Monday, October 31, 2016



English 10R-Monday, 10/31/16

No Homework-Happy Halloween

Classwork:  (We listened to and answered questions about the poem below.  If you were absent today, please find the poem online and answer questions below.  I will give you close reading questions upon your return!)


1-Listen to a reading of "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" by Christopher Marlowe

2-Briefly annotate the poem (use symbols, write comments, ask questions, make inferences, or make use of any other active reading strategies we have discussed.)

3-Share annotations


From whose point of view is this poem being told?  Who is the intended audience? (You can answer questions like this on the poem or in your notebook as we analyze the poems in this unit.)

Thursday, October 27, 2016

English 10R-Thursday, 10/29/16

Homework:

Tomorrow Test open book/notes (please prepare all material in advance and bring your own paper to the test.)

 You will be asked to read and annotate a brief piece, make connections to Anthem and write a response.  You will include an introduction with a clear claim and make text specific connections.

-Monday:  Book Return (please remove all post it notes before class!)



Classwork: (Gather your notes for tomorrow's in class writing response)

Find 4-5 post it notes from the book that you feel are significant/important to the book as a whole.


-Attach them to a sheet of paper and include page numbers, and comment on why you chose these post its-why are they important?


Tuesday, October 25, 2016

English 10R-Tuesday, 10/25/16

1.           Finish Anthem with post its and answer questions for chapters 11 and 12 (hand-out).

2.           Character Chart:  Add final examples from the last chapters of the novella.


In class writing test Friday:  (Open book/notes)

Monday, October 24, 2016


English 10R-Monday, 10/24/16

Homework: 

1.         Read Chapters 8-10 in Anthem.  Be prepared to answer questions and bring books to class every day!

2.         Take notes/annotate with post its as you read.


3.      Update Character Chart with examples through Chapters 10.


Anthem Test:    Friday (open book/notes test)

Friday, October 21, 2016

English 10R-Friday, 10/21/16

Homework:  

1.           Read Chapters 6 and 7 (VI and VII) in Anthem.  Be prepared to answer questions and bring books to class every day!

2.           Take notes/annotate with post its as you read.


3.           Character Chart:  Update for chapters 6-7 (Use the back of the sheet if needed.)

Thursday, October 20, 2016


English 10R-Thursday, 10/20/16

Homework

1.   Read Chapters (III-V) 3-5 in Anthem.  Be prepared to answer questions and bring books to class every day!

2.   Take notes/annotate with post its as you read.



3.   Add to Character Chart based on today’s discussion of chapter II (2) and your reading of 3-5. 

Wednesday, October 19, 2016


English 10R-Wednesday, 10/19/16

Homework

1.      Read Chapter (II) 2 in Anthem.  Be prepared to answer questions tomorrow and bring books to class everyday!
-take notes/annotate with post its as you read.


2.      Character Chart:  Add examples to the chart (for chapters 1 and 2).

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

English 10R-Tuesday, 10/18/16


Homework:

1.      Read Chapter 1 (I) in Anthem by Ayn Rand.  (If you were absent today, you can access the book online by searching for the title and full text.)

Be prepared to answer questions and bring books to class everyday!


2.      Take “Active Reading” notes-annotate with post its as you read (I will “spot check” these throughout the unit.)

Monday, October 17, 2016

English 10R-Monday, 10/17/16

Homework:

Post it notes needed for tomorrow. (Required)

Today we took notes in class.  Please find a classmate if you were absent and copy what you missed :) 

Friday, October 14, 2016

English 10R-Friday, 10/14/16

Literary Essay Due Monday. Post it notes required starting Tuesday.

Order: (printed prior to class)

1. Final Copy (typed, 12 point, Times New Roman font)
2. Outline (completed)
3. Grading Rubric

Thursday, October 13, 2016

English 10R-Thursday, 10/13/16

Today in the computer lab: (Today is our last day in the lab. Final Essay, Outline and Rubric-in this order-due in class Monday, 10/17/16).


Read through notes below about conclusions,  and continue to write, revise and edit your essay.


Strategies for writing an effective conclusion

One or more of the following strategies may help you write an effective conclusion.
  • Return to the theme or themes or claim in the introduction. This strategy brings the reader full circle. For example, if you begin by describing a scenario, you can end with the same scenario as proof that your essay is helpful in creating a new understanding. You may also refer to the introductory paragraph by using key words or parallel concepts and images that you also used in the introduction. (For example, if you used an important quote from an outside source, remind the reader why/how that quote is significant and related to your entire essay.)
  • Synthesize, don’t summarize: Include a brief summary of the paper’s main points, but don’t simply repeat things that were in your paper. Instead, show your reader how the points you made and the support and examples you used fit together. Pull it all together.
  • Include a provocative insight or quotation from the research or reading you did for your paper.
  • Propose a course of action, a solution to an issue, or questions for further study. This can redirect your reader’s thought process and help her to apply your info and ideas to her own life or to see the broader implications.
Strategies to avoid

  • Beginning with an unnecessary, overused phrase such as “in conclusion,” “in summary,” or “in closing.” Although these phrases can work in speeches, they come across as wooden and trite (overdone) in writing.
  • Stating the thesis/claim for the very first time in the conclusion.
  • Introducing a new idea or subtopic in your conclusion.
  • Including evidence (quotations, statistics, etc.) that should be in the body of the paper.

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

English 10R-Tuesday, 10/11/16


Homework:  Work on body paragraphs for Thursday (our last day in the computer lab.)  Complete the conclusion portion of your outline for Thursday.  (We will be discussing how to to write an effective conclusion.)

 Printed Essay, Outline and Rubric due in class Monday, 10/17/16.  Penalty for each day late!

Today:  Computer Lab

1. Review of Grading Rubric
2. Conferences on body paragraphs

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

English 10R-Wednesday, 10/5/16

Today:  In the computer lab, introductions and start of body paragraph #1.

(We will be in the lab for the rest of this week and next to work on this essay.)


Read and refer to the following:  How to write a successful body paragraph…
So, I have a quote…but how do I make it work in my essay?”      Follow the T-I-C-E Formula!
1.   (Transition – Insert – Cite – Explain)
 When writing an analysis on a piece of literature, it is important that you pull specific evidence from the text to support your idea(s). This evidence may be presented in the form of a paraphrase or a quote. When you have a quote to insert in your writing, there are four steps you can take to ensure that your quote fits flawlessly into your essay. Together, the steps are called the T-I-C-E Formula.

Pretend you want to use the following quote in your essay that you found in “There Will Come Soft Rains” by Ray Bradbury.  You think this quote shows/supports how the author uses figurative language to develop his theme:
 Quote: “But the gods had gone away, and the ritual of the religion continued senselessly, uselessly.”

Follow the T-I-C-E Steps:
 1. Transition into your quote
You need to transition from one idea to the next in your essay in order to make your writing flow. Therefore, you can’t just plop a selected quote into a paragraph and think that the reader will know how it fits in with your ideas. You need to lead into the quote with a transition. This will get the reader ready to understand how the quote works to support the paragraph’s topic sentence, and overall, the thesis/claim.

So, what is a transition? Well, the transition acts as a link between ideas. It is a sentence or two (or a few words) that explains the purpose of the quote to follow. Including background information (context) on the quote is also helpful to the transition.

The following example includes both background information and a transition.
  
For the quote, you might write a lead-in that looks something like this:
The author uses the term “gods” as a symbol for the people who lived in this house but died in a nuclear explosion.  They acted as gods, trying to control their lives with technology, but they were annihilated. The technology continues to function needlessly. 
The transition is:  
They acted as gods, trying to control their lives with technology, but they were annihilated. The technology continues to function needlessly.
 Including some background information helps the reader to understand the quote even more; therefore, it’s a good idea to include background information before the quote if you can. 

Once you’ve written your transition, be sure to:
2. Insert the quote into the paragraph.
Make sure that you put quotation marks around the quote you are using. If you do not do this, it will be considered plagiarism, which is defined as using someone else’s words as if they are your own. It is illegal.  One you’ve placed the quote into the paragraph, you should then…

3. Cite the quote
To avoid plagiarism, you must give credit to the author whose quote you are using, signifying that you in fact did not write the quote you just inserted in your essay. You do not have to write, “On page 23 in “There Will Come Soft Rains”…”

All you have to do is:
1.      Put parentheses right after the quote - ( )
2.      Write the author and page number-if there is one- where you found the quote inside the parentheses - (Bradbury, 23)
3.      Put a period after the parenthesis to end the sentence and quote - (Bradbury). If both of your stories are by the same author, write the title of the piece instead (“There Will Come Soft Rains”)
   
Now, you have written the lead in, you have put the quote into the paragraph, and you have cited it. Now it is time to write the most important part of the formula…

4. Explain how the quote supports the topic.
Yes, you may think that the transition already does this, but nine times out of ten, the reader needs to be reminded of why the quote is important to the essay. The explanation is the most important part to this formula as it acts as closure to the idea the quote presents.

What to do:
Write a sentence or a few explaining the quote – you already described what was happening when the quote was said (background info) now make sure you explain how the quote supports what you are trying to prove in the paragraph. How does the quote support the topic sentence?
  
 An explanation after the quote is inserted might be:
 “But the gods had gone away, and the ritual of the religion continued senselessly, uselessly” (88). Bradbury clearly indicates that technology cannot always be our saviors; in fact, it can actually be our downfall.

Transition, insert, cite and explain all quotes included in your essay.
When you use a quote in your essay, it should look something like this:
The author uses the term “gods” as a symbol for the people who lived in this house but died in a nuclear explosion.  They acted as gods, trying to control their lives with technology, but they were annihilated. The technology continues to function needlessly.  “But the gods had gone away, and the ritual of the religion continued senselessly, uselessly” (Bradbury, 88). Bradbury clearly indicates that technology cannot always be our saviors; in fact, it can actually be our downfall.