Sunday, April 30, 2017

Review Time!

Calendar:
Monday: RA Review- Ben Banneker Lesson
Wednesday: Argument Review
Friday: Multiple Choice Review
Tuesday: Review, Refresh, Relax
Wednesday: Exam Day!

1. Review Rhetorical Analysis rubric and sample essays
2. Give your essay a score and explain WHY you gave it the score you did
3. Tips for Rhetorical Analysis:

  • You must understand the meaning of the passage, the author's purpose in writing the passage, and the effect of the passage on the intended audience before you begin writing
  • Next, decide what rhetorical devices the writer uses to convey meaning to the reader
    • Does the writer uses particular phrases or details to appeal to the emotions or the logic of his or her intended audience?
    • Are the paragraphs arranged so that each paragraph contributes to the desired effect?
    • Do any stylistic devices (imagery, diction, figurative language, etc.) contribute to the overall effect and purpose?
4. Banneker close reading



Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Chief Seattle

LT: I can demonstrate my knowledge of rhetorical terms. I can read a text closely and pick out rhetorical strategies that contribute to the author's purpose.

1. Rhetorical Terms Quiz
2. Chief Seattle- Read, annotate and complete 1st reading Q's in partners

HW over break:
  • Chief Seattle Rhetorical Analysis (TIMED 40 Min)
  • Prompt: Analyze the rhetorical strategies that contribute to the author's purpose
    • Reminders!
    • → Your #1 overall goal--always--is purpose. What is the meaning of the piece? What did the author sit down to say? 
    • → Then you explore HOW the author did so… Strategies (big ideas: E, P, L, tone shifts, recurring devices--paragraph worthy AND linking to MEANING always!)
    • → Then sprinkle in the little things (rhetorical devices)... word choice, images, specific details that create _________ (a specific tone, an effect on the reader)
    • → Use many quotes! Short ones, or “lists” of phrases are great!
    • → Make your ending about the essay’s ending… 
  • Water Synthesis (TIMED 1 hour)
    1. Your essay should be clear, organized, logical, and thoughtful.
    2. In developing each of your major points, make certain to:
      1. Relate it to the thesis/claim
      2. Use specific examples (personal and otherwise)
      3. Use selected sources to support the major point
      4. Incorporate sources into the development of your point by using
        1. Attribution and introduction of cited sources
        2. Transitions
        3. Mix of direct quotations, summary and paraphrase.
    3. The synthesis essay asks you to be familiar with both analysis and argument.

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

The Lives of a Cell

Obj: I can analyze the structure of a text by completing a says/does analysis.

1. Rhetorical Terms Review: Quiz next class!

2. "The Lives of a Cell" Says/Does Analysis: Pick out rhetorical strategies (diction, imagery, arrangement, etc.) and note how they work to generate his comparison of earth to a cell.

HW: Synthesis Essay and Study for Quiz on Terms

Synthesis Prompt : Consider the focus of the excerpts from Dillard and Thoreau, Thomas’s essay, and the White letter. Write an essay in which you defend, challenge or qualify Thomas’s claim that “man is embedded in nature.” Refer to at least three of the texts for support.

Thursday, April 6, 2017

The Battle of the Ants

Obj: I can read a text closely and discuss analysis questions. I can review rhetorical terms by finding and creating examples to teach the class.

1. Review Synthesis Essay
2.  Discuss Thoreau
3. Read Gilbert White's letter and annotate 1st and 2nd reading questions- discuss
4. Rhetorical Terms Review

HW: Read and annotate "Lives of a Cell" and complete slides for rhetorical terms review


Monday, April 3, 2017

Emerson and Thoreau

Obj: I can recognize the strengths and weaknesses of my partner's essay. I can read a text closely and answer analysis questions.

1. Sharing essays
2. How can we tighten our language?

  • Edit paragraph
  • Confusing antecedents

3. What is Transcendentalism?
4. Discuss "big ideas" from Emerson's Nature
5. Read Thoreau and divide up 2nd reading Q's

HW: Read Gilbert White's The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne and complete 1st and 2nd reading questions

AP Lang Post Exam: What is satire?

Unit Objective: I can demonstrate my understanding of key techniques of satire in my analysis of the writing of others and in my own writing...