Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Note Sheet Format


 

CHARACTER

TAKE NOTES ON CHARACTERIZATION AND CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT. Consider character traits & motivation.

 


 


 

 


 


 

 


 


 

 


 


 


 


 


 

PLOT – TAKE NOTES ON PLOT EVENTS IN THE ORDER IN WHICH THEY OCCUR.


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

EMERGING CONFLICT(S) AND/OR CONFLICTS (S) – PROVIDE EVIDENCE FROM THE TEXT.


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

Vocabulary Word:

Definition:

Vocabulary Word:

Definition: 

Vocabulary Word:

Definition:

Vocabulary Word:

Definition: 

STYLISTIC DEVICES – IDENTIFY THE LITERARY TECHNIQUE AND EXPLAIN

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EMERGING THEME(S) AND/OR DEVELOPING THEME(S) – PROVIDE EVIDENCE FROM THE TEXT.


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

QUESTIONS AND/OR PREDICTIONS 

 
 
 
 
 


 


 

SIGNIFICANT QUOTE OR PASSAGE

COMMENTARY – EXLAIN WHY QUOTE IS SIGNIFICANT


 

CONSIDER CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT, CONFLICT, LITERARY TECHNIQUES (STYLE), THEME…

"Put the line from the text in quotes" (#).

  • Your comment should be your reaction, question, connection, inference, prediction, or literary analysis.
  • It should not repeat or just restate what the author said.
 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

Monday, November 9, 2009

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Sample Paper

James Smith

Mrs. Thompson

English 11R

3 November 2009

Justifiable Homicide?

John Kramer, the infamous Jigsaw murderer of the Saw series, both physically and psychologically tortures his victims because he believes that in the eyes of death, the people will realize the error of their ways. From afar, he watches his selected prey squander through life, bitter and dejected. He then creates twisted tests, both ironic and symbolic of their wrongdoings in life, in an attempt to awaken them to their faults and allow them the chance to right their wrongs. If we are able to look past the bloodshed and obvious issue of murder, it seems that John's idea is very noble, even righteous. He is technically saving these people from lives of sin and squalor. This controversy of justifiable homicide also frames Arthur Miller's drama The Crucible. Reverend Hale, the minister sent to rid Salem of its evil spirits, claims that "the devil is precise" and seeks to cure all who he has affected. Throughout the play, Miller explores this idea, using Hale's character to arrive at the conclusion that there are no circumstances that would justify homicide.

Reverend Hale, Salem's own Jigsaw murderer, arrives in town with the hope of purifying the village. His good intentions, however, end up causing more harm than good because
unlike John Kramer, Hale doesn't target and torture one person; his goals of decontamination target the entire town. This grandiose ambition causes trouble far deeper than that; Hale fosters the community's fear. He claims a little while after being in Salem that no one is safe, saying: "there is a misty plot afoot so subtle we should be criminal to cling to old respects and ancient

Monday, November 2, 2009

Week of 11/2-11/6

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Weekend

In Class

FOCUS: Model of the essay

OFF

FOCUS: Introduction to Revolutionary Thoughts


  1. Thomas Paine writing assignment

FOCUS: Our Idea of America vs. Thomas Paine's Hopes


1. Read excerpt and discuss.

FOCUS: Compare Thomas Jefferson's "Declaration of Independence" to Paine's revolutionary documents.


  1. How does this document mold who we are as a nation?

HW

Bring in essay with ALL ROUGH DRAFTS by Wednesday

Bring in essay with ALL ROUGH DRAFTS by Wednesday

Read "Declaration of Independence"

Finish to Chapter 25 by Monday


Monday, October 26, 2009

Notes on the Essay

Please print these notes and use them to guide your essay writing during this week. Come into class tomorrow with a functioning introduction and body paragraph. You will have the period to begin your next body paragraph.

Below this post, you will find the essay topic choices.

THE INTRODUCTION:

The Hook

We spoke about leads/hooks, but here, in layman's terms, is the purpose for them:

  1. You have an audience for anything you write, and you need to appeal to the person/people to get them interested or to make them value what you've written. The hook can is just that: what you are saying to get the reader involved in your piece.
    1. Logic (Logos)
      1. Appeal to their reason/logic by referring to facts, inference, details, and other evidence
        1. Suggestion: Perhaps, you can begin with a statistic or an unfamiliar fact. You can also create a metaphor. This appeals to their logic because you connected two things and inferred a commonality between them.


    2. Emotion (Pathos)
      1. Appeal to their emotions by calling upon feelings of empathy, sympathy, anger, fear
        1. Suggestion: Perhaps, you can begin with a personal anecdote or a related news story to tap into your readers hearts.
    3. Ethics (Ethos)
      1. Appeal to the readers' ethics by establishing yourself as competent, fair, and trustworthy author
        1. Suggestion: Perhaps, you can begin by making a stanch statement about your topic
          1. e.g., Everybody who must be at the school and begin the day at the same time—staff, faculty, and students—needs and deserves space to park.
            1. This shows that the writer is dedicated to fairness and equality.
      2. This is reserved mostly for speeches and letters, not literary analysis.


    4. Most literary essays are arguments that rely on both logical and emotional appeals.
  2. You must make sure to flesh out the hook to avoid problems in logic (e.g., false analogy, circular reasoning, overgeneralization, false cause, single cause) because one wrong move and it can ruin your essay.
  3. You will refer back to this hook to tie all your points together. So, please make sure that your anecdote or metaphor has enough substance to relate to your thesis in several ways.


Thesis—so frequently misunderstood:

  1. You have a something to say when you write an essay, and you need to figure out what that is. Frequently, teachers will give you, as I often do, a list of proposed topics. I tend not to limit you to this list, especially if you come to a literary/scholarly conclusion yourself. The thesis is simply this: a statement about what you are trying to enlighten the reader about.
  2. An effective thesis should be all of the following:
    1. Restricted
      1. A good essay deals with a bite-size issue, not with issues that would require a lifetime to discuss intelligently or thoroughly.
        1. e.g.,

Poor

Better

The world is a terrible mess.

The United Nations should be given more peace-keeping powers.

Abigail has many problems.

Abigail is a product of a lack of supervision.

Bob Ewell is an evil man.

Bob Ewell is repressed by a society that doesn't respect him.


  1. Unified
    1. The tight structure of your paper depends on its working to support a concise idea.
      1. e.g.,

Poor

Better

Detective stories are not a high form of literature, but people have always been fascinated by them, and many fine writers have experimented with them.

Detective stories appeal to the basic human desire for thrills.


  1. Specific
    1. A satisfactorily restricted and unified thesis may be useless if the idea it commits you to is vague.
      1. e.g.,

Poor

Better

James Joyce's Ulysses is very good.

James Joyce's Ulysses helped create a new way for writers to deal with the unconscious.


The Body Paragraphs:

The Proof

The substance of each of your body paragraphs will be the explanations, summaries, paraphrases, specific details, and direct quotations you need to support and develop the more general statement you have made in your topic sentence.

  1. These paragraphs can vary in number. You may need three or four to prove your thesis true, perhaps even six.
  2. Each of these paragraphs must include:
    1. Topic Sentence that Supports the Thesis Statement
      1. How will the details of this paragraph contribute to your overall thesis?
    2. Quote/Specific Details:
      1. Introduce the quote
        1. Provide context for the reader
          1. In one particular scene,…
        2. Use a "signal phrase" to introduce the quote
          1. He proclaims, "…"
          2. She asserts, "…"
      2. Direct Quote
        1. Use a direct quote when an author writes in particularly powerful language and when such textual evidence enhances your paper's argument.
        2. Be precise. Do not use a quote from an outside source (secondary source) if it is not well written or if you can state the point more clearly in your own words. In that case, you might summarize or paraphrase the author's ideas. If you summarize or paraphrase, you must still cite the source to credit the author.
        3. Prose quotations longer than four lines should be set off in block quotes, indented 10 spaces from the left margin and double spaced, without quotation marks.
      3. Your Analysis/Interpretation of the Quote
        1. Explain and discuss how the quote is significant. Relate the quote to your purpose in your paper.
        2. Demonstrate that this quote serves to make a particular point in your argument.
        3. Connect this to your HOOK.
      4. Be sure to transition/connect this paragraph with the following paragraph. You can make this the last sentence of the first paragraph or the first sentence of the next paragraph.


The Conclusion:

"Hello" is not "goodbye."

Your conclusion will clearly state what you've proven.

  1. The purpose of a conclusion is to show how you've proven your thesis.
  2. The conclusion should not introduce a new topic that has not been touched on in your essay.
  3. Your conclusion should include the following:
    1. Connect all your points, relating them back to the thesis.
    2. Clincher: try to end your paper with a connection back to that hook, which will in turn reinforce your argument. These paragraphs can vary in number. You may need three or four to prove your thesis true, perhaps even six.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Homework for the Weekend

Name:______________________________                         Thompson—The Crucible

DIRECTIONS: Over the weekend, I would like you to craft your introduction. The two items I must see are a hook and a thesis. A thesis does not need to be the last sentence of an introduction, but it must be present. Here is a list of some possible essay topics for The Crucible:

  1. Discuss the symbolic executions of Rebecca Nurse and John Proctor.
  2. How do the narrative sections add to the play? In other words, what is their purpose? How would your judgment of what is happening on stage be different without these narrative sections?
  3. One idea Arthur Miller tries to convey through The Crucible is how private conscience cannot be divorced from public action. Explain how one (1) character in the play tries to separate private conscience from public action and the consequences that ensue. Also, cite one (1) example from more modern times where this has occurred and discuss the result.
  4. Discuss the role that grudges and personal rivalries play in the witch trial hysteria.
  5. How is the caste system of Salem upended? In other words, how do the witch trials empower the powerless?
  6. Discuss the role of Reverend Hale in the drama and the change he undergoes.
  7. Discuss how the themes of The Crucible make it both universal and enduring. Is there any character in the play that, too, is universal (anyone that we can pick up and place in modern society)? Please note, this means that that he/she would have to have the personality to function in a modern society.
  8. Several literary scholars see Mary Warren as a cipher. They claim that she is a nonentity because the reader only sees her as a pawn of Abigail, and then of Proctor, and then again of Abigail. Who is the "real" Mary Warren? What is her function in the play?
  9. In Act IV, Reverend Hale states, "Life is God's most precious gift; no principle, however glorious, may justify the taking of it." Using specific references to the text (e.g., characters, events, or viewpoints), agree or disagree with Hale's perspective and defend your position.
  10. The Crucible is famous as a political allegory for the Red Scare, but what exactly is Miller trying to say? Who do you think is being most criticized in the contemporary analogy?
  11. Topic of Choice: MUST BE APPROVED BY ME

Here is a sample OUTLINE (If you don't like mine, create your own):

  1. INTRODUCTION

    Hook (How will you get the reader interested in reading this essay? Story from your own life? Hypothetical situation? Intriguing question? Other interesting start? This should seem to you almost like a piece of creative writing)

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