's widow.

  6. A book about one of Lady Franklin's rescue miss ions, The Voyage of

  7. the Fox, was among the nonessential stores and equipment left behind at

  8. Ocean Ca mp . There essentials were now being dragged laboriously over the

  9. ice by Endurance's c r e w. Far to their west on the Antarctic Peninsula was

  10. Erebus and Terror Gul f, named in honor of the two ships that had navigated

  11. the bottom of the world before being lost at the t op. Without doubt,

  12. Shackleton's men we r e well versed in s t orie s about t he Franklin voyage and

  13. well aware of t he da nge rs that faced t he m as they man-hauled two of t he

  14. boats over the rotting ice toward a ve ry unc e r t a in goal.

  15. Shackleton had hop e d by setting out across the ic e to enliven the

  16. cr ew and focus t he ir minds on act ion. I ns t e a d , he found hims e lf faced wit h

1


  1. seawater, the crew shuffled their feet in the snow, looking anxious and

  2. avoiding Shackleton's eyes. Overhead a lone petrel circled, watching the

  3. scene. Worsley, angry and exasperated, was in a standoff with a mulish,

  4. silent McNeish. The carpenter had decided not to take another step.

  5. Under naval law, a ship's crew is free of obligation when the ship sinks.




  1. Their duties are t erminat ed, and their ceases. After years at sea McNeish

  2. knew his naval law, and he was convinced that Endurance's Ship's Articles

so were canceled. He wasn't going to f ollow orders from Worsley or Shackleton

  1. or anyone else any longer. He had had enough.

  2. This was the first threat to Shacklet on's command, but it was a

  3. potentially disastrous one. Chances for survival were slim at best if they all

  4. stayed together. But if the crew broke apart and chose their own cour ses,

  5. their chances would dwindle to nothing. At that moment, nobody was siding




  1. with McNeish-after all, staying behind was obviously fatal.




  1. But Shackleton knew how close his crew was to falling apart. The

  2. fo'c'sle hands, along with McNeish, had begun grumbling about their duties




  1. and pay since the ship sank. And some of the university men, who were

  2. unused to such a hard lif e, were so demoralized by t he events of the last

I

  1. months that they seemed ready to break down. Once a man sot down on the

  2. ice and decided not to continue, it would require force or threats of violence

  3. to get him moving again.

3


  1. together between increasingly large leads of open water. Progress in any

  2. direction began to look impossible.

  3. The next day, they retreated to a large, old floe that seemed solid,

  4. and there they pitched camp, but they soon discovered it was not as secure

  5. as they had hoped. They could not go forward. The way back to Ocean Camp

  6. was impassable. The ice was too soft to cross, but there was not enough

  7. open water to launch the boats. They moved a short distance again, and then

  8. one more time.

  9. At last, they made a new camp. It appeared that they had abandoned

  10. Ocean Camp for no advantage at alI. Their new floe was smaller and less

  11. st able . They had left behind many of the things t he y had salvaged from

  12. Endurance, including the scrap lumber that had made dry floors for their

  13. flimsy, canvas tents. They were stuck where they were, and the ice pack was

  14. crumbling to pieces beneath them.

  15. On December 31, 1915, Shackleton wrote in his d ia r y: "The last day of

  16. the old year: May the new one bring us good fortune, a safe deliverance from

  17. this anxious time, and allgood things to those we love so far away."

  18. If their loved ones so far away could have seen the crew of

  19. Endurance, their hearts would have broken. Nothing could have been more

  20. pitiful and hopeless than the twenty-eight men marooned on the rotting ice

5
Second Read:




  1. Show students the handout of different text structures with a projector, or supply students with individual copies of the handout, and discuss it with

them.


  1. Divide students into groups of 3 or 4 and provide them with a copy of the chapter "Mutany" and several colored highlighters or pens.



  1. Within their groups, students will read the chapter together and identify the internal st ruct ures used based on the groups discussion and handout.




  1. One student will read a paragrap h while another student will, with the input of the entire group, highlight and label each internal structure used.



  1. After each paragraph, have students rotate tasks so that each student has the opportunity to highlight and label.




  1. Once the chapter is completed, have the groups tally how many of each text structure was included in the chapter.



  1. As a group, they will write a parag raph on how the internal text st r uctur e worked for them. Did it help them understand better, or did the author's methods make it more difficult to understand what she was writing about?




  1. Then discuss as a class: How would the text be different if she had only told the story chronologically? If she had only used description? If she had only used compare and contrast? Why does Armstrong need to use so many different types of text structures?

Description

descriptive adjectives

Cause/Effect The author tells what cause, effect,



ha ppened, the cause, therefore, reasons

0:1 ' " i'"
When the temperature drops below 45 degrees, it



result , and so, I I


Sequence

The author tells things

First, second, next,

1. _

_

_

_

_

_

First I get cold. Then I get

or

in the order they

third, later, then,

2. _

_

_

_

_

_

goose bumps on my skin,

Chronological or

happened.

after, finally

3. _

_

_

_

_

_

followed by me shaking all

Time Order




followed by

4. _

_

_

_

_




over.







dates/time

























The author tells how

alike, unlike, on the



















Some people get goose

Comparison

two things are alike and

other hand, same,



















bumps from being cold.




different.

both, while,

differences,





















Others get goose bumps from fear. While they may







however, yet



















be caused by different




























things, all goose bumps




























look alike and produce the




























same result: shiverin .




and its effects. why, because, as a I


T.., tolvt,c...

since

causes goose bumps to pop up on my skin. As a result, I shiver.





Problem/Solution The author states a The problem is...

problem and then gives His dilemma was... one or more solutions. It solved, resolved may be done by posing Question?

a question and then Answers.... answerin it.

ikcf',-d.,lrn

Goose bumps made my teeth chatter! But I resolved the problem by wrapping up in Dad's warm jacket.



Optional Team Building Activity:
This is a nonverbal exercise.


    1. Have students form a single straight line according to birthdays.

    2. Persons with January birthdays will be at the beginning of the line.

    3. Have students get in order by date as well as by month. For instance, a person with a birthday of January 1 would be followed in order by later dates within the month of Janu ar y.

    4. Persons with February birthdays would come next, in order from the first to the end of the month. The line progresses by months and days with December birthdays at the end. Persons with the same birthday share the same place in line. All communication is to be done non-verbally (no lip-re adin g or whispering al lo wed).

    5. If anyone breaks that rule, he or she must return to his/her seat and is out.

    6. When the line is completed, each person will tell his/her birt hday, beginning with January.

    7. Points are added to the entire class' s grade if done correctly. Points are deducted for each person who is not in the correct order.

    8. Double points are deducted from everyone's scores for each person out - those who are se nt back to their seats for breaking the "no talking" ru le.

    9. Debrief afterward: what st ra t egies were used to find the correct order? What worked well? What didn't work? Would it have been helpful to have had a leader in charge of everyone? Why or why not?


Student Handout 1: "Decisions Decisions"

Group member's names:



Background:
Consensus can be hard to achie ve, especially when faced with life and death decisions that need to be made quickly. In this activity, you are part of Ernest Shackleton's 1914 exhibition to Antarctica. Your ship, Endurance, has been stuck in the ice of Antarctica's Weddell Sea for nine months. The pressure from the ice surrounding it the ship will soon crush it and swallow it into the sea. Your tasked with choosing and prioritizing items to take off the ship that will be important to the crew's survival until being rescued. You cannot take everything, so you will need to choose wisely.
Directions:


  1. Use the chart below to make your choices . Check each item as 1s t, 2nd, or 3rd priority in the boxes beside the item. Items that should be consideredfir st priority are ones that are essential for survival. Second and th ird priority items may be left behind because their functi on can be achieved through other means or because they take space away from more important items.

  2. Discuss the questions below and be prepared to report to the class.



1

2

3

Item

1

2

3

Item

1

2

3

Item










Artist's oil paints










Knives










Ship's bell










Book s










Matches










Signal mirror










Camera, film










Medical supplies










Sledges and dogs










Compass










Pi st ols & cart rid ges










Soccer ball










Cooking pot s










Playing cards










Star charts










Cotton shirts










Reindeer skin sleeping

bag











Tent s










Extra kerosene










Rifl e s, cart ridge s










Too ls










Extr a lamp wicks










Rope










Wooden crates










Flar e pist ol










Sail canvas










Woolen long

underw ear












Fresh water in

canisters












sext ant










Radio










Stove
























Which it ems were the easie st and most difficult to agree on t aking? Exl pain why in each case.

What principles {criteria) guided your decisio n s?

Which member of your group influenced the decisions the m ost and how?

Explain how your group reso lved any diff erences of opinion?

Describe how each member of the group felt about the final decisio n s?


Student Handout 2: Shackelton' s Decisions as described from first hand accounts from the Shackleton and his men's journals

1

2

3

Item

1

2

3

Item

1

2

3

Item

X







Art i st' s oil p aint s




X




Knives










Sh ip' s bell

X







Books

X







Matches










Signal mirror










X




Cam era, film

X







Medical su p plie s










Sledges and dogs




X




Co m pas s

X







Pistols & cartridges










Soccer ball




X







Cooking pot s







X

Playing cards










Star charts




X







Cotton shirts

X







Reindeer ski n sleeping

bag





X




Tent s




X







Extra kerosene

X







Rifl e s, cartridges

X







Tools

X







Ext ra lamp wicks

X







Rope

X







Wooden crat es







X

Flare pist ol

X







Sail canvas

X







Woolen long underwear




X




Fresh w at er in

canist ers



X







sex t ant







X

Radio

X







Stove
























Some choices depended on the journey. The pack ice proved to be too rough for sledge s (3), and the dogs required t oo many provi sion s. (They were eut hanized.) The lamp wi cks (1), an d art ist' s oil paints (1) were used to caulk the lifeboats and the tools (1) and wooden crat es (1) were essential to m aintai n the lifeboat s.


Sha ckleton 's firs t concerns were for the necessit ies of life. Penguins and seals were easily hunted with rifles (1), so canned meat (2) was unnec essary.Pisto ls ho wever, would have been dead weight (3).
Fresh water (2) was essential, but heavy and bulky . Glacial ice, iceberg fragment s, and snow are plent iful sources of fr esh water if there is a stove (1), ke rosen e (1), matches (1), and cooking pots (1) to melt them in.
Sh elte r includes st aying warm . Rop e (1) has many uses, includin g makin g replacement shelter for the fl imsy tent s (2) from sail canvas (1). Woolen long underwear (1) and rein deer skin sleeping bags (1) are warm when wet because they trap air. Cotton shirts (3) st ay sat urated and cold.
Navigation to South Georgia depended on sext ant (1) sightings of the sun, not sta rs; so star charts (3) were unnecessary. The value of med ical supplies (1), knives (1), an d a compass (1) are obvious.
Calling for help was not an opt ion. Sh ackleton was too far from any rescuers fo r a radio (3), sign al mirror (3), a ship' s bell (3), or a flare pist ol (3) to be useful.
Shackleton was also con cerned about t he mental health of hi s men and included playing cards (1) and book s (1) to help them through times when they were forced to lie low. Perhap s this explains why the ext ra weight of journals and pencils (2), and a camera and film (2) were permi tt ed. But the soccer ball (3) would see litt le opport unity for use unde r t hese condit ions.

Ad apt ed from "Weighty Decision s" http:/ /www.pbs. org/wgbh/nova/ education/activities/ 2906 shacklet.html






3

strong


2

medium


1

working towards




Visualization

The writing shows several examples of writing that allow the reader to visualize what the writer is t rying to

describ e.



The writing sh ow s few examples of writing that allow the reader to visualize what the w rit er i s

trying to describe.



The writing show s no examples of writing that allow the reader to visualize what the writer is trying to

describe.



Sensory Aspects

This w rit in g sh ow s several examples of writin g that all ow the reader to hear, touch,

taste, or smell in their

This writing sho w s

few examples of

writ ing that allo w the reader to hear, touch, taste, or smell



This writing sho w s no examples of writing that allow t he reader to hear, touch, taste,

or smell in their

imagination what the

writ er is trying to descri be.



in their imagination

imagination what the

what the writer is

trying to describe.



writ er i s trying to

describe.



Overall writing with sensory images

The sensory im age s in the writing make it "come alive" for the reader. This a fun piece to read.

This author is making an attempt to use sens ory images in their writ ing. This

writing shows promise and w ith a little mor rlivision



will be fun to read.

This author is has not

used sensory details

in their writing.Thi s w riting is hard to connect to and with more revision will be fun to read.

Conventions

Spelling and punctuation are correct in this writing. This makes the writ ing easy for others to read

without becoming

Spelling and punctuation are

mostly correct in this

Spelling and punctuation is not correct in this writing. This makes the writing hard for others to read without

becoming confused.

writing. This makes the writing easy for others to read

without becoming

confused.

confused .







Sensory Images Rubric Student's name:

Phase 4: Synthesis
Read Article: Shackleton's Leadership Role,
During the "Heroic Age of Exploration, 11 the period in which Shackleton's 1914-1916 British Imperial Trans ­ Antarctic Expedition took place, Antarctic expeditions often became ordeals of suffering. At the time, polar explorers were revered for their sacrifices and held up as heroes, albeit often tragic ones.
At this same time, Shackleton distinguished himself as a hero, not only arnong the masses, but also among the 27 men- officers, scientists and seamen- who were his crew members on the expedition. Shackleton earned the respect of these men, not to mention the respect of millions today, by being a leader who put his men's well­ being, both mental and physical, above all else.
Sha ckleton's extraordinary leadership skills contributed lo these 27 men successfully braving the nearly two years they were stranded in the Antarctk, when the expedition ship, the Endurance, was trapped and then crushed in the pack ice of the Weddell Sea.
Shackleton's accomplishment as a leader started wilh !t is selection of tlze Endurance crew He handpicked some members, including two who had served him faithfully and performed exceptiona lly on a previous expedition. To recruit the rest, it is sa id that he posted the following notice:

Men wanted for hazardous journey. Small wages. Bitter cold. Long months of complete darkness. Constant danger. Safe return doub ful. Honor and recognition in case of success.
Shackleton's recruitment notice was brutally honest about the discomforts and dangers to be faced. When the Endurance crew members indeed encountered all of the above-mentioned conditions, they accepted them as best they could, for they had been forewarned. And they looked to Shackleton, whom they called "The Boss," for guidance about how to survive the elements, both physically and emotionally.
When the Enduranc e became locked in pack ice, Shackleton ordered the men to pursue every possibl e means of extricating the ship from t!te icy jaws of the Weddell Sea, including using ice picks and saws in attempts to reach leads sighted sometimes hundreds o_f yards away. While these labors were ultimately futile, it was useful to have the men experience this firsthand, so they would neither question their predicament of having to "winter in the pack" nor become bitter with "what ifs," such as "If we had only been allowed to cut our way out of the ice, we'd have reached the Antarctic continent by now. 11
Shackleton's calm and confidence in the more dire circumstan ces were heartening to his crew. Commenting on Shackleton's reaction to their inability to free the Enduranceji·om the ice , Alexander Macklin, the ship's doctor, said, "ft was at this moment Shackleton...showed one of his sparks of real greatness. He did not...show...the slightest sign of disappointm ent. He told us simply and calmly that we would have to spend the winter in the pack."

Shackleton sustained morale and created a unified ieam by keeping everyone busy---and equal. For example, during the long months in which the crew lived on the Endurance as a winter station , Shackle ton ignored the predominant class system of the time and had scientists scrubbing floors alongside seaman and university professors eating beside Yorkshire fisherman.
In 9ddition , Shackleton encouraged more titan work-based camaraderie. The men played football on the ice, participated in nightly sing-alongs and toasts to loved ones back home, organized highly competitive dog-sled races- and even collectively shaved their heads, posing for expedition photographer Frank Hurley.

In the few circumstances in which crew members did not subscribe to the teamwork philosophy , such as when seaman John Vincent was reported to be bullying others, Shackleton swiftly reprimanded them, setting an example. Called to Shackleton's cabin, Vincent left it humbled and demoted.
While Shackleton was called "The Boss" by his men, he did not differentiate himse lf from them. When the crew moved off the debilitated ship to a camp on the ice, Shackleton ensured that neither he nor his officers received preferential treatment.
"There was only 18 skin [sleeping] bags & we cast lots for them," wrote ship's carpenter Chippy McNeish. "I was lucky for the first time in my life for I drew one."
"There was some crooked work in the drawing," able seaman Bakewell wrote, "as Sir Ernest, Mr. Wild...Captain Worsley and some of the other officers all drew wool [sleeping] bags. The fine warm fur bags all went to the men under them."
In addition, in an attempt to help his crew get over the trauma of abandoning the Endurance, Shackleton literally served his men: Rising early in the morning, he made hot milk and hand-delivered it to every tent in the camp.

Shackleton's mantra of unity and show of humanity was infectious. While his men were suffering from the most terrible deprivation, they often rose to his example and showed tremendous compassion for each other. When First Officer Lionel Greenstreet spilled his much-needed milk on the ice, he seemed almost despondent over the loss, and, one by one, the seven men who shared his tent silently poured some of their equally precious ration into his mug, refilling it.
During the brutal, seven-day lifeboat journey to Elephant ls/a nd, Shackleton literally stood tall, boosting the morale of his suffering men by standing at the tiller, hour after hour. Later, during the 17-day sail to South Georgia Island, Shackleton monitored tlze !tea /th of his five com panions constantly. Captain Frank Worsley later wrote, "Whenever Shackleton notices that a man seems extra cold and shivering, he imm ediately orders another hot drink served to all." Worsley explained that Shackleton was careful not to single out the man suffering the most, for he would not want to frighten him about his condition.
In the face of changing circumstances and constant danger , Shackleton remained positive and decisive, which buoyed his crew. Further, throughout the 22-month Endurance expedition , Shackleton was able to bring the best in each of his men. Each crew member contributed to the team 's survival, from Captain Frank Worsley, whose exceptional navigation guided the men to both Elephant and South Georgia Islands; to carpenter Chippy McNeish, who reinforced the lifeboats,· to cook Charles Green, who created meals day after day with limited resources; to Alexander Macklin and James Mcll roy, the two doctor s, who saved steward Perce Blackborow from gangrene resulting from frostbite; to second-in-command Frank Wild, who served as leader of the 21 men on Elephant Island after the departure o,[ Shackletonand companions for South Georgia.
Twenty-eight ordinary-turned-ext raordinary men, led by Shackleton's example, survived nearly tvvo years of unimaginable hardship at the end of the Earth.
Shackleton's Leadership Role, 2001 , htt p://main.wgbh.orgl imaxl\-ha ckletonlshackleton.html
Read: Shackleton's 'disastrous leadership caused the deaths of three explorers' Telegraph http://www.telegra ph.co.uklnewsl worldnewsl antarctica/1451419/Shackletonsdisastrousleadershi pcause dthe­ deathso fthreeex plorers.html

Shackleton's 'disastrous leadership caused the deaths of three explorers' By Tony Paterson 12:01AM GMT 11 Jan 2004 For decades, Sir Ernest Shackleton has been regarded as a hero for saving the crew of the Endurance during his failed South Pole expedition of 191416. The rescue he mounted has inspired a recent spate of books and television programs, and prompted management training schools to identify him as an example for the corporate world.
Yet in a new book due to be published in April, two Antarctic historians from New Zealand who have researched the fate of Sir Ernest's advance supply team for the first time say that three members froze to death as a result of bad leadership, faulty planning and woefully short supplies. "As leader of the Imperial Trans­ Antarctic Expedition , Shackleton inevitably bore responsibility for their deaths," said Richard McElrea , one of the authors of Polar Castaways. The book includes testimony from the diary of Ernest Joyce, one of the members of the ill fated party. " Nobody would consider undertaking such a trip with such miserable

equipm ent for a sin gle second," he wrote.
Sir Ernest is best known for sailing 800 miles from the Antarctic to South Georgia in the South Atlantic in a 23ft boat in 1915 after Endurance, his main ship, was crushed by pack ice and sank. The explorer and his crew survived an epic journey through some of the world's most treacherous seas with no loss of life.
Polar Castaways tells the little known story of the "Ross Sea party" a team of 10 men dispatched from Tasmania to the Antarctic in 1914 to deposit advance supplies for Sir Ernest, who had planned to cross the South Pole from th e opposite side of the continent until his ship sank.
According to David Harrowfield, Mr McElrea's coauthor, "Shackleton had given the Ross Sea party tasks which were almost im possible to f ulfi l". The party was beset by squabbles , supply shortages, bad plannin g and ultimately death. Aneas Mackintosh, who had been selected by Sir Ernest as team leader but turned out to be fatally hotheaded, was blown out to sea on drifting pack ice, together with Victor Hayward, another expedition member. The Rev Arnold Spencer Smith, the team's padre, contracted scurvy and.froze to death.
Sir Ernest gives only scant mention of their plight in South, his own account of his I 914 expedition. Mr. McElrea said his book was based on previously unpublished interviews that he and his coauthor conducted with survivors of the expedition during the 1970s and 1980s. Their task was to deposit more than two tons of

supplies at five separate depot camps along Sir Ernest's planned route a trip that involved covering a distance of more than 2,000 miles on dog sledges across pack ice plagued by relentless blizzards and sudden thaws.
The historians' new account begins with the explorers' realization that Sir Ernest's London based supply team had failed to deli ver almost J,alf tlte equi pm ent promised for the ex pedition a bad start. Once it had set off, the party ran into difficulties alm ost im mediately. Their ship, the Aurora, which was moored according to instructions set down by Sir Ernest, snapped its anchor cables in a storm and was blown out to sea with most of the supplies aboard. The ship drifted in ice for nearly a year before it could be freed, leaving the 10 man party marooned ashore with pitifully inadequate provisions.
Members of the party had to sew makeshift footwear made out of sealskin sleeping bags and trousers were cut from the remains of discarded tents. The party stuck to its task, but squabbles broke out after Mackintosh, t he one eyed explorer selected by Sir Ernest to lead the expedition, refused to reduce the heavy loads the team was dragging , even though several men had frost boils and most of the dogs had died from exposure.

Discipline continued to deteriorate and the food ration was reduced to eight sugar lumps and a biscuit a day. Spencer Smith, who was just 31, diedfrom scurvy, while Mackintosh had to be strapped to a sledge after becoming delirious . The party finally made it back to a camp at McMurdo sound in March 1916 after a tour that had lasted six months.
Two months later, Mackintosh insisted on making a dash across the frozen McMurdo sound to a hut with better supplies at Cape Evans, 15 miles to the north. "First we save you from death and now you want to risk dying again. What idiots are we dealing with here!" Joyce is recorded as saying. Mackintosh nevertheless walked out on to the floating pack ice with fellow explorer Hayward. An hour later, a blizzard blew up and forced the ice out into the sea. The pair were never seen again.
The Ross Sea party was not rescued until January 1917. Men had given their lives in a worthless sacrifice, the historians argue, because Sir Ernest neither crossed the Antarctic nor reached any of the depots they had laid.
The London based James Caird Society set up to honour Sir Ernest's memory and named after the boat on which the explorer and his crew made their escape 1/17/2016. Shackleton's 'disastrous leadership caused the deaths of three explorers' Telegraph

http://www.telegraph. co.uklnews/worldnews/antarctica/145 I 4 I 9/Shackletonsdisastrousleadershipcausedthe­ deathsofthreeexplorers.html 2/2 rejected claims that the explorer was to blame for the plight of the Ross Sea party.
"Shackleton was at the time coping with his own
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