Summer Homework
CSN requires summer homework for all students entering Kindergarten through Grade 12.
Summer homework provides a valuable opportunity for students to review concepts learned during the school year and helps to prevent loss of academic progress. Consistent reinforcement of skills is crucial to academic success, and summer homework allows students to maintain their progress and be better prepared for the upcoming school year.
Click on the divisions and grade levels below to view summer homework assignments.
Please Note: Homework is based on the rising grade level. For example, if your child just completed first grade, they must complete homework for 2nd grade. If your child just completed 5th grade, go to Middle School, then select the assignments for 6th Grade.
Lower School
Lower School Literacy Letter
Dear Lower School Parents,
As we approach the end of another school year, I want to take a moment to express my gratitude for your ongoing support and involvement in your child's education. It has been a year filled with incredible growth and achievements for our students, particularly in literacy.
Throughout the year, our students have dedicated themselves to various aspects of literacy: reading, writing, phonics, spelling, grammar, and vocabulary. Witnessing the strides they've made fills me with joy. However, with the summer break on the horizon, we are also mindful of the phenomenon known as the "summer slide." Research from Scholastic indicates that, on average, students tend to forget a significant portion of what they have learned over the summer months. In fact, teachers often spend four to six weeks at the beginning of the new school year re-teaching material that students have forgotten during the break.
To combat the “summer slide” and ensure that our rising kindergarten through fifth-grade students continue to build upon their literacy skills, we have curated a set of engaging activities focused on reading and writing. These activities are designed to help students retain the skills they've acquired and nurture their love for literacy. Please see the attached summer homework assignment.
Students are encouraged to work on these activities throughout the summer break and bring their completed work to their new teachers on the first day of the new school year. We understand that summer is a time for relaxation and family moments but dedicating some time to these activities will greatly benefit your child's academic growth.
Additionally, I would like to highlight the Summer Programs offered at CSN. These programs provide wonderful opportunities for further enrichment and learning experiences outside of the traditional classroom setting. You can find more details about the programs by visiting the following link:
CSN Summer Programs: https://communityschoolnaples.campbrainregistration.com/?returnUrl=%252FLanding
(Click on "Login Using Parent Portal" and use your Blackbaud credentials to gain access)
Should you have any questions about the activities provided, or the Summer Programs, please do not hesitate to reach out to me or your child's classroom teacher. Your partnership in your child's education is invaluable, and together, we can ensure a summer filled with continued growth and success.
Kindly,
Mrs. Elise Carlisi
Lower School Literacy Coordinator
Kindergarten
1st Grade
2nd Grade
3rd Grade
4th Grade
5th Grade
Middle School
6th Grade
Summer Reading
Rising 6th Grade students must complete both the Community Read AND the 6th Grade English book.
MS Community Read:
Al Capone Does My Shirts by Gennifer Choldenko (ISBN: 978-0142403709)
The novel Al Capone Does My Shirts is the Middle School Community Read for 2024-2025. All MS teachers and students read the novel over the summer. Al Capone Does My Shirts will be discussed during the first week(s) of school in advisory. All middle school students should arrive to campus in August ready to discuss the book and participate in activities based on the book. We will also celebrate the novel with an all-school Al Capone Does My Shirts Gimkit game.
Rising 6th Grade English:
A Rover’s Story by Jasmine Warga (ISBN:978-0-0631-1393-0)
Please either annotate or keep notes of interesting or challenging parts on a separate piece of paper or in a notebook. Also, please look up definitions of words you do not know and make a list of them. Bring the book, notes, and list the first day of school. Be ready to discuss them.
7th Grade
Summer Reading
Rising 7th Grade students must complete both the Community Read AND the 7th Grade English book.
MS Community Read:
Al Capone Does My Shirts by Gennifer Choldenko (ISBN: 978-0142403709)
The novel Al Capone Does My Shirts is the Middle School Community Read for 2024-2025. All MS teachers and students read the novel over the summer. Al Capone Does My Shirts will be discussed during the first week(s) of school in advisory. All middle school students should arrive to campus in August ready to discuss the book and participate in activities based on the book. We will also celebrate the novel with an all-school Al Capone Does My Shirts Gimkit game.
7th Grade English:
Animal Farm by George Orwell (ISBN 978-0-4515-2634-2)
Please either annotate or keep notes on a separate piece of paper/in a notebook. Bring the book and notes the first day of school. Be ready to discuss.
8th Grade
Summer Reading
Rising 8th Grade students must complete the MS Community Read, the History class novel, and CHOOSE ONE English book from the list.
MS Community Read:
Al Capone Does My Shirts by Gennifer Choldenko (ISBN: 978-0142403709)
The novel Al Capone Does My Shirts is the Middle School Community Read for 2024-2025. All MS teachers and students read the novel over the summer. Al Capone Does My Shirts will be discussed during the first week(s) of school in advisory. All middle school students should arrive to campus in August ready to discuss the book and participate in activities based on the book. We will also celebrate the novel with an all-school Al Capone Does My Shirts Gimkit game.
8th Grade History Book:
Chasing Lincoln’s Killer: The True Story of the Pursuit and Capture of John Wilkes Booth by James L. Swanson (ISBN: 978-0439903547)
Please either annotate or keep notes on a separate piece of paper/ in a notebook. Be ready to discuss the book in history class the first week of school.
8th Grade English Options: Please choose one.
Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card (ISBN: 978-0-7653-4229-4)
The Giver by Lowis Lowry (ISBN: 978-0-395-64566-6)
A Wrinkle in Time by Madeline L’Engle (ISBN: 0-440-49805-8)
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins (ISBN: 978-0-439-02348-1
Please either annotate or keep notes on a separate piece of paper/ in a notebook. Bring the book and notes the first day of school. Be ready to discuss.
Upper School
Summer AP
AP Research
- Scherff & Rush (2018)
- AP Research Papers:
AP Seminar
AP U.S. History
AP World Languages
AP Art
Summer English
Welcome to Upper School English Summer Reading, 2024!
We hope you look forward to an opportunity to breathe, to vacate, and to find a cozy corner in which to read a good book. Or two. Or as many as you please! Visit your family bookshelves, or a bookstore, or Amazon, and find a title that appeals to you!
Your teacher may require you to read a specific title in addition to books of your choosing, so check your class’s requirements, which are listed below.
Can’t find a book? Use THE LIST (beginning on Page Three of this document), which offers a range of wonderful options, sorted by interest.
Here is what we ask of you:
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Read something that interests you. Books on THE LIST are loosely organized by genre—Literary/ Realistic Fiction; Mystery/Thriller/Science Fiction; Historical Fiction; Nonfiction—in the hopes you may more easily find something to your liking.
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Read something that is new for you.
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Do not watch movies as substitutes for the books.
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Feel free to use audio books as supplements to turning the pages of an actual book or e-book, but do not use them as substitutes for reading.
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Do not read online summaries (i.e. Spark Notes, Shmoop, Cliffs Notes) as substitutes for the books.
You will be accountable for your reading when we return to school in ways that will differ from teacher to teacher. Remember: The point of Summer Reading assignments is to continue your development as critical readers, writers, and thinkers. Using any resource or technology--including generative artificial intelligence applications--that interferes with your own development runs contrary to the point as well as the spirit of summer reading and its related writing assignments.
- English I & English I Honors
- English II
- English II Honors
- Junior-Senior Electives
- AP English Language & Composition
- AP English Literature & Composition
English I & English I Honors
Read and annotate The House on Mango Street, by Sandra Cisneros (ISBN: 978-0679734772) AND one other title (either one you have found or one from THE LIST ). Annotations are notes written in the margins to capture your thoughts while reading. A student might annotate to:
- wonder about something
- connect the book to other stories, historical events, personal experiences, etc.
- mark passages that reflect the book’s themes and lessons
- notice changes in characters or notice how characters contrast each other
- explore how setting plays an important role in the story
- analyze why the author chose a certain word, phrase, name, description, punctuation, etc.
Students will engage in additional work related to the text when school begins. This may include an in-class presentation or some other form of assessment. As you read, we suggest that you not only follow the plot but also consider the way the story is told by the author. Annotations or notes that explore your thoughts about this as well as a few passages of significance may help you better recall the text, contribute to discussion, and complete assignments upon return to school.
English II
1. Read and annotate the first 19 chapters (pages 1-307) of The Help (ISBN: 978-0425232200) by Kathryn Stockett. Your annotations should focus on details about Aibileen Clark, Minny Jackson, and Skeeter Phelan. Your annotations will be graded when you return to school in August.
2. After you have read through page 307, write a one paragraph personal response about each of the three main characters so far. What do you like/dislike about them? What are significant experiences that you remember about each of them? What challenges do they face?
3. We will read and annotate pages 308-522 in class at the beginning of the semester.
English II Honors
1. Read and annotate The Help (ISBN: 978-0425232200), by Kathryn Stockett. Watching the movie is not a substitute for reading the text, but if you do see the movie, please share your critique – I would love to know what you think!
2. Type answers to your choice of three of the eleven discussion questions that are printed at the back of the book in the “Readers Guide for The Help.” Answers should be 150-200 words. Be thoughtful in your responses.
3. Choose two passages that made you think or feel something (one near the beginning/middle and one near the end of the novel). Copy the passage down, being sure to include the page number. Then write two reflections in which you explain what moved you or why the excerpt stood out to you. Reflections should be 150-200 words and should be in your own voice.
Junior-Senior Electives
Read and annotate two books fromTHE LIST. If do not find titles that interest you, please feel free to select books that are appropriate in terms of rigor, sophistication, and content. English teachers can offer advice about books that you may find appealing and let you know if your choices of titles not on THE LIST are appropriate for summer reading.
We suggest that one of your selections be from that genre, time, and/or theme. For example, if you signed up for Poetry for Everyone, then one of your books could be a poetry anthology that focuses on the work of a particular poet, a specific era (World War I poetry, for example), or a specific place (Ireland, or New York City, or the Great Plains).
NOTE: If you are taking The Hero's Journey during Semester One, you must read the first two books from the seven-part Harry Potter series of novels.
Students will engage in additional work related to the texts when school begins. This may include an in-class presentation or some other form of assessment. As you read, we suggest that you not only follow the plot but also consider the way the story is told by the author. Annotations or notes that explore your thoughts about this as well as a few passages of significance may help you better recall the text, contribute to discussion, and complete assignments upon return to school.
AP English Language & Composition
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Read and annotate Hunger of Memory: The Education of Richard Rodriguez, by Richard Rodriguez
(ISBN: 978-0553382518). Note that this is a memoir, not a novel, so as you read, you should remember that the author is recollecting events from his childhood and young adulthood. Comparing his development with your own may offer you insights into who you are now and the journey you are undertaking by signing up for AP Language.
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Write at least three Reader/Writer Notebook entries per week, hand-written in a bound notebook using blue or black ink. One entry per week must be about something that you are reading (for this class or another). You may not use TikTok or other forms of social media as the sources of your reading. Pick up a book, or a magazine, or a newspaper, ideally in print form. Do not engage in plot summary. Instead, write about your impressions of what you have read. If you notice that the author is arguing about something, how did they do it? What kinds of proof and reasons did they use?
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Read and annotate at least one other book from THE LIST .
Important Note: When reflecting on what you have read, please remember to focus not on the “what” but on the “how” and the “why” of the author’s work. In other words, your entries should not be book reports or content summaries of what happens. Instead, tell me about what that content means. Lean into this work. Ask questions. Entries are opportunities to grow and explore, not hurdles to clear. Waiting until the day before the deadline to write all of your entries will turn this learning opportunity into busy work. Don't do this.
AP English Literature & Composition
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Read and annotate The Poisonwood Bible, by Barbara Kingsolver (ISBN# 978-0060786502)
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Type three reflections (250-300 words), and in each, explore the narrative points of view of one of the following characters: Orleanna, Rachel, Adah, Leah, or Ruth May. Bring the characters to life, be both creative and analytical, show their personalities and struggles -- don’t tell me a character synopsis or report facts.
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Read about the “Resource Curse”: https://www.bloomberg.com/quicktake/resource-curse
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Type an original analysis (250-300 words), using quotations from both texts, that meaningfully connects the “Resource Curse” to Poisonwood Bible.
*Note: Avoid plot summary in your writing if you wish to earn credit for your work.
Summer Math
- Post Algebra 1 - https://www.deltamath.com/students?code=4U36-H9Z6
- Post Algebra 1 Honors – https://www.deltamath.com/students?code=8H3J-C8Q5
- Post Geometry – https://www.deltamath.com/students?code=NM6Q-M4BA
- Post Geometry Honors – https://www.deltamath.com/students?code=3L8J-X6HG
- Post Algebra 2 – https://www.deltamath.com/students?code=A52X-8B9M
- Post Algebra 2 Honors – https://www.deltamath.com/students?code=37Z3-3FQ4
- Post Algebra 3 and Trig – https://www.deltamath.com/students?code=46E4-B8DM
- Post Pre-Calculus - https://www.deltamath.com/students?code=Q8SD-669U
- Post Pre-Calculus Honors - https://www.deltamath.com/students?code=MV54-T8LK
Should you have any questions or concerns please email me at:
jgardner@communityschoolnaples.org
Have a great summer!
Jacqui Gardner
Upper School Mathematics Chair