AP Lit 2021-2013 Fall Per. 0 & 5 Assignments
- Instructor
- Mrs. Sheri Zoratti
- Term
- Fall 2013
- Department
- English
- Description
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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
Upcoming Assignments
No upcoming assignments.
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~ elements of Juvenalian Satire?
~ Complete responses to team analysis questions
~ Brainstorm ideas for your own Modest Proposal
Colbert's Swiftian Proposal video clip (my links): http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/368379/december-13-2010/the-word---swift-payment
* HW: (ongoing): Allusion Teaching Project and Document w/MLA citations
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- Reading assignment: “A Modest Proposal” Please give each student a copy of the handout
- Teams should work together to read and annotate the text. Teams may shuffle around a bit to do this, because about 1/3 of the students are familiar with the text and can help those who are not
- They are to annotate the text, focusing on how Swift achieves his satiric purpose.
- Teams may also work together to respond to the questions on the back (1 paper per team is fine). If they do not finish, let them know we will have more time on Tuesday. The writing assignment will be assigned next week.
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-- Plan to have Thursday of this week and Wednesday of next week for library and in-class work on the project...come prepared
Depending on time available:
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* Team Teaching Assignment: Allusions (see attached)
-- you will teach on Jan 24, 27, 28, and Finals Day (Finals are on WEDNESDAY for zero and Thursday for 5th)
* AP Practice Test: 13 min individual, 13 min team, grade/review
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* Overview: World Cafe, close readings, essay, Test, Major Work Summary, essay, etc.)
+ FAFSA Pin lab requirements (SSN, home address, appropriate email + bring SSN for a parent in order to create their PIN as well)
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* Kick off Volume II (read to Ch. XXX) + Write journals analyzing satirical elements
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Works of literature often depict acts of betrayal. Friends and even family may betray a protagonist; main characters may likewise be guilty of treachery or may betray their own values. Select a novel or play that includes such acts of betrayal. Then, in a well-written essay, analyze the nature of the betrayal and show how it contributes to the meaning of the work as a whole.
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* HW: Finish Malapropism worksheet + be ready for Reader's Theater Monday!
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District Writing Assessment
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* Act III Quiz (10 Questions/Super easy!)
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* Discuss language/double meanings in Hamlet's dialogue with Ophelia Act III.i + paraphrase Hamlet and Ophelia's closing words
* Resume Act III (Branagh) -- We were able to complete III.iii
* HW: Complete Act III reading (you have only to finish Act III iv) + Act I/II Essay due Tuesday
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* To be or Not to Be Soliloquy: 3 different versions in film
* Resume Act III reading/acting
* HW: Explication of Act II.ii soliloquy due tomorrow plus Act I/II essay due Tuesday
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* Stamp Act II ii summary annotations
* Introduce Act by Act Essays -- see attached
* Act II ii soliloquy: Branagh version and time to clarify questions
* Begin Act III reading
* HW: Act II explication due on Friday + Begin Act I/II essay (due Tuesday)
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* Pay for books if you have not yet...OVERDUE!
* Share Character Maps
* Act II ii with Branagh: Read and pause to discuss and paraphrase key events and language: Paraphrase Voltemand's news & Polonius's plan) -- Skip Act II.ii ll. 338-562 (included in summary), resume at Soliloquy ll. 563-622
* Act II ii Explication ("O, what a rogue and peasant slave am I") -- Due Friday. Work on this with teams/in tutorials.
>> Follow the following breakdown/chunking of the text:
ll. 563-571; 572-580 (be sure to understand the allusion to Hecuba); 581-586; 586-590; 591-597 (look for the shift here! Plus an allusion to Prometheus); 598-605; 605-611; 611-615; and 615-622
* HW: Begin work on Explication (due Friday) + See yesterday for summary
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Objective: SWBAT determine author's purpose and use of literary devices by close reading of practice AP test (individually and collaboratively)
Collect parent letters
2. Teams: Discuss/debate and write your answers in Column B -- 15 minutes
3. Whole class: Correct answers in Column C + notes on question types and rationales -- 15 min
* HW: Read Act II to page 50 line 58 (we saw most of Act II.i in the Branagh film; re-read those sections for details and continue reading up to page 50 line 58)
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* Roles/reading of Act I.iii (After Polonius' speech to Laertes) and I iv (Hamlet, Horatio, Ghost, Marcellus)
* Act I scene iv (Show Gibson film Ch. 6 and Ch. 7 -- it is out of order ~ 16 min.)
* HW: Read Act I scene v and prepare to discuss
* Reminder: Parent homework is due Friday!
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- Objective: SWBAT interpret Shakespeare's language/diction by taking notes and practicing.
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Assignment: Create a PPT with 10 slides:
Slide 1: Title slide with team names
Slide 2-3: Summary of text
Slide 4-8-: Lit Crit for your text
Slides 9-10: Close reading analysis (select quotes with interesting diction, details, syntax, and/or imagery)
Assessed on 5-Pt. Rubric for the following: 1. Content/Meets Reqs.2. Clarity of PPT 3. Depth of analysis 4. Presenter knowledge/delivery
· Greasy Lake: http://teacherweb.com/WA/CloverParkHighSchool/MsSelby/Greasy-Lake.pdf
· A Clean, Well-Lighted Place: http://www.mrbauld.com/hemclean.html
· Harrison Bergeron: http://www.tnellen.com/cybereng/harrison.html
· The Lottery: http://sites.middlebury.edu/individualandthesociety/files/2010/09/jackson_lottery.pdf
· The Tale Tell Heart: Diyanni
· Trifles: Diyanni
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* Collect Fic Bootcamp HW ("Soldier's Home")
Sentence-by-sentence break down of A Tale of Two Cities essay (I do, teams do, you finish as HW)
* HW: Fic Bootcamp -- You MUST come prepared with notes that clearly respond to the Fic Bootcamp prompts! Lack of notes = not prepared = ostracized from team for the day
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Objective: SWBAT analyze a short story (at 3 levels of depth) by practicing close reading, responding to questions, and utilizing Aristotle's topics for argument to draft thesis statements and analytical paragraphs.
9/25: Character section: "Cathedral" HW due (I will collect the Team assignment and HW from one person per team) + Quiz + Whole-class discussion; Read "Araby"
9/26 Setting section/Teams
9/27 Setting section/HW + quiz
9/30 POV section/Teams
10/1: POV section/HW + quiz HW: Read "A&P" AND respond to the questions -
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Join our new Edmodo group: Zoratti AP Lit 2013-2014
Group code f5x4i4
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Voice Lessons: Diction
9/19: Rockinghorse Winner -- Direct Instruction and questions for teams. Hand out Fiction Bootcamp and list the dates. HW: "Guests of the Nation"
9/20: Plot section: Team responses for "Guests of the Nation"; HW: Read "War" and complete questions
9/23: Plot section: "War" HW due (I will collect the Team assignment and HW from one person per team) + Quiz + Whole-class discussion; HW: Read "Astronomer's Wife"
9/24: First 5 minutes: Phuong talking about voter reg + internship; Character section: Team responses for "Astronomer's Wife"; HW: Read "Cathedral" and complete questions
* Daily HW: Read the assigned stories from the "Fiction Bootcamp" packet and prepare responses for the questions prior to coming to class.
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-- The end results should be telling. Once you see how much analysis you wrote, evaluate the sophistication of that analysis. Refer to the rubric.
* Form groups by prompt (2009, 2010, 2011) and evaluate sample essays (AP Central)
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Major Works Summaries due
* Share your thesis statements with team -- help each other strengthen as needed/share out
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- 10 min: Team Quiz on first 10 lit terms (allegory, alliteration, allusion, analogy, anaphora, aphorism, apostrophe, assonance, caesura, connotation) -- each member must contribute
- 5 min: Review
- BNW article discussion: Take a stand (Scale of 1-10) and select evidence as support: How close are we to the world Huxley envisioned? Team discussion/class discussion/whip-around + hand in the articles
- Reflect on your current level of writing based on the assigned reading (L1, L2, or L3) + demo with pirate flag (slides 1-3 of PPT)
- *HW: 3 Reduction Organizers & contracts due Friday
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Additions to agenda (due to mishap yesterday morning):
- Discuss opportunity to see Death of a Salesman at SCR
- Review S.R. card analysis on elmo -- return cards and collect again
* Read the article (SB) and connect the ideas to BNW
* Give One/Get One for Brave New World: Lines of Communication -- We may modify this depending on the time it takes to do the opening activities
* HW: Reflection + Reminder: Major Works Graphic Organizers are due FRIDAY
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- *** Discuss opportunity to see Death of a Salesman at SCR
- Quiz on first 10 lit terms (allegory, alliteration, allusion, analogy, anaphora, aphorism, apostrophe, assonance, caesura, connotation)
* TEWWG Discussion:
> 6 min: Team Discussion
> Teacher Model of Close Reading
> Teams: Work together on the handout (2 passages) -- write 7-10 sentences for each
> HW: Complete Close Reading + Read/annotate the handout (Developing an Analytical Voice)
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* T&G yesterday's test (MC only)
* Book 3 discussions: Team up with students who read your novel for book club discussion
* Visual Memory with Lit Terms:
1. The word elephant >> green squirrel blue tree >> bald head pogo (we see pics)
2. Demo first 3 lit terms (see photo) with 4 columns
(numbers, nouns, skip column, word + defs,): allegory, alliteration, allusion, analogy, anaphora, aphorism, apostrophe, assonance, caesura, connotation)
* HW: define and memorize those 10 terms + Bring TEWWG
Reminder: Reduction Organizers + Contracts due Friday 9/13
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* Review "I Am" Poem assignment
* Reminder: I Am Poems are due Friday
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1. Select 1 prompt for your essay
* Last 5 min: Check out Diyanni
*: Read & understand the syllabus + contract is due 9/13
* I Am Poem is due Friday