AP Lit 2011-2012 Per. 0 & 5 Assignments

Instructor
Mrs. Sheri Zoratti
Term
Fall 2011
Department
English
Description
The summer reading assignment is attached. Please check back periodically to see any updates or links.
 
 

AP ENGLISH LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION SYLLABUS

Website: www.santiagohs.org

 

Instructors:     Mrs. Zoratti

Email:            [email protected]            

Office Hours: Thursdays during lunch [other times available by appointment]

 

COURSE DESCRIPTION

AP English is a rigorous college-level course.  The course focuses on a variety of genres of literature by using major works from different literary periods concentrating on close reading of the texts.  Writing skills are developed with attention to form, style, and structure as well as content.  Preparation for the AP Exam is part of the course and we expect you to take the AP Exam.

 

COURSE OBJECTIVES

Students will be able to:

  • Develop accurate and perceptive critical analysis of major texts (English, American, European,  Classical and multi-cultural) representing various literary genres
  • Acquire fluent, precise writing style through the preparation of essays about the texts
  • Understand the technique of poetry as it affects and enhances meaning in a poem
  • Generate independent, thoughtful, and analytical discourse during class discussions
  • Deliver oral reports with poise and clarity
  • Demonstrate knowledge of literary terms
  • Develop essential writing skills and knowledge required to deal successfully with the questions on the AP English examination

 

AP ENGLISH POLICIES

§         All assignments are due at the beginning of the class on the scheduled due date.  Papers (essays, responses, projects, etc.) must be completely assembled (stapled, packaged) and ready for submission as you walk into the classroom before the tardy bell rings.  Class time will not be used for assembly purposes. Late papers will not be accepted.  I will not accept them for a lower grade, as a sympathy gesture on my part, or as a direct result of a unique excuse on your part.

§         All writing assignments are to be typed.  Maintain a copy of all writing assignments on paper, hard drive, and flash drive.

§         Students must contribute to classroom discussion in a meaningful, analytical, way.  Failure to do so will result in a lower grade.

§         Students must maintain an ongoing record of class notes and major works notes for test preparation purposes. 

§         Students must attend class prepared on a daily basis.  Borrowing supplies, texts or course materials from other students is prohibited.  This is a college-level course and daily preparation is required for success in this course. 

§         Required supplies: texts, binder [1 ½” - 2”], college-ruled paper, 2+ pens (black and blue ink), white-out, and highlighters.  Your binder needs 6 tabs: Terms, Voice Lessons, Writing, Major Works, Poetry, and Prose.

§         We follow all Santiago High School policies regarding attendance, tardies, attire, electronic devices, food and beverages, etc.

 

COURSE MATERIALS

  • Primary Text:  DiYanni, Robert. Literature—Reading Fiction, Poetry and Drama (5th ed.).
  • Novels, plays, and poetry as assigned, including the Summer Reading texts.

 


COURSEWORK

 

§         First Quarter:  Summer Reading discussions, essays, and quizzes; Short Fiction (literary and critical terminology); works by Porter, Updike, Lawrence, Joyce, Jackson, Boyle, Williams, and others.  Classical drama:  Hamlet, Much Ado about Nothing, and others

 

§         Second Quarter: 19th and 20th century drama which may include:  A Doll House, The Glass Menagerie, Death of a Salesman, and/or The Importance of Being Earnest.  Core novel:  Pride and Prejudice.

 

§         Third Quarter:  Novels:  All Quiet on the Western Front, 1984, and/or Frankenstein.  Study and analyze poetry from the 16th to 19th centuries.

 

§         Fourth Quarter:  Twentieth century poetry; non-fiction prose (essays, criticism) from the 19th and 20th centuries.  We will close the year with a senior research project and literature circles.

 

 

There will be at least three critical essays assigned each quarter along with tests and quizzes on the required reading.

 

Several of the critical essays will be completed in class to prepare students for the time limitations on the essays required for the Advanced Placement test in May.  Students who pass the AP exam may elect to waive the lower division English literature requirement in college.  (Minimum scores for this waiver vary from college to college – check your college website for details).

 

The format and content of this course mirrors that of a university literature course.  The AP canon emphasizes the work of such essential literary voices as Shakespeare, Donne, Ibsen, Shaw, Austen, Orwell, Dickinson, Joyce, Achebe and Miller.  As with a university level course, there is no extra credit, and no late work or “make-up” work accepted for grading.  Successful student writing in the AP context must exhibit a student’s ability to think critically and his or her mastery of expository prose.

 

Student grades are based primarily on the critical essays but also reflect the importance of other class requirements as well.  These are the grade components and relative percentages for Advanced Placement students:

 

 

Formative work (homework, quizzes, small assignments)

30-35%

Summative work (essays, tests, major projects)

45-50%

Final projects (research essays, final presentations, final exams)

15-20%

 

 

Scale: 90-100% = A    80-89% = B     70-79% = C    60-69% = D    59% or below = F

Files


Assignment Calendar

Upcoming Assignments RSS Feed

No upcoming assignments.

Past Assignments

Due:

Assignment

Strunk and White (see linked document for the full text and attached Word file for abridged text)

Due:

Assignment

Jan 30, 31, and Finals Days:
 
Teams teach allusions to the class per the requirements laid out in the assignment handout

Due:

Assignment

26-27: Virginia Woolf's "A Room of One's Own"
 
Thursday:
* Quickwrite
* Bio on Woolf
* Class reading of "Shakespeare's Sister"  -- annotate the text and write her 6 primary beliefs
* HW: Complete reading and annotation
 
Friday: 
* Watch Stossel's report on Title IX -- discussion of equity and fairness (Werth has DVD)
* Share "starred" belief from Woolf's essay
* Teams: 3 after reading questions
-- I passed back P&P essays for students to take notes on strengths/weaknesses
* Last 15 minutes: Write OUTLINE for essay prompt
* Monday: MLA research documents are due + start teaching allusions

Due:

Assignment

Tues-Wed: In-class time to work on team Allusion Research/Teaching Project
*** Bring your documents to class in order to use your time effectively!**

Due:

Assignment

 
* Finish work with Swift/writing Modest Proposals
* HW: (ongoing): Allusion Teaching Project and Document w/MLA citations
*** Bring your documents to class in order to use your time effectively!**

Notes on your essays:

* STOP committing the following basic errors: In the story "Pride and Prejudice" by Jane Austen uses a limited omniscient point of view to alter the readers perspective..."

This excerpt has FOUR ERRORS that I consider inexcusable in your writing as AP-Lit seniors, so STOP MAKING THEM! (You know who you are -- about 75% of you are making one, two, three, or all four of these errors on a regular basis).

Here is another example: In "Pride and Prejudice" by Jane Austen is a novel where ...

And another: In Pride and Prejudice written by Jane Austen, creates...




Due:

Assignment

AP-Lit Practice Test (MC)
 
* HW: (ongoing): Allusion Teaching Project and Document w/MLA citations

Due:

Assignment

Objective: Recognize and evaluate Juvenalian satire by reading & analyzing Swift's techniques + prepare to apply by writing your own Modest Proposal
 
* Continue reading the text
~ elements of Juvenalian Satire?
~ Respond to team analysis questions
~ Brainstorm ideas for your own Modest Proposal
 
* HW: (ongoing): Allusion Teaching Project and Document w/MLA citations

Due:

Assignment

* Any questions re: the Allusion Research/Teaching Project?
-- Plan to have Tuesday and Wednesday of next week for in-class work on the project...come prepared
 
* PPT: Review of Satire
* WOTD: sardonic
* Video Clip: Colbert
* Vocabulary Preview for "A Modest Proposal"
* Background on "the Irish Problem"/ (Garden Grove/Beverly Hills analogy)
* Begin reading the text -- look for references to animals, look for satiric elements
* HW: (ongoing): Allusion Teaching Project and Document w/MLA citations

Due:

Assignment

* Team Teaching Assignment: Allusions (see attached)
 -- you will teach on Jan 30, 32, and Finals Day
 
* Notebook Check -- Tabs/Organization + College Acceptance Letters (funny)
 
* Personal Vocabulary Building -- Add 10 words/Wk from any text
 
 

Due:

Assignment

Upcoming: Colbert, Swift, Virginia Woolf

Due:

Assignment

* Collect Major Works Summary for P&P
AP Open Q. Essay

Due:

Assignment

Essay Prep/Outlining  
* Quick Survey (Honors/AP)
* 2 Volunteers read Darcy POV stories/turn in
* Start by looking at strengths and weaknesses of previous 2 essays.  What do you need to do to up-level your sophistication of analysis?
* Draft your thesis and outline your focus for each body paragraph (Use Essay Outlining format -- see attached for example)
* HW: Reminder: Major Works Summary is due tomorrow

Due:

Assignment

* Share letters (from Monday's HW)
* The novel from Darcy's POV:
1. Adjectives to describe Darcy (Evidence?)
2. Discuss Limited Omniscient Narrator
3. Read twice: Volume 3, Ch. 2/Ch. X LIV in student version: pp. 173-176 (top) -- skip these 2 paragraphs: "In seeing Bingley" and "Elizabeth was pleased"
4. While reading, make note of Darcy's state of mind -- infer possible meanings to Darcy's actions.
5. Now, rewrite the scene from DARCY's perspective, using a limited omniscient narrator. Be sure to compose dialogue to reveal Darcy's responses to various exchanges. For example, why does he show up early? How does he feel when he sees Elizabeth? Her aunt and uncle? How does he want to be perceived? etc.

Due:

Assignment

I'm out Per. 1-6  for Getty field trip
 
* Pemberly and Poem connection

Due:

Assignment

* Collect Ch. 43 assignment
* Close reading of the letters (Yours, etc.)
1. Read aloud: Jane's letter to Elizabeth (Vol. II ch. 3 or Ch. XXXI) -- tone?  diction? emotion?
2. Teams: Re-read Darcy's proposal to Elizabeth (Vol II, Ch. 11 or ch. XXXIV)
  -- 5 emotions Lizzy experiences
  -- 5 sentences that best capture Lizzy's response
 -- Pride?  Prejudice?
 
* HW: Letter from Lizzy to Jane recounting Darcy's proposal to her -- reflect Austen's use of language! (Due Wednesday)

Due:

Assignment

* Warmup: Write summary for C-Notes by answering your questions and adding transitions
* Today is the last day to turn in Dialectical Journals!
* Ch. 19 Close Reading activity with teams (see attached)
* HW: Ch. 43 Close Reading (see attached)

Due:

Assignment

Bring your Social Security Number today!  We will be doing FAFSA registration in the library with the counselors and you MUST have your SSN to do it! (Free $$)

Afterward: 
* Share/collect drawings
* Close Reading PPT -- Finish Cornell Notes as HW -- be sure you draft ideas for a thesis for the Melville excerpt (it doesn't need to be polished -- just use the ideas from the close reading to come up with a draft of a thesis statement)
*Add questions, but wait for summary in class tomorrow

Due:

Assignment

Wednesday 1/4: 

* Test in class (Should take 30 min)
* Discuss Hogarth's satirical "Marriage A-la Mode" Series of paintings -- look for evidence of satire
* Satirical drawing: "Do you Know Who I Am?"  -- focus on Lady Catherine, Mr. Collins, Miss Bingley, Mrs. Bennet, Mary, or Lydia (you choose).  Find representative quotations, choose a setting and situation, decide on symbolic elements (like the chained dogs in Hogarth's painting) and create your drawing.
* HW: Complete the activity including  drawing or storyboard -- artistic merit is immaterial (I'm looking for your ideas) + Remember to bring SSN tomorrow!

Due:

Assignment

2 Week timeframe (Jan 3 to 13):
 
-- Collect Pride & Prejudice Journals (1/4 - 1/6 Window)
-- Socratic Seminar or World Cafe
-- Assessments
-- Assign Team Project (due in 2 weeks)
 
Other:
-- More practice writing thesis statements/outlines.  A few students asked for another model of how to approach this, so I drafted another thesis and outline for one of the practice prompts for us to discuss (attached) along with another practice prompt.
-- I also uploaded a PPT I found online that may help those of you who continue to struggle with writing thesis statements.  Take a look.  It addresses a range of thesis statements, from biographical narrative to expository to response to lit.  
-- We need to start Lit Terms lessons after P&P Projects

Due:

Assignment

Tuesday 1/3: World Cafe 

* Play P&P Soundtrack 
* Choose hosts for each table (5 tables for zero/8 tables for 5th) in advance
* Count off rest of students 1-5 or 1-8
* Give each table host their question, butcher paper for ideas, notes, drawings (students may take c-notes if desired) 
* Host stays, the rest of the group moves to next cafe table

* HW: P&P Test tomorrow (comprehension/objective).  Study  your Major Works Summary in preparation for the test.

Due:

Assignment

Assignment over break: 
 
While reading P&P you will keep a diectical journal based on the satire/high comedy in the novel.  -Important Note: There are 3 Volumes in the book but the Dover Edition does not reflect this, so make note of it in your text:
    Volume I: Ch. I-XXIII (pp. 1-91)
    Volume II: Ch. XXIV-XLII (pp. 91-163)
    Volume III: Ch. XLIII - LXI (pp. 163-end)
 
Journal Requirements: For each Volume of the novel, you will select 4 quotations from that part of the text that reflect the ideas of high comedy/satire and write them on the left side of your journal; your analysis of the quotation will be on the right side.  Choose interesting quotations and do a "close reading" so that your analysis is engaging and insightful.  You are required to analyze only 12 total quotations (4 per volume x 3 volumes) so put your energy into choosing quotations that speak to you and analyzing with depth.
 
This is due January 4th-6th. 

Due:

Assignment

Here is something interesting to read if you have a moment to spare.

Due:

Assignment

Assignment over break:
 
While reading P&P you will keep a diectical journal based on the satire/high comedy in the novel. -
 
Important Note: There are 3 Volumes in the book but the Dover Edition does not reflect this, so make note of it in your text:
     Volume I: Ch. I-XXIII (pp. 1-91)
     Volume II: Ch. XXIV-XLII (pp. 91-163)
      Volume III: Ch. XLIII - LXI (pp. 163-end)
 
Journal Requirements: For each Volume of the novel, you will select 4 quotations from that part of the text that reflect the ideas of high comedy/satire and write them on the left side of your journal; your analysis of the quotation will be on the right side. Choose interesting quotations and do a "close reading" so that your analysis is engaging and insightful and reflects an understanding of Austen's use of language. You are required to analyze only 12 total quotations (4 per volume x 3 volumes) so put your energy into choosing quotations that speak to you and analyzing with depth.
 
This is due January 4th-6th.
 
Additionally, you may want to work on your Major Works Graphic Organizers while you read.  This is not due until we are finished with our work on the text (1/13), but it makes sense to do it as you go.  And THINK for YOURSELF!  STOP abusing Shmoop, Sparknotes, et al.  (Organizers are attached for you)

Due:

Assignment

Today's agenda:
 
* Teams: Discuss your thoughts, ahas, questions, and quotations of interest (especially high comedy) -- share out with class
* P&P Video clips from 1940, 1995, and 2005 -- Darcy's first appearance at the Meryton Ball and Lizzie's arrival at Netherfield when Jane is ill.
* Class read/Team read  and discuss Ch. 13 (p. 41) to Ch. 16
* Assignment over break: Complete reading the book and keep a journal of high comedy while you read (I also suggest completing your Major Works Summary as you read).  See the separate post for details.

Due:

Assignment

* Satire Video clip/ppt
* Class review of some examples of satire/high comedy in P&P thus far (PPT)
 + P&P chapter-by-chapter discussions (Slides 11-18)
* Team reading Ch. 7-12 (up to p. 41) -- complete as HW

Due:

Assignment

* Warm-up: Write a summary of your Cornell Notes on the Regency Era/Jane Austen
 -- Method: Answer your left margin questions + add transitions
-- Share out what you learned (Stratified society; Austen's anonymity as a writer, the original title of the novel, etc.)
* Prejudice: What does it mean to you? Pride: Positive (earned) and Negative (unmerited; false pride)
* P&P chapter-by-chapter discussions (Slides 1-10) 
* Begin Pride & Prejudice (Whole Class)
* HW: Ch. 1-6 (page 18) + Review the Satire handout

Due:

Assignment

* Return Hamlet to Student Services
* Pre-reading activity for P&P
* Writing Tips: How to score a 9 (or at least a 7) on your AP essays
* HW: Do a bit of research on Jane Austen and the Regency Era (take C-Notes) -- I've attached a PPT with some basic background, so start with that and then see what else you can find out!
* Bring Pride and Prejudice tomorrow!

Due:

Assignment

Week of 12/12: More Writing tips + Begin Pride and Prejudice -- Complete reading over break
 
Monday's agenda:
 
* Collect Major Works Summaries for both Hamlet and Much Ado (see Friday's HW for the attachments  -- you may use either organizer depending on what works best for you).
* AP Question 3 Sample Responses/Anchors:
1. Quietly read the essays and score using the AP Rubric
2. Teams discuss scoring/rationale
3. Class debrief
* How to strengthen the foundation of your essay: your thesis
* HW: Write a thesis that meets the checklist for 3 prompts (attached)
* Bring Hamlet tomorrow (we'll return it)

Due:

Assignment

Now that you see your score for the AP practice test, it's time to make sure you learn the key terminology. 
 
The following links are to Quizlet flashcards and games for the terms that you need to know.  Use these links: Study the flashcards, take the practice tests, and play the games so that the words become second nature to you. 

Due:

Assignment

12/8: Much Ado film
* HW: Major Works Summaries for both Hamlet and Much Ado -- Due on Monday
 
(see attached -- you may choose either option for your work)

Due:

Assignment

Much Ado Essay (40 min)
* Begin film
 
* HW due Thursday:
 
1. Create a Sparknotes account and take the AP Lit practice test (see link below).
2. After you take the test, print your results, along with study notes/diagnostic based on the test results (it will give you strengths and weaknesses)
3. PROVE TO ME that you're working to improve your weaknesses by doing test corrections.  Include WHY you chose the answer you chose, and WHY that answer is incorrect/why the correct answer is the best choice.*** Note: I was working with some students on this in the library, and we couldn't find a way to print it up without taking 15 or so pages. Can anyone come up with a solution for this to share with the class?  
This diagnostic test will pinpoint your weak areas and tell you how to target those areas effectively. The test takes 30 minutes to complete.
 

Due:

Assignment

Readers' Theater!
* See attached rubric

Due:

Assignment

AP-Lit Practice Test (MC)
Independent (Column A)
Teams (Column B)
Correct Answer (Column C)
+ Take Notes
 
* HW: Rehearse your lines, gather your materials, prepare for Readers' Theater!

Due:

Assignment

* Discuss/collect Malapropism worksheet
* Hamlet essay team assessment -- highlight analysis and grade using rubric
* Reader's theater practice

Due:

Assignment

Collaboration Day (short zero):
 
* Reader's Theater practice
* Teams: Malapropism worksheet -- Show Act III, scene iii (Dogberry, Verges, and the Watch) for context
* HW: Finish Malapropism worksheet

Due:

Assignment

* Much Ado quiz
* Team essay evaluation and lesson: Each team must read an essay excerpt from "A Rose for Emily" and evaluate errors/come up with a lesson to teach to a second team (We will use Practice 2 and Practice 3 for this).
* Introduce Reader's Theater and form teams -- performances will be on Monday

Due:

Assignment

* Turning a 4 or 5 into a 6 or 7 -- teamwork
* Return "A Rose for Emily" essays -- take notes/refile
* Overview of Much Ado (attached) -- Complete this as HW (Take notes on characters, themes, vocabulary, etc.)

Due:

Assignment

If you haven't checked this out yet, be sure that you do over break!  Here are two articles that might give you some "food for thought" as you decide on a college and a major:

Due:

Assignment

Hamlet Essay (In-class)

Personal Statement Rewrites due (Note: You are not required to rewrite your essay, but you must return it to me for your portfolio)

Due:

Assignment

Over Thanksgiving Break: Do a first read/pleasure read of Shakespeare's Much Ado about Nothing -- we'll delve into discussion and analysis when we get back (it's a pretty quick read for a Shakespeare play!)

Due:

Assignment

College Panel today!  We will be visited by a number of my former students who will share what college is REALLY like!  Be sure to come prepared with questions!

* Reminder: Personal Statements rewrites are due by tomorrow (You are not required to rewrite your statement, but you must return your essay for your portfolio).  

* In-class Hamlet essay tomorrow

Due:

Assignment

* Quick Act 5 Recap:
1. How does Hamlet learn of Ophelia's death?  Describe the scene and outcome (5.2.13-79)
2. What happens to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern? Give specifics.  (5.2.13-79)
3. What is Osric's role in the play?  (5.2.81-185) Hint: He is a sycophant
 
* Act 5.2 Re-enactment (8 actors needed) -- discussion of theme & resolutions/importance of Fortinbras
* Test tomorrow + Journals due tomorrow! 

Due:

Assignment

Reminder: Per 6 and after School: UC Rep in Room 120

Due:

Assignment

Week of 11/14 Outline:
 
Mon-Tue: Stamp journal; Complete Hamlet reading, acting, discussion, and written responses
Wed: Hamlet Test and collect journals (including sentence frame responses)
Thur: College Student Panel + Articles (Lion King)
Fri: Essay

Due:

Assignment

* Turn in Personal Statement revisions if you want them reflected in Q1 grades (otherwise you have until next Thursday)
* Act 5.1 discussion and analysis: Team Explication of Hamlet's "Alas, poor Yorick" speech (due in class)
* HW: Read 5.2 + Journals!

Due:

Assignment

* Act IV Closure: Guided questions and live acting
~ The pirates appear (Deus ex machina)
~ Revenge plot within a revenge plot within a revenge plot
~ Ophelia's death: Accident or suicide?
 
* HW: Act 5.1 reading + work on journals
* Personal Statement rewrites: Due tomorrow if you want in the gradebook for Q1; window to revise closes on Thursday, 11/17; Journals due 11/18

Due:

Assignment

* Today's focus: Act 4.4-4.6: Shakesperean insults, pointless battles, and insanity
* Discussion and sentence frame responses
* HW: Act 4.7 and journal responses

Due:

Assignment

** Reminder: UC Rep here today during 6th and after school!  Update: UC Rep is out ill, so we will reschedule for 11/14

* Today's focus: Act 4.1-4.3: PUNS!
* Discussion and sentence frame responses
* HW: Act 4.4-4.6 and journal responses

Due:

Assignment

Objective: Practice taking a portion of the exam in a timed setting, then review to understand your strengths and weaknesses

AP-Lit MC Practice Test 1 Q 1-13

1. On your own: Write your answers in Column A (in ink) -- Should take 13 minutes; I will give you 18 this time since it's such a challenging text
2. Teams: Discuss/debate and write your answers in Column B (in ink) -- 12 minutes
3. Whole class: Correct answers in Column C + notes on question types and rationales -- 15 min

* HW: Read 4.1-4.3 (short scenes) and continue journal work

Due:

Assignment

Act III: Turning Point discussion and quick quiz

Due:

Assignment

* Voice Lessons: Tone/ Collect explications + stamp journals
* Complete Act III, scene 1 analysis questions
* Begin Act III, scene 2 analysis
* HW: Act III, scene 3-4

Due:

Assignment

Today's agenda (substitute teacher)
 
* Teams: Complete your Act III, scene 1 soliloquy explications
* Teams: Work on your Hamlet journals
* HW: Work on both of the above;  I will collect an explication from each student on Wednesday, along with a journal check

Due:

Assignment

* Hamlet's "To be or not to be" Soliloquy
* Act III, scene 1 Explication -- follow the sample; work in teams but the assignment will be collected from each student on Wednesday (See attached PPT)
* HW: Read Act III, scene 2

Due:

Assignment

Personal Statements Due! (This is the last day I will accept them -- please note if you are applying to a UC so that I can prioritize)
 
* Voice Lessons: Tone
* Model Explication (student sample from Act I)
* Teams: Explicate Act II, scene 2 soliloquy (due Monday)
* HW: Read Act III, scene 1 + Continue to work on your joural responses

Due:

Assignment

* Turn in Personal Statements (Window closes TOMORROW!)
* Voice Lessons: Tone
* Stamp Journal progress
* Act II reading and analysis: Use Branagh 1:02-1:18 to review...
   -- "Brevity is the soul of wit"
   -- Hamlet's love letter to Ophelia
   -- Hamlet's madness and taunting of Polonius
   -- Hamlet's awareness of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern's motives
   -- Introduction of the Players
* If time: Also show Gibson 38:00 - 44:00 for contrast
* Teams: Work on your Journal responses
* HW: Journals + personal statements if you have not yet submitted

Due:

Assignment

* Voice Lessons: Tone
* Act II, scene 1 analysis and sentence frames
* HW: Act II, scene 2 reading (begin in class/finish as HW)

Due:

Assignment

Parent Letters due!  See attached for the Polonius letter/parent HW assignment
 
* Collect 1 Explication per team + any remaining order $
* Beginning of period: Open and read your letters from your parents -- share reactions as desired -- Hang onto this letter FOREVER!
* Act I Closure (PPT attached)
* HW: Read Act II, scene 1
* Reminder: Personal statements due this week!

Due:

Assignment

I will be out today for a funeral
 
Complete your work in this order:
 
1. Teams: Complete your explication of Act I, scene 2 lines 129-159.  I will collect this from one random team member tomorrow
2.Work on yourHamlet Journals – again you may work in teams, but you each need to respond on your own (see yesterday's homework for the attachment)
 
Reminders: Parent letter is due tomorrow!  Personal Statement is due this week!

Due:

Assignment

* Last day to pay for book order ($5 for both books: Much Ado and Pride & Prejudice)
* Handout Hamlet Journal/Questions to guide your reading -- you will work on this throughout your reading; I will check your progress periodically (stamps) and collect at the end of the play (see attached)
* Analysis of Act I, scene 3 (see attached PPT for details and sentence frames)
* Continue explication of the first soliloquy in TEAMS
* HW: Complete reading of Act I by Monday
* Reminder: Personal Statements are due no later than 10/28

Due:

Assignment

* $5 for book orders (pay by tomorrow!)
* Analysis of Act I, scene 2 (see attached PPT for specifics and for sentence frames)
 -- Set up a page titled Hamlet Sentence Frame Responses
 -- Be sure to note Act, scenes, and lines as you respond
* I will model explication of Hamlet's first soliloquy
* HW: Read Act I, scene 3 by tomorrow (finish Act I by Monday)
 + work on personal statement (due 10/28 or earlier)

Due:

Assignment

10/19:
* Turn in $5 for your book order
* The Simpsons: Hamlet
* Hamlet Act I.1 in-class reading and discussion
* HW: Act 1.2 reading + work on personal statement (due 10/28 or earlier)

Due:

Assignment

10/18: Hamlet Pre-Reading
* 1-minute Hamlet video
* Anticipation Guide (from the back of yesterday's handout)
* Book Checkout
* Shakespeare Bootcamp 
See attached PPTs (Reading Plays, Shakespeare Bootcamp, and Anticipation Guide) ** HW: Personal Statement is due by 10/28 (typed) -- you may turn it in at any point between now and then

Due:

Assignment

Week of 10/17: No Voice lessons this week
 
10/17: In-Class Prompt (About You)  See attached PPT (Quickwrite to Rough Draft ppt)
* Note: This will be your rough draft for your Personal Statement/UC app/Scholarship essay
* Book orders for Pride & Prejudice and Much Ado about Nothing ($5 for BOTH!)


 
10/20-10/21: Hamlet reading as assigned + Peer Editing/Revision of Personal Statement

Due:

Assignment

Week of 10/10

Objectives: Students will read, discuss, and write analytically re: an author's use of voice (syntax, imagery, diction, detail, etc.).

Voice Lessons: Detail

10/10: Use of Force discussion/collect HW from Friday
10/11: In-class culminating essay for Fiction Bootcamp/Voice Lessons
10/12: Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" reading and discussion
10/3- 10/14:T.C. Boyle's "Greasy Lake" and Ernest Hemingway's "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place" -- reading and discussion
* HW due 10/17: Hamlet pre-reading handout

Due:

Assignment

Week of 10/3:  HW & Classwork assignments as detailed in "Fiction Bootcamp" packet.

Voice Lessons: Syntax


** Note: We will stay on the same schedule despite our CSU presentation on Monday, but we will take the Language & Style quiz on Tuesday instead of Monday***


Monday 10/3: Collect "A&P" and "Spunk" work; CSUF presentation; HW: "A Worn Path"
Tuesday 10/4: Voice Lesson: Syntax; Quiz on "A&P"/"Spunk"; Teamwork on "A Worn Path"; HW: "Young Goodman Brown"
Wednesday 10/5 Voice Lesson: Syntax; Quiz on "A Worn Path" and "Young Goodman Brown" Team discussion on YGB +HW "A Very Old Man" (Quick PPT on Hawthorne & YGB)
Thursday 10/6 Voice Lessons: Syntax; Magical Realism lesson; Teamwork on "A Very Old Man"; HW: "The Story of an Hour"
Friday 10/7: Syntax; Quiz on the above stories; Discussion/Wrap up; HW over the weekend: "Use of Force" -- Choose TWO questions Page 6 (one from Sect. III and one from Sect. IV) of your packet and respond in relation to "Use of Force" -- your response should be at least 1/2 page per question.  Answer the "So What?"
 
Objective: AP students will collaboratively discuss and debate elements of fiction in short stories and write analytical responses.

Due:

Assignment

All classes:

Today we will have a presenter visit us from CSU-Fullerton to discuss:

1. The Four Systems of Higher Education
2. College Timeline for Seniors

Periods 0, 4, and 5 will meet in Rm. 120 as usual
Periods 1 & 2 will meet in the cafeteria (we will be with Mr. Werth's students)

Due:

Assignment

Week of 9/26:  HW & Classwork assignments as detailed in "Fiction Bootcamp" packet.

Voice Lessons: Imagery (Mon-Wed); Syntax notes (Fri)


9/26 Setting section/Teams
9/27 Setting section/HW + quiz
9/28 POV section/Teams
9/29: POV section/HW + quiz (No Voice Lesson or Bootcamp discussion today -- Nacirema reading/annotation/discussion instead)
9/30: Language & Style section/Teams

Due:

Assignment

Week of 9/19: HW & Classwork assignments as detailed in "Fiction Bootcamp" packet (see attached)

Voice Lessons: Diction

9/19: Rockinghorse Winner -- Direct Instruction and questions for teams
9/20: Plot section: Team responses for "Guests of the Nation"
9/21: Plot  section: "War" HW due  (I will collect the Team assignment and HW from one person per team) + Quiz + Whole-class discussion
9/22: Character section: Team responses for "Astronomer's Wife"
9/23: Character section: "Cathedral" HW due (I will collect the Team assignment and HW from one person per team) + Quiz + Whole-class discussion

* Daily HW: Read the assigned stories from the "Fiction Bootcamp" packet and prepare responses for the questions prior to coming to class.  



Due:

Assignment

I recommend that all of my seniors check out the attached document re: UC Readiness Checklist for your senior year, or go to my links and click on the UC Readiness Facebook link.

Due:

Assignment

Discussion Board!

Here is a board for you to talk about your summer reading assignments, questions, etc. I posted a couple of ideas to get you started, but this board is for YOU: Add threads, questions, ideas, etc. that will help YOU better understand the works. I hope to keep this board going all year. I'll pop in to answer questions/moderate as needed, but this is a place for you to talk with each other -- a virtual Socratic Seminar, if you will :D

You will need to create an account to post. Your account must clearly indicate who you are, so please use your first initial, last name (I would be szoratti) unless that is not enough information to distinguish you, in which case, add your full first name, or middle initial.

At this point, the board is not mandatory, but I will be checking in to see who is participating, and I hope to see you all there! This is a good example of the ways I look to see evidence of your intellectual curiosity, which is so important for success in this class!

Due:

Assignment

Due today: "AP Major Works Summary" (attached) for Their Eyes Were Watching God and Brave New World.

Spend some time to do this right -- these will come in very handy as you prep for the AP Lit exam later this year.

Note: I have 2 different versions attached -- use the one that best fits your style and study needs.

Due:

Assignment

Agenda:

* Collect Major Works Summary sheets for Brave New World and Their Eyes were Watching God

* Course Expectations Overview

* Return essays: HIGHLIGHT your own essay as follows:  Highlight your on-prompt analysis ONLY -- that is, do not highlight plot summary or retelling; do not highlight quotations; do not highlight off-prompt journeys.  
 -- The end results should be telling.  Once you see how much analysis you wrote, evaluate the sophistication of that analysis.  

* Some initial thoughts about the essays: When you write your response, analyze events at end of the novel, then the beginning, then the middle (in other words, out of order) -- this should help you avoid plot summary.  Also, use the author's name instead of the characters' names.  For example, instead of writing "Janie's hair symbolizes her various stages life, from being controlled to ultimately gaining independence. " try this: "Hurston reveals the empowerment of her protagonist Janie through her hair, which varies from tightly wrapped when she is being controlled by the men in her life, to loose and wild when she is free and on her own path."  See the difference?   

-- Per 0 Examples: Jenny Vo, Daisy Vences, Jennifer Amador, Daniel Nguyen's (first few paras)
-- Per 5 Examples: Nancy Mai, Michelle Wong, Lucia Camacho, Nicole Nguyen


* Hand out Fiction Bootcamp Packets and begin guided First Reading  of RHW

* HW: Read "The Rockinghorse Winner" to prepare for Monday's class

Due:

Assignment

Objective: Students will engage in collegial discussion and reflection regarding our summer literature.

Agenda:

* Quick Trade & Grade (MC Test)
* Read the article and connect the ideas to BNW
* Give One/Get One for Brave New World
* Lines of Communication
* HW: Reflection + Reminder: Major Works Graphic Organizers are due FRIDAY
* Bring: Diyanni tormorrow

Due:

Assignment

Objective: Students will engage in collegial discussion and reflection regarding our summer literature.

Agenda:

* Portfolio Exchange (last 5 min of zero/first 5 min of 5th)
* Share "I Am" Poems (and turn in)
* Student examples of Character Poems for Their Eyes were Watching God
* Mini Socratic Seminars re: discussion items (Change of Plan: Phil Chairs PPT)
* Write reflection
* Bring Brave New World tomorrow

Due:

Assignment

Agenda:

* S.R. Test (multiple choice and short answer)
* Reminder "I Am" Poems (due tomorrow)
* HW: Jot down your thoughts re: the 8 questions AND write questions of your own for class discussion tomorrow. (See attached)
* Bring Their Eyes were Watching God tomorrow!

Due:

Assignment

Agenda:

On-Demand Essay (Respond to AP Free Response question with Summer Reading novel): Choose 1 out of the 3 prompts.

* Highlight your thesis statement
* Reminder: Test tomorrow

Due:

Assignment

Zero: 

* Submit Summer Reading Index cards (Write your name on ALL cards and clip together with paper clip)
* Turn in your locators
* Complete Index Card assignment as HW (see attachment for directions)

Zero and 5th:
* Summer Reading Assessment Part I
* Complete "I Am" poem about yourself

* HW: Review & take notes on the attached Literary Analysis PPT -- this will assist you in writing cogent & persuasive essays for this course, including the essay you will write on Monday

* Personalize your "I Am Poem" -- due next Wednesday

* Reminder: Major Works Summaries are due next Friday (See Sept. 16th HW for the attachments and instructions)

Due:

Assignment

Please see attached for a copy of our summer assignment, due the first day of class.  

Due:

Assignment

Agenda (5th Period):

* Submit Summer Reading Index cards (Write your name on ALL cards and clip together with paper clip)
* While I sign locators... Complete a class Index Card (follow directions on projector)
* "I Don't Know You" Activity
* HW: Assessments on Summer Reading will occur on Friday, Monday, and Tuesday
* Head's Up: Review & take notes on the attached PPT before Monday's class