Focus: How we can nurture our creative sides?
1. Sharing you with a short piece I recently wrote as a gift to my dad
2. Reading through the options from The 3 A.M. Epiphany
3. Writing your way to your own epiphanies!
4. Sharing your writing if time allows
HW:
Enjoy your senior years, and please stop my desk to visit (or to get help on your college essays).
Monday, May 18, 2015
Friday, May 15, 2015
Juniors Are the New Seniors: May 15, 2015
Focus: What do you need to take care of?
1. Warming up with my last round of reminders:
3. Deciding what you need to do right now, and offering you some suggestions about Naviance and teacher recs
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
1. Warming up with my last round of reminders:
- Turn in all books.
- Complete and print your letter to future AP Lit students.
- Complete and print your legacy (the essay you're most proud of and would like to be used as an example--you can leave your name on or off).
- Submit your online course evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
3. Deciding what you need to do right now, and offering you some suggestions about Naviance and teacher recs
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
Thursday, May 14, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Ending: May 14, 2015
Focus: How does it end?
See you at graduation, seniors!
See you tomorrow in class, juniors!
1. Warming up with my last round of reminders:
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
See you at graduation, seniors!
See you tomorrow in class, juniors!
1. Warming up with my last round of reminders:
- Turn in all books.
- Complete and print your letter to future AP Lit students.
- Complete and print your legacy (the essay you're most proud of and would like to be used as an example--you can leave your name on or off).
- Submit your online course evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Wondering What's Stranger Than Fiction? May 13, 2015
Focus: What do we love about literature?
1. Warming up with my last round of reminders:
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
1. Warming up with my last round of reminders:
- Turn in all books.
- Complete and print your letter to future AP Lit students.
- Complete and print your legacy (the essay you're most proud of and would like to be used as an example--you can leave your name on or off).
- Submit your online course evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Sharing Favorites: May 12, 2015
Focus: What do we love about literature?
1. Warming up with my last round of reminders:
3. Start watching Stranger Than Fiction
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
1. Warming up with my last round of reminders:
- Turn in all books.
- Complete and print your letter to future AP Lit students.
- Complete and print your legacy (the essay you're most proud of and would like to be used as an example--you can leave your name on or off).
- Submit your online course evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
3. Start watching Stranger Than Fiction
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
Monday, May 11, 2015
A.P. + Literature = 4ever: May 11, 2015
Focus: What do we love about literature?
1. Warming up with your last happy Monday thoughts
2. Reminding you of the final tasks to accomplish before you go
4. Composing letters, filling out course evaluations, turning in books, and checking stuff off
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
1. Warming up with your last happy Monday thoughts
2. Reminding you of the final tasks to accomplish before you go
- Turn in all books.
- Complete and print your letter to future AP Lit students.
- Complete and print your legacy (the essay you're most proud of and would like to be used as an example--you can leave your name on or off).
- Submit your online course evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
4. Composing letters, filling out course evaluations, turning in books, and checking stuff off
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
Friday, May 8, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Finishing Strong: May 8, 2015
Focus: How do we finish the year in A.P. Literature?
1. Warming up: A brief overview of next week / sign-up
2. Giving you an overview of the final tasks to accomplish before you go
4. Turning in books (if you have them)
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
1. Warming up: A brief overview of next week / sign-up
2. Giving you an overview of the final tasks to accomplish before you go
- Turn in all books.
- Complete and print your letter to future AP Lit students.
- Complete and print your legacy (the essay you're most proud of and would like to be used as an example--you can leave your name on or off).
- Submit your online course evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
4. Turning in books (if you have them)
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Done with the Test: May 7, 2015
Focus: How do we finish the year in A.P. Literature?
1. Warming up: How did it go?
2. Giving you an overview of the final tasks to accomplish before you go
4. Turning in books (if you have them)
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
1. Warming up: How did it go?
2. Giving you an overview of the final tasks to accomplish before you go
- Turn in all books.
- Complete and print your letter to future AP Lit students.
- Complete and print your legacy (the essay you're most proud of and would like to be used as an example--you can leave your name on or off).
- Submit your online course evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
4. Turning in books (if you have them)
HW:
1. Turn in all books.
2. Complete and print your letter.
3. Complete and print your legacy.
4. Submit your online evaluation, which you can access by clicking HERE.
Monday, May 4, 2015
A.P. Lit Was Born Ready: May 5, 2015
Focus: Why were you born ready for the A.P. Lit exam?
1. Warming up with some bedtime stories and remembering why you love to read
2. Offering you some interesting statistics:
3. Taking time to work through your bedside stacks and sample some "real" Question 3s
HW:
Finish up your bedside stacks, get a good night's sleep, and get to Ames by 7:30!
1. Warming up with some bedtime stories and remembering why you love to read
2. Offering you some interesting statistics:
- This year in A.P. Lit you have typed at least 100 pages of literary analysis.
- This year in A.P. Lit you have read, on average, about 3,000 pages of prose (you have also read at least 120 poems).
- You have been reading and speaking English for at least 16 years.
- But never mind all that...YOU WERE BORN READY FOR THE AP LIT EXAM!
3. Taking time to work through your bedside stacks and sample some "real" Question 3s
HW:
Finish up your bedside stacks, get a good night's sleep, and get to Ames by 7:30!
May the Fourth Be With You!
Focus: What do we need to know about prose?
1. Warming up with happy Monday thoughts and a few reminders from Mrs. Talen!
2. Enjoying a little "Name that Tone" with Quizlet, the first page of East of Eden, and the first page of Invisible Man
My easy tricks for deciphering tone:
4. Viewer Choice: Practicing 19th century prose with multiple choice questions, or...
Practicing contemporary prose with an essay prompt.
5. If time allows, taking a quick peek at Prince Liam from "The Royals"...or shall we call him Prince Hal?
HW:
1. The test is in about a week. The part of the test that you can really prepare for at this point is Question 3, so work hard on your bedside stacks. Repetition is key. Repetition is key.
2. One of your big question blog posts will be receiving a 9-point grade. Which one? That's up to you! Please e-mail me by noon today to tell me which one you'd like me to grade (can be from either semester). If I don't hear from you by noon, I will grade your most recent one.
1. Warming up with happy Monday thoughts and a few reminders from Mrs. Talen!
2. Enjoying a little "Name that Tone" with Quizlet, the first page of East of Eden, and the first page of Invisible Man
My easy tricks for deciphering tone:
- Look for patterns of diction (especially verbs).
- Look for patterns of imagery.
***FIVE MINUTE BREAK FOR READING LETTERS FROM PAST A.P. LIT STUDENTS***
4. Viewer Choice: Practicing 19th century prose with multiple choice questions, or...
Practicing contemporary prose with an essay prompt.
5. If time allows, taking a quick peek at Prince Liam from "The Royals"...or shall we call him Prince Hal?
HW:
1. The test is in about a week. The part of the test that you can really prepare for at this point is Question 3, so work hard on your bedside stacks. Repetition is key. Repetition is key.
2. One of your big question blog posts will be receiving a 9-point grade. Which one? That's up to you! Please e-mail me by noon today to tell me which one you'd like me to grade (can be from either semester). If I don't hear from you by noon, I will grade your most recent one.
Friday, May 1, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Reviewing Poetry: May 1, 2015
Focus: What do we need to know about poetry?
1. Warming up with a walk down memory lane: Enjoying an enlightening clip on "Word Bending" with the King of ______________ (name that poetic term) (5:00)
2. Partaking in "Name That Poetic Term"
3. Close reading "The Writer" together with an MMM approach and attacking a few multiple choice questions
4. Undressing Free Response #1 with "The Naked and the Nude"
HW:
1. The test is in about a week. The part of the test that you can really prepare for at this point is Question 3, so work hard on your bedside stacks. Repetition is key. Repetition is key.
2. One of your big question blog posts will be receiving a 9-point grade. Which one? That's up to you! Please e-mail me by noon on Monday to tell me which one you'd like me to grade (can be from either semester). If I don't hear from you by noon, I will grade your most recent one.
1. Warming up with a walk down memory lane: Enjoying an enlightening clip on "Word Bending" with the King of ______________ (name that poetic term) (5:00)
2. Partaking in "Name That Poetic Term"
3. Close reading "The Writer" together with an MMM approach and attacking a few multiple choice questions
4. Undressing Free Response #1 with "The Naked and the Nude"
HW:
1. The test is in about a week. The part of the test that you can really prepare for at this point is Question 3, so work hard on your bedside stacks. Repetition is key. Repetition is key.
2. One of your big question blog posts will be receiving a 9-point grade. Which one? That's up to you! Please e-mail me by noon on Monday to tell me which one you'd like me to grade (can be from either semester). If I don't hear from you by noon, I will grade your most recent one.
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are-- (April 29, 2015)
Focus: Do R & G find meaning in their lives? In their deaths?
1. Warming up with the most important lines from Act 3 (of your choosing, of course)
2. Using past A.P. prompts to discuss the play in small groups
3. Creating your final big blog post and selecting the one you'd like me to assign a 9 point grade in the Literary Essay category (it can be from either semester)
HW:
The test is in about a week. The part of the test that you can really prepare for at this point is Question 3, so work hard on your bedside stacks. Repetition is key. Repetition is key.
Guildenstern: No...no...not for us, not like that. Dying is not romantic, and death is not a game which will soon be over...Death is not anything...death is not...It's the absence of presence, nothing more...the endless time of never coming back...a gap you can't see, and when the wind blows through it, it makes no sound... (124)
1. Warming up with the most important lines from Act 3 (of your choosing, of course)
2. Using past A.P. prompts to discuss the play in small groups
3. Creating your final big blog post and selecting the one you'd like me to assign a 9 point grade in the Literary Essay category (it can be from either semester)
HW:
The test is in about a week. The part of the test that you can really prepare for at this point is Question 3, so work hard on your bedside stacks. Repetition is key. Repetition is key.
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Finding Meaning: April 28, 2015
Focus: To what extent do R & G find meaning in their lives and in their deaths?
ACT: Very Shortened Class
1. Finishing R & G Are Dead (1:36 ish)
2. Identifying the most significant line in Act 3 and sharing ideas about Stoppard's usage of the boat and the stage
HW:
The test is in about a week. The part of the test that you can really prepare for at this point is Question 3, so work hard on your bedside stacks. Repetition is key. Repetition is key.
ACT: Very Shortened Class
1. Finishing R & G Are Dead (1:36 ish)
2. Identifying the most significant line in Act 3 and sharing ideas about Stoppard's usage of the boat and the stage
HW:
The test is in about a week. The part of the test that you can really prepare for at this point is Question 3, so work hard on your bedside stacks. Repetition is key. Repetition is key.
Monday, April 27, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Sailing Towards the End: April 27, 2015
Focus: To what extent are we free on a boat?
Please turn in your culminating essays and do a little happy dance!
1. Warming up with Happy Monday thoughts
2. Talking about bedside stacks!
3. Finishing Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead and sharing ideas about Stoppard's usage of the boat and the stage
4. Discussing Stoppard's play in small groups, using past A.P. prompts as a guide
HW:
The test is in about a week. The part of the test that you can really prepare for at this point is Question 3, so work hard on your bedside stacks. Repetition is key. Repetition is key.
Please turn in your culminating essays and do a little happy dance!
1. Warming up with Happy Monday thoughts
2. Talking about bedside stacks!
3. Finishing Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead and sharing ideas about Stoppard's usage of the boat and the stage
4. Discussing Stoppard's play in small groups, using past A.P. prompts as a guide
HW:
The test is in about a week. The part of the test that you can really prepare for at this point is Question 3, so work hard on your bedside stacks. Repetition is key. Repetition is key.
Friday, April 24, 2015
R & G Are Not Dead...Yet: April 24, 2015
Focus: Does the world of R & G have order and/or purpose?
Spring Assembly: Shortened Class
1. Warming up by offering you a few quick culminating essay reminders
2. Reading the rest of Act II together
3. Thinking through the play artistically:
HW:
Culminating essay due Monday.
Spring Assembly: Shortened Class
1. Warming up by offering you a few quick culminating essay reminders
Staple your question/booklist to the front of your essay.
Include an MLA heading.
Include a header (Your last name Page #) in the upper right corner of each page.
Cite each quotation properly.
Attach a properly formatted Works Cited page that includes all works referenced in your essay.
2. Reading the rest of Act II together
- What imprisons the characters and how so? Do they have freedom?
- Is there logic/reason governing the world of R & G? Where are they seeking it? Do they find it?
- What are R & G's thoughts on death?
- Why the play within a play within a play?
3. Thinking through the play artistically:
- Try illustrating the characters from each "world" in this play (R & G, the Hamlet characters, the tragedians/actors performing the dumbshow) in a way that demonstrates how much control the characters have over their worlds.
- For example, does one world exist inside another? Are they each subject to the same laws?
- If the illustration is throwing you off, try simply forming a scale, or a spectrum, of control, and consider where each character falls.
HW:
Culminating essay due Monday.
Thursday, April 23, 2015
The Play Is the Thing: April 23, 2015
Focus: What control do the characters have or lack over their universe?
1. Warming up: Skim the question game on pages 42 through 44 and select one question you think is central to this play so far
2. Reading Act II together
3. Thinking through the play artistically: Try illustrating the characters from each "world" in this play (R & G, the Hamlet characters, the tragedians/actors performing the dumbshow) in a way that demonstrates how much control the characters have over their worlds.
For example, does one world exist inside another? Are they each subject to the same laws?
If the illustration is throwing you off, try simply forming a scale, or a spectrum, of control, and consider where each character falls.
HW:
Culminating essay due Monday.
1. Warming up: Skim the question game on pages 42 through 44 and select one question you think is central to this play so far
- Why does Stoppard have them play the question game?
2. Reading Act II together
- What imprisons the characters and how so? Do they have freedom?
- Is there logic/reason governing the world of R & G? Where are they seeking it? Do they find it?
- What are R & G's thoughts on death?
- Why the play within a play within a play?
3. Thinking through the play artistically: Try illustrating the characters from each "world" in this play (R & G, the Hamlet characters, the tragedians/actors performing the dumbshow) in a way that demonstrates how much control the characters have over their worlds.
For example, does one world exist inside another? Are they each subject to the same laws?
If the illustration is throwing you off, try simply forming a scale, or a spectrum, of control, and consider where each character falls.
HW:
Culminating essay due Monday.
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
A.P. Literature Is Offstage: April 22, 2015
Focus: What does it mean to be offstage?
1. Warming up: Close reading a passage from yesterday
PLAYER: We keep to our usual stuff, more or less, only inside out. We do on stage the things that are supposed to happen off. Which is a kind of integrity, if you look on every exit being an entrance somewhere else. (28)
2. Enjoying the rest of Act 1 in R & G, the film version (start at 18ish minutes) with the same focus as yesterday:
3. Wrapping up by breaking down today's focus question in small groups:
HW:
Culminating essay due this Monday.
1. Warming up: Close reading a passage from yesterday
PLAYER: We keep to our usual stuff, more or less, only inside out. We do on stage the things that are supposed to happen off. Which is a kind of integrity, if you look on every exit being an entrance somewhere else. (28)
- In your lives, how would you define living "offstage" to living "onstage"? In other words, when are you are offstage, and when are you onstage? For example, is your school life offstage or onstage, and why? Is there such a thing as "offstage"?
- What is the player revealing about his acting troop's intentions? Why is there integrity in this?
- What does he mean when he says that every exit is entrance somewhere else?
- How is this an example of metatheatre? In other words, how is this a play about plays/theatre?
2. Enjoying the rest of Act 1 in R & G, the film version (start at 18ish minutes) with the same focus as yesterday:
- Where do you see elements of Absurdism/Existentialism?
- Which objects seem to serve as metaphors? What larger ideas do they stand for and how?
- What connections to Waiting for Godot are you noticing?
3. Wrapping up by breaking down today's focus question in small groups:
- How are Rosencrantz's and Guildenstern's onstage lives (when they're in Hamlet) different from their offstage lives?
- Is being onstage more or less authentic than being offstage? Where do they have a greater sense of purpose? Where do they have more power?
HW:
Culminating essay due this Monday.
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
A.P. Literature Is Flipping a Coin: April 21, 2015
Focus: Why is Tom Stoppard interested in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern?
1. Warming up with the flip of a coin:
a. Take a coin and flip it in the air 20 times. Record how many times it comes up heads, and how many times it comes up tails. Interpret/explain the results.
b. Now, imagine that you take a quarter (a normal quarter) and flip it in the air twenty times. If it were to come up heads each time, would you be surprised? Why or why not? In your opinion, is the world generally an orderly or a disorderly place?
c. How would Samuel Beckett explain the imaginary phenomenon above?
1. Warming up with the flip of a coin:
a. Take a coin and flip it in the air 20 times. Record how many times it comes up heads, and how many times it comes up tails. Interpret/explain the results.
b. Now, imagine that you take a quarter (a normal quarter) and flip it in the air twenty times. If it were to come up heads each time, would you be surprised? Why or why not? In your opinion, is the world generally an orderly or a disorderly place?
c. How would Samuel Beckett explain the imaginary phenomenon above?
2. Speeding up: Here's what you need to know about Rosencrantz and Guildenstern from Hamlet...
- In Hamlet, they are minor characters and spend the vast majority of the play offstage.
- They're supposed to be Hamlet's friends, but they're really being used to spy on him.
- Near the end of the play, they ride on a boat from Denmark to England with Hamlet; they have sealed orders from King Claudius to the King of England, requesting that the King of England kill Hamlet.
- Hamlet, however, changes the note so that the orders are to kill Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, which the King of England carries out when they arrive in England.
- The action in the two bullet points above all takes place offstage in Hamlet and is merely reported by Fortinbras at the end of the play.
3. Acting out the beginning of Act One in R&G Are Dead
HW:
If you'd like feedback on your brainstorming, outlining, and drafting, please send me an e-mail with your specific inquiries. If you just Google share a document with me, I'm not sure what you'd like help with.
New final due date: April 27 (however, if you turn yours in early, it will be the first one graded and returned).
- Pre-reading: What's the significance of the title?
- Where do you see elements of Absurdism/Existentialism?
- Which objects seem to serve as metaphors? What larger ideas do they stand for and how?
- What connections to Waiting for Godot are you noticing?
HW:
If you'd like feedback on your brainstorming, outlining, and drafting, please send me an e-mail with your specific inquiries. If you just Google share a document with me, I'm not sure what you'd like help with.
New final due date: April 27 (however, if you turn yours in early, it will be the first one graded and returned).
Monday, April 20, 2015
A.P. Lit Has Been Drafted: April 20, 2015
Focus: How do little prompts grow into big essays?
1. Warming up with happy Monday thoughts
2. Unraveling the mind-boggling process of how a prompt becomes an outline; developing sub-questions for your prompt if you have not yet done so
Click here to see how Chase turned his prompt into an outline. Note: I highly recommend using questions to guide your outline.
3. Offering you some examples of how outlines turn into body paragraphs
Click here to see Brooke's outline and draft (hers is literary / philosophical).
Below are a few scraps from my culminating essay, which was more personal:
4. Inspiring you to think outside the box with some images from a less traditional essay from a few years ago:
HW:
If you'd like feedback on your brainstorming, outlining, and drafting, please send me an e-mail with your specific inquiries. If you just Google share a document with me, I'm not sure what you'd like help with.
New final due date: April 27 (however, if you turn yours in early, it will be the first one graded and returned).
1. Warming up with happy Monday thoughts
2. Unraveling the mind-boggling process of how a prompt becomes an outline; developing sub-questions for your prompt if you have not yet done so
Click here to see how Chase turned his prompt into an outline. Note: I highly recommend using questions to guide your outline.
3. Offering you some examples of how outlines turn into body paragraphs
Click here to see Brooke's outline and draft (hers is literary / philosophical).
Below are a few scraps from my culminating essay, which was more personal:
I discovered that the entire world can fall away from you while you’re just lying there on the couch with a white homemade baby blanket in your hands. It just floats away like a tiny a globe with everyone and everything in it, except you. And my husband had to squeeze me hard in his arms before I could climb back into that globe. It hurt, coming in and out of life, like when your foot pricks itself out of numbness after falling asleep. Aibileen from The Help describes it the best as she remembers the death of her son: “That was the day my whole world went black. Air look black, sun look black. I laid up in bed and stared at the black walls a my house. Minny came ever day to make sure I was still breathing, feed me food to keep me living. Took three months fore I even look out the window, see if the world still there. I was surprise to see the world didn’t stop just cause my boy did” (Stockett 2-3). My walls had turned black, too. And I didn’t care to see if the world was still out there.
But a week later, after trying unsuccessfully to squeeze back into designer jeans, I told my husband that I wanted to hire Mark to be my personal trainer. Mark ran an independent boot camp twice a week that my husband had been attending for a year. Unlike the trainers who ran boot camps at my regular gym, Mark was an actual army guy, and he didn’t take crap from anyone. He seemed like the right pick to be my personal trainer. I needed him to be my Nick Carraway, inclined to reserve all judgments, or my Rahim Kahn, convincing me that “there is a way to be good again” (Hosseini 1).
My ending:
As I write this, I wonder if this is a story to pass on. I think it is. But I’m still not sure if I answered my own question, so I’d like to end with this:
In Beckett’s perplexing world of waiting where characters constantly fall to the ground, Vladimir quietly asks Pozzo, “What do you do when you fall far from help?”
Pozzo replies, “We wait till we can get up. Then we go on. On!” (Beckett 102).4. Inspiring you to think outside the box with some images from a less traditional essay from a few years ago:
HW:
If you'd like feedback on your brainstorming, outlining, and drafting, please send me an e-mail with your specific inquiries. If you just Google share a document with me, I'm not sure what you'd like help with.
New final due date: April 27 (however, if you turn yours in early, it will be the first one graded and returned).
Friday, April 17, 2015
A.P. Hamlet Scholars: April 17, 2015
Focus: What background information do we need to understand R & G are dead?
1. Warming up: So what do you already know about Hamlet? A crossword challenge for you!
1. Warming up: So what do you already know about Hamlet? A crossword challenge for you!
- Where does the play primarily take place?
- What is the play's/Hamlet's central conflict?
- What minor "battles" take place in the play?
- How are the play's conflicts ultimately resolved?
3. Watching the official 60-second Hamlet: Reduced Shakespeare Company
4. If time allows, (re)introducing yourselves to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern via two Hamlet clips
Act 2, scene 2 (58:10)
Act 3, scene 2 (2:00:30)
5. Cooling down: What do we know about these two characters, and why might Tom Stoppard have chosen them for his play?
HW:
If you'd like feedback on your brainstorming, outlining, and drafting, please send me an e-mail with your specific inquiries. If you just Google share a document with me, I'm not sure what you'd like help with.
New final due date: April 27 (however, if you turn yours in early, it will be the first one graded and returned)
4. If time allows, (re)introducing yourselves to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern via two Hamlet clips
Act 2, scene 2 (58:10)
Act 3, scene 2 (2:00:30)
5. Cooling down: What do we know about these two characters, and why might Tom Stoppard have chosen them for his play?
HW:
If you'd like feedback on your brainstorming, outlining, and drafting, please send me an e-mail with your specific inquiries. If you just Google share a document with me, I'm not sure what you'd like help with.
New final due date: April 27 (however, if you turn yours in early, it will be the first one graded and returned)
Thursday, April 16, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Workshopping: April 16, 2015
Focus: How do we read and write about prose passages?
1. Warming up: Considering yourself an existential hero (or not)
1. Warming up: Considering yourself an existential hero (or not)
- What does your mountain consist of? What about your boulder? Your endless sky?
- What makes you pause at the top, and what do you think of?
- What makes you pause at the bottom, and what do you think of?
- What compels you to push the boulder up the hill once again?
3. Revisiting Mary Barton (2004 Form B)
- What point of view is used? Why might the author have chosen that point of view?
- What details strike you as significant? What larger patterns/themes do they create?
- What is revealed through the dialogue? What social commentary does the dialogue evoke?
- Find lines that contribute to the characterization of...
- Wilson
- Mr. Carson's servants
- The upper class ladies (wife and daughters, I'm assuming) of Mr. Carson's house
- What larger social commentary do these characterizations create?
4. Perusing the rubric and sample essays, then workshopping your own Tuesday writings
HW:
If you'd like feedback on your brainstorming, outlining, and drafting, please send me an e-mail with your specific inquiries. If you just Google share a document with me, I'm not sure what you'd like help with.
New final due date: April 27 (however, if you turn yours in early, it will be the first one graded and returned)
If you'd like feedback on your brainstorming, outlining, and drafting, please send me an e-mail with your specific inquiries. If you just Google share a document with me, I'm not sure what you'd like help with.
New final due date: April 27 (however, if you turn yours in early, it will be the first one graded and returned)
Tuesday, April 14, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Rolling the Stone: April 15, 2015
Focus: What is the existential hero?
1. Warming up with a little freewriting (and two fantastic film clips)
"It was like some beautiful bird flapped into our drab little cage and made those walls dissolve away, and for the briefest of moments, every last man at Shawshank felt free."
"Get busy living or get busy dying."
"Hope is a dangerous thing."
"Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies."
2. Offering you a little background on existentialism
3. Reading Albert Camus' "The Myth of Sisyphus"
4. Considering yourself an existential hero (or not)
1. Warming up with a little freewriting (and two fantastic film clips)
"It was like some beautiful bird flapped into our drab little cage and made those walls dissolve away, and for the briefest of moments, every last man at Shawshank felt free."
"Get busy living or get busy dying."
"Hope is a dangerous thing."
"Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies."
2. Offering you a little background on existentialism
3. Reading Albert Camus' "The Myth of Sisyphus"
- What is the absurd hero?
- What is the nature of his struggle?
- What makes him tragic?
- What makes him happy?
- What is the nature of his freedom?
- How are Vladimir and Estragon like Sisyphus? How are they different?
4. Considering yourself an existential hero (or not)
- What does your mountain consist of? What about your boulder? Your endless sky?
- What makes you pause at the top, and what do you think of?
- What makes you pause at the bottom, and what do you think of?
- What compels you to push the boulder up the hill once again?
HW:
If you'd like feedback on your brainstorming, outlining, and drafting, please send me an e-mail with your specific inquiries. If you just Google share a document with me, I'm not sure what you'd like help with.
New final due date: April 27 (however, if you turn yours in early, it will be the first one graded and returned)
If you'd like feedback on your brainstorming, outlining, and drafting, please send me an e-mail with your specific inquiries. If you just Google share a document with me, I'm not sure what you'd like help with.
New final due date: April 27 (however, if you turn yours in early, it will be the first one graded and returned)
A.P. Lit Is Writing: April 14, 2015
Focus: How can we improve our timed writing organizational skills?
1. Warming up with some umbrella brainstorming on Waiting for Godot AP essay topics
2. Improving your prose timed writing skills
From Mrs. Talen, to students taking an AP test:
Today and Wednesday AP Pre-Registration meetings will take place every hour (except 4th) in the forum. Please remind your AP students that they must attend one of these meetings during an off hour. They must also bring a #2 pencil.
HW:
If you'd like feedback on your brainstorming, outlining, and drafting, please send me an e-mail with your specific inquiries. If you just Google share a document with me, I'm not sure what you'd like help with.
1. Warming up with some umbrella brainstorming on Waiting for Godot AP essay topics
2. Improving your prose timed writing skills
From Mrs. Talen, to students taking an AP test:
Today and Wednesday AP Pre-Registration meetings will take place every hour (except 4th) in the forum. Please remind your AP students that they must attend one of these meetings during an off hour. They must also bring a #2 pencil.
HW:
If you'd like feedback on your brainstorming, outlining, and drafting, please send me an e-mail with your specific inquiries. If you just Google share a document with me, I'm not sure what you'd like help with.
Monday, April 13, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Waiting for Themes To Emerge: April 13, 2015
Focus: What are we here for? That is the question.
1. Warming up: Happy Monday with Waiting for...Elmo
2. Relating to the play: Think of the most recent conversation you had with someone (in the hallway, before class, after class, via text, etc). What was it about? What about the conversation before that? What was it about? When was the last time you had a meaningful conversation?
3. Watching a clip of the ending and drawing some larger conclusions: Do Foster's ideas work with this play?
"Every Trip Is a Quest"
A quester?
A place to go?
A stated reason to go there?
Challenges and trials en route?
A real reason to go there?
"Nice to Eat with You: Acts of Communion"
"...breaking bread together is an act of sharing and peace, since if you're breaking bread you're not breaking heads." (8)
"...writing a meal scene is so difficult, and so inherently uninteresting, that there really needs to be some compelling reason to include one in the story. And that reason has to do with how characters are getting along. Or not getting along." (8)
"Now, Where Have I Seen Her Before?"
"Here it is: there's only one story. There, I said it and I can't very well take it back. There is only one story. Ever. One. It's always been going on and it's everywhere around us and every story you've ever read or heard or watched is part of it."
"More Than It's Gonna Hurt You: Concerning Violence"
"Violence is one of the most personal and even intimate acts between human beings, but it can also be cultural and societal in its implications...that punch in the nose may be a metaphor." (88)
"Geography Matters..."
"First, think about what there is down low or up high. Low: swamps, crowds, fog, darkness, fields, heat, unpleasantness, people, life, death. High: snow, ice, purity, thin air, clear views, isolation, life, death." (173)
"He's Blind for a Reason, You Know?"
Remember your old friend, Oedipus? And his frenemy, Tieresias?
"Every move, every statement by or about that character has to accommodate the lack of sight; every other character has to notice, or behave differently, if only in subtle ways...Clearly the author wants to emphasize other levels of sight and blindness beyond the physical." (202)
"Is He Serious? And Other Ironies"
"Now hear this: irony trumps everything." (235)
What ingrained expectations do we have of the characters and symbols in this play, and how does Beckett deny us the satisfaction of applying our expectations to these symbols (thus making them ironic)?
4. Enjoying a Socratic seminar (30 minutes)
5. Wrapping up with Waiting for...Elmo if time allows
HW:
Culminating essay outlines should be complete at this point; e-mail me when you'd like me to look over yours. Draft at least two paragraphs (perhaps an introduction and a thesis paragraph) over the weekend.
Interested in taking A.P. Language next year? Click on the link below for the online application:
1. Warming up: Happy Monday with Waiting for...Elmo
2. Relating to the play: Think of the most recent conversation you had with someone (in the hallway, before class, after class, via text, etc). What was it about? What about the conversation before that? What was it about? When was the last time you had a meaningful conversation?
3. Watching a clip of the ending and drawing some larger conclusions: Do Foster's ideas work with this play?
"Every Trip Is a Quest"
A quester?
A place to go?
A stated reason to go there?
Challenges and trials en route?
A real reason to go there?
"Nice to Eat with You: Acts of Communion"
"...breaking bread together is an act of sharing and peace, since if you're breaking bread you're not breaking heads." (8)
"...writing a meal scene is so difficult, and so inherently uninteresting, that there really needs to be some compelling reason to include one in the story. And that reason has to do with how characters are getting along. Or not getting along." (8)
"Now, Where Have I Seen Her Before?"
"Here it is: there's only one story. There, I said it and I can't very well take it back. There is only one story. Ever. One. It's always been going on and it's everywhere around us and every story you've ever read or heard or watched is part of it."
"More Than It's Gonna Hurt You: Concerning Violence"
"Violence is one of the most personal and even intimate acts between human beings, but it can also be cultural and societal in its implications...that punch in the nose may be a metaphor." (88)
"Geography Matters..."
"First, think about what there is down low or up high. Low: swamps, crowds, fog, darkness, fields, heat, unpleasantness, people, life, death. High: snow, ice, purity, thin air, clear views, isolation, life, death." (173)
"He's Blind for a Reason, You Know?"
Remember your old friend, Oedipus? And his frenemy, Tieresias?
"Every move, every statement by or about that character has to accommodate the lack of sight; every other character has to notice, or behave differently, if only in subtle ways...Clearly the author wants to emphasize other levels of sight and blindness beyond the physical." (202)
"Is He Serious? And Other Ironies"
"Now hear this: irony trumps everything." (235)
What ingrained expectations do we have of the characters and symbols in this play, and how does Beckett deny us the satisfaction of applying our expectations to these symbols (thus making them ironic)?
4. Enjoying a Socratic seminar (30 minutes)
5. Wrapping up with Waiting for...Elmo if time allows
HW:
Culminating essay outlines should be complete at this point; e-mail me when you'd like me to look over yours. Draft at least two paragraphs (perhaps an introduction and a thesis paragraph) over the weekend.
Interested in taking A.P. Language next year? Click on the link below for the online application:
Friday, April 10, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Still Waiting: April 10, 2015
Focus: What are we here for? That is the question.
1. Warming up: Stealing ideas from a few articles about Waiting for Godot in performance
2. Finishing the play and drawing some larger conclusions: Do Foster's ideas work with this play?
"Every Trip Is a Quest"
A quester?
A place to go?
A stated reason to go there?
Challenges and trials en route?
A real reason to go there?
"Nice to Eat with You: Acts of Communion"
"...breaking bread together is an act of sharing and peace, since if you're breaking bread you're not breaking heads." (8)
"...writing a meal scene is so difficult, and so inherently uninteresting, that there really needs to be some compelling reason to include one in the story. And that reason has to do with how characters are getting along. Or not getting along." (8)
"Now, Where Have I Seen Her Before?"
"Here it is: there's only one story. There, I said it and I can't very well take it back. There is only one story. Ever. One. It's always been going on and it's everywhere around us and every story you've ever read or heard or watched is part of it."
"More Than It's Gonna Hurt You: Concerning Violence"
"Violence is one of the most personal and even intimate acts between human beings, but it can also be cultural and societal in its implications...that punch in the nose may be a metaphor." (88)
"Geography Matters..."
"First, think about what there is down low or up high. Low: swamps, crowds, fog, darkness, fields, heat, unpleasantness, people, life, death. High: snow, ice, purity, thin air, clear views, isolation, life, death." (173)
"He's Blind for a Reason, You Know?"
Remember your old friend, Oedipus? And his frenemy, Tieresias?
"Every move, every statement by or about that character has to accommodate the lack of sight; every other character has to notice, or behave differently, if only in subtle ways...Clearly the author wants to emphasize other levels of sight and blindness beyond the physical." (202)
"Is He Serious? And Other Ironies"
"Now hear this: irony trumps everything." (235)
What ingrained expectations do we have of the characters and symbols in this play, and how does Beckett deny us the satisfaction of applying our expectations to these symbols (thus making them ironic)?
3. Wrapping up
HW:
1. Culminating essay outlines should be complete at this point; e-mail me when you'd like me to look over yours. Draft at least two paragraphs (perhaps an introduction and a thesis paragraph) over the weekend.
2. If you were absent today or yesterday, please complete the play on your own; we will have a Socratic seminar on Monday, but you can create your reading tickets in class that day.
Interested in taking A.P. Language next year? Click on the link below for the online application:
1. Warming up: Stealing ideas from a few articles about Waiting for Godot in performance
2. Finishing the play and drawing some larger conclusions: Do Foster's ideas work with this play?
"Every Trip Is a Quest"
A quester?
A place to go?
A stated reason to go there?
Challenges and trials en route?
A real reason to go there?
"Nice to Eat with You: Acts of Communion"
"...breaking bread together is an act of sharing and peace, since if you're breaking bread you're not breaking heads." (8)
"...writing a meal scene is so difficult, and so inherently uninteresting, that there really needs to be some compelling reason to include one in the story. And that reason has to do with how characters are getting along. Or not getting along." (8)
"Now, Where Have I Seen Her Before?"
"Here it is: there's only one story. There, I said it and I can't very well take it back. There is only one story. Ever. One. It's always been going on and it's everywhere around us and every story you've ever read or heard or watched is part of it."
"More Than It's Gonna Hurt You: Concerning Violence"
"Violence is one of the most personal and even intimate acts between human beings, but it can also be cultural and societal in its implications...that punch in the nose may be a metaphor." (88)
"Geography Matters..."
"First, think about what there is down low or up high. Low: swamps, crowds, fog, darkness, fields, heat, unpleasantness, people, life, death. High: snow, ice, purity, thin air, clear views, isolation, life, death." (173)
"He's Blind for a Reason, You Know?"
Remember your old friend, Oedipus? And his frenemy, Tieresias?
"Every move, every statement by or about that character has to accommodate the lack of sight; every other character has to notice, or behave differently, if only in subtle ways...Clearly the author wants to emphasize other levels of sight and blindness beyond the physical." (202)
"Is He Serious? And Other Ironies"
"Now hear this: irony trumps everything." (235)
What ingrained expectations do we have of the characters and symbols in this play, and how does Beckett deny us the satisfaction of applying our expectations to these symbols (thus making them ironic)?
3. Wrapping up
HW:
1. Culminating essay outlines should be complete at this point; e-mail me when you'd like me to look over yours. Draft at least two paragraphs (perhaps an introduction and a thesis paragraph) over the weekend.
2. If you were absent today or yesterday, please complete the play on your own; we will have a Socratic seminar on Monday, but you can create your reading tickets in class that day.
Interested in taking A.P. Language next year? Click on the link below for the online application:
Thursday, April 9, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Qua Qua Quaing: April 9, 2015
Focus: Why do they wait?
A. Warming up: Viewing a performance of Lucky's speech and exploring what happens to the speech when you eliminate the "blah blah blah's" and "qua qua qua's"
Find three parts of Lucky's speech and try to connect them to other lines/stage directions in Act 1.
III. Wrapping up
HW:
1. Continue working on your culminating essay prompt and booklist; let me know anytime you'd like feedback. Outline due Friday.
2. A heads-up: On Monday, we will have a Socratic seminar on Waiting for Godot.
A. Warming up: Viewing a performance of Lucky's speech and exploring what happens to the speech when you eliminate the "blah blah blah's" and "qua qua qua's"
Find three parts of Lucky's speech and try to connect them to other lines/stage directions in Act 1.
- What patterns does Lucky's speech share with the rest of the play so far?
- What metaphorical luggage is Lucky carrying for everyone in this play?
- Why have outsiders (Pozzo, Lucky, and the Boy) enter the scene? What purpose do they serve?
III. Wrapping up
HW:
1. Continue working on your culminating essay prompt and booklist; let me know anytime you'd like feedback. Outline due Friday.
2. A heads-up: On Monday, we will have a Socratic seminar on Waiting for Godot.
Wednesday, April 8, 2015
Advanced Placement Waiting: What Day Is It?
Focus: What are they waiting for?
1. Warming up with a brief film clip echoing Alex and Joe's performance
From shmoop: "At least Lucky can see the rope around his neck. Vladimir and Estragon can’t."
3. Reading the rest of Act 1 in Waiting for Godot
HW:
1. Continue working on your culminating essay prompt and booklist; let me know anytime you'd like feedback. Outline due Friday.
1. Warming up with a brief film clip echoing Alex and Joe's performance
- What aspects of human existence does this performance accentuate?
- How is Lucky "lucky"? In other words, how is his suffering less than that of Didi and Gogo?
- To what extent is his name ironic? Or, how is he suffering more than Didi and Gogo are?
- What might the rope around his neck symbolize?
From shmoop: "At least Lucky can see the rope around his neck. Vladimir and Estragon can’t."
3. Reading the rest of Act 1 in Waiting for Godot
- Viewing a performance of Lucky's speech
HW:
1. Continue working on your culminating essay prompt and booklist; let me know anytime you'd like feedback. Outline due Friday.
Tuesday, April 7, 2015
A.P. Lit Feels Anaphoric Today: April 7, 2015
Focus: What are they waiting for?
1. Waiting for your prompts and book lists to turn into an outline
2. Waiting to understand the absurdist elements you're noticing so far in Godot
3. Waiting for Alex and Joe to perform more of the play for us
HW:
Continue working on your culminating essay prompt and book list; outline due this Friday.
1. Waiting for your prompts and book lists to turn into an outline
2. Waiting to understand the absurdist elements you're noticing so far in Godot
3. Waiting for Alex and Joe to perform more of the play for us
HW:
Continue working on your culminating essay prompt and book list; outline due this Friday.
Monday, April 6, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Waiting: April 6, 2015
Focus: What does it mean to wait?
1. Warming up with "I Am Waiting"
2. Building a little background knowledge on the Theatre of the Absurd and Absurdist protagonists
3. Starting to act out Waiting for Godot with focus questions
HW:
Continue to build ideas for your culminating essay; start gathering old books, looking through your childhood stuff, reworking your prompt, etc. I will start giving you feedback on your prompts and booklists this afternoon.
1. Warming up with "I Am Waiting"
- MMM approach: What strikes you about this poem?
- What does it mean to wait? Does it make you powerful? Vulnerable? Hopeless? Hopeful?
- What are you waiting for?
2. Building a little background knowledge on the Theatre of the Absurd and Absurdist protagonists
3. Starting to act out Waiting for Godot with focus questions
HW:
Continue to build ideas for your culminating essay; start gathering old books, looking through your childhood stuff, reworking your prompt, etc. I will start giving you feedback on your prompts and booklists this afternoon.
Friday, April 3, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Thinking About How It all Comes Together: April 3, 2015
Focus: What is the culminating essay, and how do we begin?
1. Warming up: Listing your favorite books from childhood to today
2. Perusing four sample essays from students of years past and discussing the components of the culminating essay
3. Forming rough drafts of your culminating essay prompts and booklists
HW:
1. Please e-mail me/Google share with me a draft of your prompt and booklist by Monday.
2. Poetry response #9 due Monday.
3. If you have your own copy of Waiting for Godot, bring it to class Monday.
1. Warming up: Listing your favorite books from childhood to today
2. Perusing four sample essays from students of years past and discussing the components of the culminating essay
3. Forming rough drafts of your culminating essay prompts and booklists
HW:
1. Please e-mail me/Google share with me a draft of your prompt and booklist by Monday.
2. Poetry response #9 due Monday.
3. If you have your own copy of Waiting for Godot, bring it to class Monday.
Thursday, April 2, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Editing: April 2, 2015
Focus: How can we improve our timed writings?
1. Warming up: Evaluating your 12-week grades
2. Gathering with your book clubs one last time to assess your Tuesday writings:
a. Discuss how you answered the prompt. How did you interpret the prompt? What examples did you use? What was the larger importance of the book to which you connected those examples?
b. Read through the rubric together, highlighting important words that distinguish one grading category from another.
c. Pass clockwise and read quietly once without making a mark.
d. Comment on its content and organization (thesis, topic sentences, examples, close readings, etc.); then, using the rubric, suggest a grade range and give a brief explanation of your decision.
e. Pass again clockwise and read quietly without making a mark.
f. Comment on its style (diction, sentence variety, lead-ins, transitions, etc.); then, using the rubric, suggest a grade range and give a brief explanation of your decision.
g. Pass one last time (clockwise) and read quietly without making a mark.
h. Comment on what the writer asked you to comment on; then, using the rubric, suggest a grade range and give a brief explanation of your decision.
3. Conferencing with your fellow group members on the feedback you gave
HW:
1. Tomorrow marks the end of 12 weeks. If you have any make-up work from the past six weeks (including poetry responses) or a revision of your critical review, you must turn it in by this Friday.
2. Make sure your big blog post is ready for me to look at tomorrow.
3. If you own your own copy of Waiting for Godot, start bringing it to class tomorrow/next week.
1. Warming up: Evaluating your 12-week grades
2. Gathering with your book clubs one last time to assess your Tuesday writings:
a. Discuss how you answered the prompt. How did you interpret the prompt? What examples did you use? What was the larger importance of the book to which you connected those examples?
b. Read through the rubric together, highlighting important words that distinguish one grading category from another.
c. Pass clockwise and read quietly once without making a mark.
d. Comment on its content and organization (thesis, topic sentences, examples, close readings, etc.); then, using the rubric, suggest a grade range and give a brief explanation of your decision.
e. Pass again clockwise and read quietly without making a mark.
f. Comment on its style (diction, sentence variety, lead-ins, transitions, etc.); then, using the rubric, suggest a grade range and give a brief explanation of your decision.
g. Pass one last time (clockwise) and read quietly without making a mark.
h. Comment on what the writer asked you to comment on; then, using the rubric, suggest a grade range and give a brief explanation of your decision.
3. Conferencing with your fellow group members on the feedback you gave
HW:
1. Tomorrow marks the end of 12 weeks. If you have any make-up work from the past six weeks (including poetry responses) or a revision of your critical review, you must turn it in by this Friday.
2. Make sure your big blog post is ready for me to look at tomorrow.
3. If you own your own copy of Waiting for Godot, start bringing it to class tomorrow/next week.
Wednesday, April 1, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Writing About Their Book Club Novels: April 1, 2015
Focus: How can we write effectively about our book club novels?
1. Warming up: Trying out Mrs. Ferrill's nifty three-minute outline
Vague example: Sethe takes the life of her own daughter.
Concrete example: The scene in which Sethe murders Beloved is narrated primarily through the third person omniscient viewpoint of the "four horsemen" who have come to collect her.
Vague example: Sethe constantly remembers the abuses of Schoolteacher's nephew.
Concrete example: Sethe carries a chokecherry tree scar on her back.
Vague example: Billy Pilgrim bounces around irregularly in space and time. OR
The Tallis home is dysfunctional.
Concrete example:
2. Enjoying your book club timed writing
HW:
1. This Friday marks the end of 12 weeks. If you have any make-up work from the past six weeks (including poetry responses) or a revision of your critical review, you must turn it in by this Friday.
2. Make sure your big blog post is ready for me to look at tomorrow.
3. If you own your own copy of Waiting for Godot, start bringing it to class this week.
1. Warming up: Trying out Mrs. Ferrill's nifty three-minute outline
- Showing you an example
- Trying it out with a previous timed writing (or other essay if you don't have a timed writing handy)
- Backing it up with concrete examples (the key to avoiding excessive plot summary)
Vague example: Sethe takes the life of her own daughter.
Concrete example: The scene in which Sethe murders Beloved is narrated primarily through the third person omniscient viewpoint of the "four horsemen" who have come to collect her.
Vague example: Sethe constantly remembers the abuses of Schoolteacher's nephew.
Concrete example: Sethe carries a chokecherry tree scar on her back.
Vague example: Billy Pilgrim bounces around irregularly in space and time. OR
The Tallis home is dysfunctional.
Concrete example:
2. Enjoying your book club timed writing
HW:
1. This Friday marks the end of 12 weeks. If you have any make-up work from the past six weeks (including poetry responses) or a revision of your critical review, you must turn it in by this Friday.
2. Make sure your big blog post is ready for me to look at tomorrow.
3. If you own your own copy of Waiting for Godot, start bringing it to class this week.
Monday, March 30, 2015
A.P. Lit Is at the Book Club After Party: March 31, 2015
Focus: How can we write effectively about our book club novels?
1. Warming up: Brainstorming a list of concrete examples for each book and performing a quick sample close reading together.
2. Enjoying your book club timed writing
HW:
1. This Friday marks the end of 12 weeks. If you have any make-up work from the past six weeks (including poetry responses) or a revision of your critical review, you must turn it in by this Friday.
2. Make sure your big blog post is ready for me to look at tomorrow.
3. If you own your own copy of Waiting for Godot, start bringing it to class this week.
1. Warming up: Brainstorming a list of concrete examples for each book and performing a quick sample close reading together.
2. Enjoying your book club timed writing
HW:
1. This Friday marks the end of 12 weeks. If you have any make-up work from the past six weeks (including poetry responses) or a revision of your critical review, you must turn it in by this Friday.
2. Make sure your big blog post is ready for me to look at tomorrow.
3. If you own your own copy of Waiting for Godot, start bringing it to class this week.
Sunday, March 29, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Looking at the Big Picture: March 30, 2015
Focus: What larger themes in your novel can you start to pin down?
1. Warming up: Prompting you to think thematically about you book club novel
Click here for online version of the prompts for Free Response #3
2. Developing your big question blog posts; complete these before class tomorrow.
HW:
1. Finish your big question blog; tomorrow will be your Tuesday writing on your book club book.
2. If you have your own copy of Waiting for Godot, start bringing it to class on Wednesday (we begin waiting on Wednesday).
1. Warming up: Prompting you to think thematically about you book club novel
a. Read through the list of prompts for Free Response #3, marking the ones that might apply to you book club novel.
b. Narrow down your choices: Please highlight THREE prompts that speak directly to your novel.
c. As a group, brainstorm together how you would respond to each of the three prompts. What would your overarching argument be? What would your 2-3 supporting arguments be? What specific examples (setting, symbols, dialogue, motifs, moments, etc.) would you bring in?
d. Pick one of your documents with the three highlighted prompts to turn in to Ms. Davidson before the end of class. Make sure all of your names are at the top.
e. I will select one for your Tuesday writing tomorrow.
Click here for online version of the prompts for Free Response #3
2. Developing your big question blog posts; complete these before class tomorrow.
Please remember to bring in specific passages, specific symbols, moments, words, etc; the more specific you get, the better the close readings and the more complex the themes.
HW:
1. Finish your big question blog; tomorrow will be your Tuesday writing on your book club book.
2. If you have your own copy of Waiting for Godot, start bringing it to class on Wednesday (we begin waiting on Wednesday).
Friday, March 20, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Book Clubbing: March 20, 2015
Focus: Is the ending in the beginning?
1. Warming up with Vonnegut, beginnings, and endings: War in Reverse
How do the final pages of your book club novel offer a reversal (or a reflection) of the first pages?
2. Enjoying your penultimate day of book clubs
3. Comparing your answers from yesterday's multiple choice and arriving at consensus, maybe
HW:
If you're done with your book club novel, then nothing. Nothing at all. Have a nice spring break, everybody!
1. Warming up with Vonnegut, beginnings, and endings: War in Reverse
How do the final pages of your book club novel offer a reversal (or a reflection) of the first pages?
2. Enjoying your penultimate day of book clubs
3. Comparing your answers from yesterday's multiple choice and arriving at consensus, maybe
HW:
If you're done with your book club novel, then nothing. Nothing at all. Have a nice spring break, everybody!
Thursday, March 19, 2015
A.P. Lit Strums the Eolian Harp: March 19, 2015
Focus: How do we approach a perfectly good poem or piece of prose laden with multiple choice interrogations?
1. Warming up by reading the poem aloud with our MMM approach:
a. What story do the images and verbs tell? Tone?
b. What story do the sentences tell?
c. How would you section this poem? What's the most important shift?
d. Let's sketch (as in actually draw) the central metaphor here. Who's the harp? Who's the breeze? What does it all mean??!!
2. Speed dating through the multiple choice questions
3. Trying a prose multiple choice passage
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for tomorrow.
2. Revisions of critical review essays.
1. Warming up by reading the poem aloud with our MMM approach:
a. What story do the images and verbs tell? Tone?
b. What story do the sentences tell?
c. How would you section this poem? What's the most important shift?
d. Let's sketch (as in actually draw) the central metaphor here. Who's the harp? Who's the breeze? What does it all mean??!!
2. Speed dating through the multiple choice questions
3. Trying a prose multiple choice passage
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for tomorrow.
2. Revisions of critical review essays.
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Book Clubbing: March 18, 2015
Focus: What is your book's hero gaining and/or losing?
PLC: Shortened Class
1. Offering you a few thoughts about nontraditional heroes; has your hero reached any kind of turning point/shift/realization?
2. Enjoying your penultimate day of book clubs!
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading (hopefully, the rest of the book) and syllabus for Friday.
2. If you're revising your critical review, the sooner, the better. Remember to highlight all changes on your new your draft and attach it to your old one.
3. Next poetry response not due until April 6.
PLC: Shortened Class
1. Offering you a few thoughts about nontraditional heroes; has your hero reached any kind of turning point/shift/realization?
2. Enjoying your penultimate day of book clubs!
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading (hopefully, the rest of the book) and syllabus for Friday.
2. If you're revising your critical review, the sooner, the better. Remember to highlight all changes on your new your draft and attach it to your old one.
3. Next poetry response not due until April 6.
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
A.P. Is Strumming the Eolian Harp: March 17, 2015
Focus: What are the hardest poetry multiple choice sections we're going to see on the test, and how do we approach them?
1. Warming up with a dramatic reading of "A Dialogue Between the Soul and Body"
Moments (imagery, diction, metaphors, sounds, etc.)
Movements (shifts, ends of long sentences...consider how you would section the poem)
Multiple meanings (theme and tone)
What is the soul's complaint about the body?
What metaphor does the soul use to describe the body?
What is the body's complaint about the soul?
What metaphor does the body use to describe the soul?
What imagery and diction stand out?
What tone do the imagery and diction create? (Exercise that vocab)
Unravel the metaphor in the final two lines: What is being compared to what and why?
2. Trying out the multiple choice on your own; discussing your processes as a class
3. Reading and responding to "The Eolian Harp"
4. Speed dating to discuss your multiple choice selections
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for tomorrow.
2. Next poetry response is not due until April (I'm hoping that you'll have a somewhat homework-free spring break).
1. Warming up with a dramatic reading of "A Dialogue Between the Soul and Body"
Moments (imagery, diction, metaphors, sounds, etc.)
Movements (shifts, ends of long sentences...consider how you would section the poem)
Multiple meanings (theme and tone)
What is the soul's complaint about the body?
What metaphor does the soul use to describe the body?
What is the body's complaint about the soul?
What metaphor does the body use to describe the soul?
What imagery and diction stand out?
What tone do the imagery and diction create? (Exercise that vocab)
Unravel the metaphor in the final two lines: What is being compared to what and why?
2. Trying out the multiple choice on your own; discussing your processes as a class
3. Reading and responding to "The Eolian Harp"
4. Speed dating to discuss your multiple choice selections
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for tomorrow.
2. Next poetry response is not due until April (I'm hoping that you'll have a somewhat homework-free spring break).
Monday, March 16, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Book Clubbing: March 16, 2015
Focus: How can we read our book club novels like professors?
1. Warming up with a little Foster...
"The [hero's] quest consists of five things:
(a) a quester
(b) a place to go
(c) a stated reason to go there
(d) challenges and trials en route
(e) a real reason to go there" (3)
As you come to the end of your book club books, trying pairing an early scene with a later scene and see what it reveals about the transformation of characters, symbols, settings, and other motifs.
2. Meeting your book clubs and (possibly) considering the nature of the quest in your novels
3. Wrapping up
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading for Wednesday.
2. If you have had your conference with me and would like to revise your critical review essay, now is the time, friends. I would aim to revise before spring break.
3. Poetry responses due Monday, but if you'd like to knock it out before spring break, I will gladly take it on Friday.
1. Warming up with a little Foster...
"The [hero's] quest consists of five things:
(a) a quester
(b) a place to go
(c) a stated reason to go there
(d) challenges and trials en route
(e) a real reason to go there" (3)
As you come to the end of your book club books, trying pairing an early scene with a later scene and see what it reveals about the transformation of characters, symbols, settings, and other motifs.
2. Meeting your book clubs and (possibly) considering the nature of the quest in your novels
3. Wrapping up
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading for Wednesday.
2. If you have had your conference with me and would like to revise your critical review essay, now is the time, friends. I would aim to revise before spring break.
3. Poetry responses due Monday, but if you'd like to knock it out before spring break, I will gladly take it on Friday.
Friday, March 13, 2015
A.P. Literature Is Shaking Hands with a Place: March 13, 2015
Focus: What does it mean to be an artist?
1. Enjoying our final poetry project presentation, brought to you by
2. Warming up with my favorite Andy Goldsworthy quotations
3. Watching Rivers and Tides with a focus on what it means to be an artist (any kind of artist)
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for Monday, March 16.
2. Next poetry response due next Monday.
1. Enjoying our final poetry project presentation, brought to you by
2. Warming up with my favorite Andy Goldsworthy quotations
3. Watching Rivers and Tides with a focus on what it means to be an artist (any kind of artist)
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for Monday, March 16.
2. Next poetry response due next Monday.
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Presenting Poetry: March 11, 2015
Focus: How can our own creativity shed light on poetry?
PARCC: Shortened Class Today
1. Browsing through the poetry packet with a reflective focus: Look through the poems that were presented yesterday, and for as many you can, jot down one thing you learned from its presentation
2. Enjoying your poetry projects! Audience members: Think about what you can bring to each presentation as well. Thoughtful questions? Positive feedback? Your own interpretations?
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for Monday, March 16.
2. Next poetry response due next Monday. This week might be a good time to knock it out.
PARCC: Shortened Class Today
1. Browsing through the poetry packet with a reflective focus: Look through the poems that were presented yesterday, and for as many you can, jot down one thing you learned from its presentation
2. Enjoying your poetry projects! Audience members: Think about what you can bring to each presentation as well. Thoughtful questions? Positive feedback? Your own interpretations?
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for Monday, March 16.
2. Next poetry response due next Monday. This week might be a good time to knock it out.
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Presenting Poetry: March 10, 2015
Focus: How can our own creativity shed light on poetry?
Please turn in your poetry essays.
Reminder: You will have a fire drill during third hour.
1. Browsing through the poetry packet with a singular focus
2. Establishing the order of project presentations
(Wednesday classes will be short)
3. Enjoying your poetry projects! Audience members: Think about what you can bring to each presentation as well. Thoughtful questions? Positive feedback? Your own interpretations?
HW:
1. Your first hour class will begin at noon tomorrow (if you are a junior taking the PARCC test, please arrive at your normal time and bring your headphones).
2. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for Monday, March 16.
3. Next poetry response due next Monday. This week might be a good time to knock it out.
Please turn in your poetry essays.
Reminder: You will have a fire drill during third hour.
1. Browsing through the poetry packet with a singular focus
2. Establishing the order of project presentations
(Wednesday classes will be short)
3. Enjoying your poetry projects! Audience members: Think about what you can bring to each presentation as well. Thoughtful questions? Positive feedback? Your own interpretations?
HW:
1. Your first hour class will begin at noon tomorrow (if you are a junior taking the PARCC test, please arrive at your normal time and bring your headphones).
2. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for Monday, March 16.
3. Next poetry response due next Monday. This week might be a good time to knock it out.
Monday, March 9, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Turning Down Frank: March 9, 2015
Focus: Why does Eveline turn down Frank, and how can I write about that effectively?
1. Warming up with happy Monday thoughts
2. Exploring "Eveline" together:
a. If you were writing an essay about the setting in this story, which three lines/phrases would you focus on?
b. If you were writing an essay about symbolism in this story, which three lines/phrases would you focus on?
c. If you were writing an essay on imagery in this story, which three lines/phrases would you focus on?
d. If you were writing an essay on characterization in this story, which three lines/phrases would you focus on?
3. Having a look at the unofficial rubric and two sample essays from our own scholars
a. With your partner, you're going to focus on one particular aspect of one essay (Ms. Leclaire will let you know which ones). Discuss the essay and your assigned task together, and write down some of your ideas and questions.
b. You will have two minutes to teach your task to the rest of the class. Help us all leave class with a stronger understanding of this essay.
Tasks include...
1. Organization (topics of paragraphs, order of paragraphs, focus within each paragraph, transitions)
2. Textual evidence (choice of quotations, number of quotations, and lead-ins)
3. Style (writer's diction and syntax)
4. Analysis of quotations (close readings of quotations and connections back to prompt)
5. Thesis and topic sentences (clarity, specificity, debatability, provability)
6. Use of literary elements (implicit or explicit discussion of symbol, setting, imagery, etc.)
4. Workshopping your essays
HW:
1. Poetry essays and projects are due tomorrow.
Essayists: You must have a HARD COPY of your essay ready to turn in at the beginning of class.
Project people: Be ready to present tomorrow. Finish filling out your rubric prior to class so you can hand it to me right before you present.
2. Juniors: Click HERE for a PARCC tutorial so that you understand both how to navigate the Language Arts test and what kinds of questions you can expect to see.
3. Assigned book club reading and syllabus for next Monday, March 16 (your next poetry response is also due this day).
1. Warming up with happy Monday thoughts
2. Exploring "Eveline" together:
a. If you were writing an essay about the setting in this story, which three lines/phrases would you focus on?
b. If you were writing an essay about symbolism in this story, which three lines/phrases would you focus on?
c. If you were writing an essay on imagery in this story, which three lines/phrases would you focus on?
d. If you were writing an essay on characterization in this story, which three lines/phrases would you focus on?
3. Having a look at the unofficial rubric and two sample essays from our own scholars
a. With your partner, you're going to focus on one particular aspect of one essay (Ms. Leclaire will let you know which ones). Discuss the essay and your assigned task together, and write down some of your ideas and questions.
b. You will have two minutes to teach your task to the rest of the class. Help us all leave class with a stronger understanding of this essay.
Tasks include...
1. Organization (topics of paragraphs, order of paragraphs, focus within each paragraph, transitions)
2. Textual evidence (choice of quotations, number of quotations, and lead-ins)
3. Style (writer's diction and syntax)
4. Analysis of quotations (close readings of quotations and connections back to prompt)
5. Thesis and topic sentences (clarity, specificity, debatability, provability)
6. Use of literary elements (implicit or explicit discussion of symbol, setting, imagery, etc.)
4. Workshopping your essays
HW:
1. Poetry essays and projects are due tomorrow.
Essayists: You must have a HARD COPY of your essay ready to turn in at the beginning of class.
Project people: Be ready to present tomorrow. Finish filling out your rubric prior to class so you can hand it to me right before you present.
2. Juniors: Click HERE for a PARCC tutorial so that you understand both how to navigate the Language Arts test and what kinds of questions you can expect to see.
3. Assigned book club reading and syllabus for next Monday, March 16 (your next poetry response is also due this day).
Thursday, March 5, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Responding to Poetry: March 5, 2015
Focus: How can we develop our poetry projects and presentations?
Click here to see the schedule for next Wednesday and Thursday.
1. Warming up with a few presentation guidelines
2. Conferencing with Ms. Leclaire on your papers and projects (optional)
3. Working on your projects and papers, which are now due Tuesday
Paper reminder: The explication portion of your essay should entail multiple body paragraphs (think of this part as a Tuesday writing).
HW:
1. Essays are due Tuesday, and all project people must be ready to present on Tuesday.
2. Juniors: Click HERE for a PARCC tutorial so that you understand both how to navigate the Language Arts test and what kinds of questions you can expect to see.
3. Assigned book club reading and syllabus for next Monday, March 16 (your next poetry response is also due this day).
Click here to see the schedule for next Wednesday and Thursday.
1. Warming up with a few presentation guidelines
2. Conferencing with Ms. Leclaire on your papers and projects (optional)
3. Working on your projects and papers, which are now due Tuesday
Paper reminder: The explication portion of your essay should entail multiple body paragraphs (think of this part as a Tuesday writing).
HW:
1. Essays are due Tuesday, and all project people must be ready to present on Tuesday.
2. Juniors: Click HERE for a PARCC tutorial so that you understand both how to navigate the Language Arts test and what kinds of questions you can expect to see.
3. Assigned book club reading and syllabus for next Monday, March 16 (your next poetry response is also due this day).
Wednesday, March 4, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Book Clubbing: March 4, 2015
Focus: Why can't your characters just stay happy? What do they gain in the face of conflict?
1. Warming up with Ian McEwan and why novels can't just be happy
2. Enjoying book clubs, day 4 (if you were absent Monday, please assess your Socratic value)
3. Wrapping up
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading and syllabus for tomorrow.
2. Thursday will be a project/paper work day. Bring anything that may be of help in your creative process (laptop, ear buds, playdough, what have you).
1. Warming up with Ian McEwan and why novels can't just be happy
2. Enjoying book clubs, day 4 (if you were absent Monday, please assess your Socratic value)
3. Wrapping up
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading and syllabus for tomorrow.
2. Thursday will be a project/paper work day. Bring anything that may be of help in your creative process (laptop, ear buds, playdough, what have you).
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Writing About Prose: March 3, 2015
Focus: What do we need to practice in our prose timed writings?
1. Warming up with your Beloved timed writings
2. Offering a few reminders about what to look for in prose timed writings
3. Trying out a prose timed writing (40 min)
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading and syllabus for tomorrow.
2. Project proposals due tomorrow.
3. Thursday will be a project/paper work day.
1. Warming up with your Beloved timed writings
2. Offering a few reminders about what to look for in prose timed writings
First inch and last inch
Point of view
Setting/symbols
Change in character or relationship (usually at the end)
3. Trying out a prose timed writing (40 min)
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading and syllabus for tomorrow.
2. Project proposals due tomorrow.
3. Thursday will be a project/paper work day.
Monday, March 2, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Book Clubbing: March 2, 2015
Focus: How can Vonnegut help us understand our book club books (even the ones not written by Vonnegut)?
Please turn in your poetry responses and help yourself to a new packet!
1. Warming up with a little Vonnegut:
3. Assessing your own Socratic value thus far:
8/9: I was completely prepared and brought my book club to new heights. I could not have done much better, and I helped my book club understand parts of my book that they may not have otherwise considered.
6/7: I was prepared each day and contributed thoughtfully to our discussions.
5: I wasn't quite as prepared as I should have been, but I did contribute once or twice.
3/4: I was a distraction to my book club. They would have been better off without me.
1/2: I insulted members of my book club, alienated myself, and was a general disgrace to the English language. My book club made me sit in the corner.
NP: I was a non participant, either because of absence or extenuating circumstances.
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading for Wednesday.
2. Complete your next poetry response for Monday.
3. Work on your poetry essay and projects, which are due in one week; project proposals due Wednesday at the latest.
Please turn in your poetry responses and help yourself to a new packet!
1. Warming up with a little Vonnegut:
- Vonnegut on "How To Write a Short Story
3. Assessing your own Socratic value thus far:
8/9: I was completely prepared and brought my book club to new heights. I could not have done much better, and I helped my book club understand parts of my book that they may not have otherwise considered.
6/7: I was prepared each day and contributed thoughtfully to our discussions.
5: I wasn't quite as prepared as I should have been, but I did contribute once or twice.
3/4: I was a distraction to my book club. They would have been better off without me.
1/2: I insulted members of my book club, alienated myself, and was a general disgrace to the English language. My book club made me sit in the corner.
NP: I was a non participant, either because of absence or extenuating circumstances.
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading for Wednesday.
2. Complete your next poetry response for Monday.
3. Work on your poetry essay and projects, which are due in one week; project proposals due Wednesday at the latest.
Friday, February 27, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Book Clubbing: February 27, 2015
Focus: What do early chapters of our book club books reveal?
During class today, please sign up for a writing conference. This will translate into a grade, so please make sure you copy your conference date carefully into your calendar.
1. Warming up with ratifying the Big Question Blog Amendment
2. Meeting with book clubs to work through your opening activities, questions, and closing activities
3. Enjoying an enlightening clip on "Word Bending" with the King of Assonance (5:00)
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for Monday.
2. Next poetry response due Monday.
3. Work on your poetry papers and projects, due March 9. Project people: your proposals are due Wednesday.
During class today, please sign up for a writing conference. This will translate into a grade, so please make sure you copy your conference date carefully into your calendar.
1. Warming up with ratifying the Big Question Blog Amendment
2. Meeting with book clubs to work through your opening activities, questions, and closing activities
3. Enjoying an enlightening clip on "Word Bending" with the King of Assonance (5:00)
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for Monday.
2. Next poetry response due Monday.
3. Work on your poetry papers and projects, due March 9. Project people: your proposals are due Wednesday.
Thursday, February 26, 2015
A.P Lit Is Forming Poetry Projects and Papers: February 26, 2015
Focus: How do we turn our metacognitives into papers and projects?
1. Warming up by putting your poem to the test: SOAPSTONE
a. Trying out SOAPSTONE with prisoner's poem of the week: "Southern Cop"
b. Using SOAPSTONE to explicate your paper/project poem
2. Offering a few words of advice to the poetry essay people (see website for overview and samples)
3. Explaining the project proposal and rubric
4. Working and conferencing on papers and projects
HW:
1. Papers and projects are due Monday, March ?
Project people: Proposals and rubrics due Wednesday, March 4
2. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for Friday.
3. Poetry responses due Monday.
1. Warming up by putting your poem to the test: SOAPSTONE
a. Trying out SOAPSTONE with prisoner's poem of the week: "Southern Cop"
b. Using SOAPSTONE to explicate your paper/project poem
2. Offering a few words of advice to the poetry essay people (see website for overview and samples)
3. Explaining the project proposal and rubric
4. Working and conferencing on papers and projects
HW:
1. Papers and projects are due Monday, March ?
Project people: Proposals and rubrics due Wednesday, March 4
2. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for Friday.
3. Poetry responses due Monday.
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
A.P. Lit Is Book Clubbing: February 25, 2015
Focus: How are we approaching the early chapters of our book club books?
PLC: Shortened Class
If you are reading Atonement and have not yet turned in your signature, please do so now.
1. Warming up with your book club opening activities
2. Enjoying discussions of the early chapters of your book club books
3. Wrapping up with a quick debriefing of what went well and what your goals are for next time
HW:
1. Tomorrow will be a poetry paper/project work day.
2. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for Friday.
3. Next poetry response due Monday; if you have been absent, please make sure your response for this week has been turned in.
PLC: Shortened Class
If you are reading Atonement and have not yet turned in your signature, please do so now.
1. Warming up with your book club opening activities
2. Enjoying discussions of the early chapters of your book club books
3. Wrapping up with a quick debriefing of what went well and what your goals are for next time
HW:
1. Tomorrow will be a poetry paper/project work day.
2. Assigned book club reading/syllabus for Friday.
3. Next poetry response due Monday; if you have been absent, please make sure your response for this week has been turned in.
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
A.P. Lit Discovers Anaphora, A.P. Lit Discovers the Meaning of Life: February 24, 2015
Focus: What is anaphora, and how does it help us understand poetry?
1. Warming up with a little Mumford & Sons: Why might they repeat "I will wait" so many times?
2. Understanding what anaphora is...and how being repetitive can be powerful when its poetically intentional
3. Applying anaphora to some old friends (Billy Collins and Robert Frost), and then to some new friends (Laura Kasischke, Joanna Klink, Uncle Walt, and William Blake)
4. Trying out your own poetic hand at anaphora by composing an imitation poem
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading/syllabus
2. Next poetry response due Monday.
3. This Thursday will be a day to start composing your poetry essays and working on poetry projects.
1. Warming up with a little Mumford & Sons: Why might they repeat "I will wait" so many times?
2. Understanding what anaphora is...and how being repetitive can be powerful when its poetically intentional
3. Applying anaphora to some old friends (Billy Collins and Robert Frost), and then to some new friends (Laura Kasischke, Joanna Klink, Uncle Walt, and William Blake)
4. Trying out your own poetic hand at anaphora by composing an imitation poem
HW:
1. Assigned book club reading/syllabus
2. Next poetry response due Monday.
3. This Thursday will be a day to start composing your poetry essays and working on poetry projects.
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