Tuesday 15 December 2015

Romantic Review


Review for Test on Romanticism

1 – Be able to discuss with examples how Emerson (Nature and Self-Reliance)  and Thoreau (Walden and Civil Disobedience fit the ideas of Transcendentalism.  You will need to be able to pick out  a theme for each essay and use specific examples.

2 – Discuss the meaning of the “A Psalm of Life”, “The Tide Falls”, “The Chambered Nautilus” and “Old Ironsides”.  Be able to analysis rhyme scheme, stanza structure, and metaphor in each poem.  Also apply the question: What gives life purpose to the poems.

3 – List the elements of American Gothic literature and give examples of these elements in “The Fall of the House of Usher” and The Scarlet Letter.

4 – Be able to discuss the following questions as connected to the literature of the Romantic Period:

“Is the price of progress ever too high?”

“Is it patriotic to protest one’s government?”

“Does everyone have a dark side?”

“Where do people look for the truth?”

Wednesday 9 December 2015

Thursday, Friday and Monday

Thursday

We will read Henry Wadsworth Longfellow pages 342 - 346.  Answer questions 1-7 on page 347.


Friday

We will read Oliver Wendell Holmes pages 348 - 352.  Answer questions 1-4 and 6 on page 353. 


Monday

Read Poe 410 - 431.  Briefly write a blog entry where you summarize the Romantic Gothic elements in the story.  Look at page 312 if you need to review Romantic Gothic ideas. 

American Literature

Learning Goal: Students will evaluate purposes and arguments in works of public advocacy.

Today we will read "Woman in the Nineteenth Century", discuss the Fuller's arguments and then answer questions on page 408 (#1-5).

Tuesday 8 December 2015


Learning Goal: RI2, Analyze a complex set of ideas and explain how they develop over the course of the text

Today's Objective: Identify Emerson's theme in "Nature" and discuss how he expands upon the idea. 

What we will do today: Read the background information of Emerson, read the essay "Nature", discuss the theme and ways he develops it. 

Do questions 2,3, 5 and 7. 

Monday 7 December 2015

Emerson

Ralph Waldo Emerson: "Self-Reliance"

Learning Goal: RI2, Analyze a complex set of ideas and explain how they develop over the course of the text

Today's Objective: Identify Emerson's theme in "Self-Reliance" and discuss how he expands upon the idea. 

What we will do today: Read the background information of Emerson, read the essay "Self-Reliance" discuss the theme and ways he develops it. 


On page 375 answer questions 1, 4, 5 and 6.



Friday 4 December 2015

Civil Disobedience

Learning Goal: Determine the central ideas of a text and analyze their development; provide an objective summary of the text.


Today's Objective: Read "from Civil Disobedience" and determine the theme that Thoreau develops and then write a summary of the text using specific examples to back up your ideas.
 

Also, please turn in your Scarlet Letter essay!  

Thursday 3 December 2015

Walden

Learning Goal: Determine two or more central ideas of a text and analyze their development; provide an objective summary of the text.

Today's Objective: Read "from Walden" and determine two themes that Thoreau develops and then write these themes and how Thoreau develops them with a summary of the text.

HW: questions 1-4, 6 and 7 on page 388.

We will be reading Thoreau for the next few days.  He is the most important essayists of the 19th century - so important that the two essays you're read hit Common Core Standards RI2, RI4, RI5, RI6, and RI9.

Smile. 

Wednesday 2 December 2015

Scarlet Letter ESSAYS

Today is your last day to work on these in class.

They are due on Friday! 

Tuesday 1 December 2015

Examples

In the Scarlet Letter, the theme of exile transforms the characters of Hester, Dimmesdale, and Chillingworth. 

In the Scarlet Letter, the "A" on Hester's chest represents Hester, herself, and reflect her transformation - from Adulterer to Able to Absolution.  The "A" is Hester's soul. 

In the Scarlet Letter, Pearl represents the theme of forgiveness.  She is the force sent - like a female Christ figure - to allow Hester and Dimmesdale to be saved from their sin.


Monday 30 November 2015

Outline




THEMES:

2010. Palestinian American literary theorist and cultural critic Edward Said has written that “Exile is strangely compelling to think about but terrible to experience. It is the unhealable rift forced between a human being and a native place, between the self and its true home: its essential sadness can never be surmounted.” Yet Said has also said that exile can become “a potent, even enriching” experience. Select a novel, play, or epic in which a character experiences such a rift and becomes cut off from “home,” whether that home is the character’s birthplace, family, homeland, or other special place. Then write an essay in which you analyze how the character’s experience with exile is both alienating and enriching, and how this experience illuminates the meaning of the work as a whole. Do not merely summarize the plot. 

Go here

Nature vs. Human Law
Nature of Evil
Sin vs. Forgiveness or Punishment vs. Forgiveness
Individual vs. Society
Exile
Public Guilt vs. Private Guilt
Civilization vs. Wilderness or Town vs. Woods
Good vs. Evil

Analysis Essay:
Students will need to analysis some aspect of The Scarlet Letter and connected it to a theme. Things that can be explored include symbolism, tone, diction, characters and events. I expect students to use their didactical journals for focus on examples. I also expect all students to choose something small to concentrate on. I would rather you spend three pages examining one paragraph in relation to a theme, than to try and examine something like Pearl’s role as Savior and Chillingworth’s role as the devil (unless you view these roles from looking at one paragraph or one page). This would be too large. You couldn’t examine it in enough detail in three pages. Remember I’m looking for precise thesis statements and evidence that is analyzed. 

Remember - thesis statement.

Connect the symbol, character or literary element to a theme.  Then present an order of development or list of things you will cover in your essay.

Thesis Statement

Your thesis statement directs all of the ideas, quote selection, and commentary in your essay. Therefore, a muddled or imprecise thesis statement will lead to an unclear or meaningless essay.

A thesis statement is NOT:

1. An abstract concept. For example, “Greed” is not a thesis statement.

2. A general “universal” truth. For example, the following sentence is not a thesis statement: “For thousands of years, man has been greedy.”

A thesis statement IS a statement that provides direction for the analysis of a theme or idea presented by a particular text. Therefore, in order to construct an effective thesis statement, you must first determine what a text is suggesting about an abstract concept (like greed, for example).
Your thesis statement will address an abstract concept PLUS the evaluation of that concept through a particular text.

A thesis statement for “The Pardoner’s Tale” might address the abstract concept of greed as it is handled in the story. The first two examples are NOT thesis statements. The third one is a complete thesis statement:

a. Greed is something that man has struggled with for centuries, as demonstrated in “The Pardoner’s Tale” by Chaucer. (Abstract Concept Only)

b. “The Pardoner’s Tale,” written by Chaucer, is a story about how three men kill one another while looking for Death. (Plot Summary)

c. “The Pardoner’s Tale,” written by Chaucer, suggests that the “deadly” sin of greed is stronger than any oath of friendship, and will ultimately lead those who give into its allure to their own destruction.

Literary Analysis

Today - you get to work on your analysis essays.  Remember these need to be 3-5 pages.  I will be looking at specifics examples and the analysis of specifics.  You should be drawing from your dialectical journals.


Unit Learning goal: Students will demonstrate knowledge of nineteenth century foundation works of American Literature by determining how a theme is developed over the course of text by analyzing structure, author’s choice of details, and character; and, by writing an essay on how these elements (or one of them) influences the meaning of the novel as a whole.



Scale/Rubric relating to learning goal:
4 – The student can write a 5-10 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel.
3 – The student can write a 3-5 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel.
2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student can write a 3-5 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel.
1 – Even with help from the teacher the student is unable to the student can write a 3-5 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel.
 


  
A
B
C
D
FOCUS
Hook, Thesis Statement, Order of development are fresh and original, and connected to a theme.  Thesis is narrow and manageable.  Order is precise and helps develop one clear idea.  Hook and thesis are connected. 
Hook, Thesis Statement and Order are present in the first paragraph. 
There is a thesis statement but either it is not clear, or the order of development and/or hook is missing.
No thesis statement
Examples and Analysis
The examples from the source (text) not only back up the thesis but are introduced, explained and analyzed. The analysis shows depth of thought and insight into the text.
The examples used back up the main ideas of the essay.  The analysis offers some insight into the theme, but the depth is not necessary original. 
The examples used don’t necessarily back up the thesis.  They are summative in nature and not exact.  The analysis doesn’t offer much if any depth into the text or is merely plot summary.
No Analysis and/or Examples
Voice/Word Choice
Point of view is evident.  Clear sense of audience.  Ideas are original.  Work is engaging.  Precise, fresh and original words.
Some sense of audience.  Conveys ideas to reader.  Ideas are not necessary original.  Uses favorite words correctly.  Some experiment with new words or SAT words. 
Paper lacks energy.  Essay lacks focus and/or doesn’t persuade.  Language relies on repetition of the same words or there is an overuse of “to be” verbs. 
Voice is not apparent, or doesn’t necessary seem that of the author. 
Mechanics
No mistakes
One to five small mistakes that do not affect the reading of the essay
Five to ten mistakes
Numerous mistakes that impair rea

Tuesday 17 November 2015

Near the End!

THE SCARLET LETTER

Unit Learning goal: Students will demonstrate knowledge of nineteenth century foundation works of American Literature by determining how a theme is developed over the course of text by analyzing structure, author’s choice of details, and character; and, by writing an essay on how these elements (or one of them) influences the meaning of the novel as a whole.



Scale/Rubric relating to learning goal:
4 – The student can write a 5-10 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel.
3 – The student can write a 3-5 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel.
2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student can write a 3-5 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel.
1 – Even with help from the teacher the student is unable to the student can write a 3-5 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel.

Objectives (smaller chunks of overall goal) and suggested time periods

At the end of this Unit the Students will be able to

1)  List and explain 3-5 symbols from the novel The Scarlet Letter
2)  Discuss the basic structure(s) of The Scarlett Letter
3)  Given the main ideas of various pieces of Romantic Literature
4)  List the key aspects of Romanticism
5)  List the key aspects of transcendentalism
6)  Discuss who the Fireside poets were and what they believed in
7)  Keep a dialectical journal while reading The Scarlet Letter
8)  Evaluate the purpose and argument of public advocacy
9)  Determine two or more themes in a text
10)          Discuss the importance of rhyme scheme and stanza structure and how they create meaning
11)          Compare Emerson and Thoreau


 READING - LEFT

11/17 chapter 18

11/18 chapter 19

11/19 20-21

11/20 Quiz

11/30 Book Finished - Dialectical Journals DUE!

11/30 - 12/2 Work on Essay

12/3 Thoreau

12/4 Thoreau

12/9 Emerson

12/10 Emerson

12/11 Poe

12/12 Longfellow and Fireside Poets

12/13 Longfellow and Fireside Poets

12/14 - 12/15 Review 

Monday 16 November 2015

Scarlet Letter

So - we are going to finish the Scarlet Letter by the time your get back from Thanksgiving Break.  Start thinking about your essays!

Also - dialectical journals due in two weeks. 

Friday 13 November 2015

Friday!

Today we are going to look at a PPT on Benedict Arnold and then continue answering the questions from Don't Know Much About History.

Homework: Finish answering/outlining the information from Don't Know Much About History.

Wednesday 11 November 2015

What is your letter

Today, we are going to read the next chapter in the Scarlet Letter.

Tomorrow we might play a review game.

On Friday - your assignment is to wear a letter that represents YOU.  The class will have to guess what the letter stands for.  This is an easy daily grade.


Friday 6 November 2015

HESTER





LEARNING GOAL: RL9 - read and discuss classical literature of the 19th century.  Determine a theme of a text by referring to specifics from a text.  


Objective: record and analyze specifics from the text as you read.  Make sure these specifics interest you and relate to some larger idea or connection. 


Lets look at some symbols:

Hester Prynne
Hester: Hestier in Greek mythology, Zeus’s sister, a woman of beauty
            hestier (hasty)
Prynne: prurient
             prune: purify her sin
             pry: probe into the interior of one’s heart
                               
Arthur Dimmesdale
Arthur: Adam, adultery
Dimmesdale: dim + dale:  dim interior  (to hide one’s sin)                      
 
Roger Chillingworth
Roger: rogue (revenge)
Chillingworth: chilly (cruel, inhumane)
                        + worth (induce Arthur to speak out his own sin)
                                    
Pearl: good, pure and precious
 
 
 NEW VOCABULARY
 
Anathema
Emolument
Mountebank
Deleterious
Misanthropy
Indefatigable
Constrained
Amenable
Averred
Heterodox

Wednesday 4 November 2015

Wednesday

THE SCARLET LETTER

Unit Learning goal: Students will demonstrate knowledge of nineteenth century foundation works of American Literature by determining how a theme is developed over the course of text by analyzing structure, author’s choice of details, and character; and, by writing an essay on how these elements (or one of them) influences the meaning of the novel as a whole.



Scale/Rubric relating to learning goal:
4 – The student can write a 5-10 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel.
3 – The student can write a 3-5 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel.
2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student can write a 3-5 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel.
1 – Even with help from the teacher the student is unable to the student can write a 3-5 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel.

Objectives (smaller chunks of overall goal) and suggested time periods

At the end of this Unit the Students will be able to

1)  List and explain 3-5 symbols from the novel The Scarlet Letter
2)  Discuss the basic structure(s) of The Scarlett Letter
3)  Given the main ideas of various pieces of Romantic Literature
4)  List the key aspects of Romanticism
5)  List the key aspects of transcendentalism
6)  Discuss who the Fireside poets were and what they believed in
7)  Keep a dialectical journal while reading The Scarlet Letter
8)  Evaluate the purpose and argument of public advocacy
9)  Determine two or more themes in a text
10)          Discuss the importance of rhyme scheme and stanza structure and how they create meaning
11)          Compare Emerson and Thoreau

Wednesday 28 October 2015

Scarlet Letter

Today, we are going to spend 15-20 minutes creating a Quizlet for your vocabulary words. 

Then we will move onto chapter 4 of the Scarlet Letter.  Your reading schedule for the Scarlet Letter is below.  Remember to continue to post dialectical journals.  I will be checking these this week and giving you feedback.

10/28 Chapter 5

11/2 Chapter 6

11/3 Quiz on 1st six chapters

11/4 Chaps 7-8

11/5 Chaps 9-10

11/6 chap 11

11/9 chap 12

11/10 chap 13

11/11 chap 14

11/12 chap 15

11/13 Quiz

11/16 16-17

11/17 chapter 18

11/18 chapter 19

11/19 20-21

11/20 Quiz

11/30 Book Finished - Dialectical Journals DUE!

11/30 - 12/2 Work on Essay

12/3 Thoreau

12/4 Thoreau

12/9 Emerson

12/10 Emerson

12/11 Poe

12/12 Longfellow and Fireside Poets

12/13 Longfellow and Fireside Poets

12/14 - 12/15 Review

Monday 26 October 2015

Monday

Today -

we are going to look at chapter 3 of The Scarlet Letter.  Please keep up with your dialectical journals.

We will have a vocabulary quiz on Friday.

New Vocabulary 
Supinely
Inviolate
Martial
Despotism
Prudent
Abrogate
Buttress
Concomitant
Diaphanous
Impinge

Tuesday 20 October 2015

Dialectical Journals

The Dialectical Journal: THE SCARLET LETTER      


Effective students have a habit of taking notes as they read. This note-taking can several forms: annotation, post it notes, character lists, idea clusters, and many others. One of the most effective strategies is called a dialectical journal. The word “dialectical” has numerous meanings, but the one most pertinent is the “art of critical examination into the truth of an opinion” or reworded “The art or practice of arriving at the truth by using conversation involving question and answer.” As you read, you are forming an opinion about what you are reading (or at least you are SUPPOSED to be forming an opinion). That opinion, however, needs to be based on the text – not just a feeling. Therefore, all of your opinions need to be based on the text.

The procedure is as follows:

1. Purchase a dedicated spiral notebook and draw a line down the center of each page of the notebook.  NOTE: I expect you to publish these journal entries on your blogs nightly and number them as you go.

2. As you read, pay close attention to the text.

3. Whenever you encounter something of interest (this could be anything from an interesting turn of phrase to a character note), write down the word/phrase in the LEFT HAND COLUMN making sure that you NOTE THE PAGE NUMBER. If the phrase is especially long just write the first few words, use an ellipsis, then write the last few words.

4. In the RIGHT HAND COLUMN, WRITE YOUR OBSEVRATIONS ABOUT THE TEXT you noted in the left-hand column. This is where you need to interact in detail with the text. Make sure that your observations are THOROUGH, INSIGHTFUL, and FOCUSED CLEARLY ON THE TEXT.

Requirements:

1) For each novel we read you will need to complete a MINIMUM of 55 entries if you wish to be eligible for an “A”.  35 is the minimum for a passing grade.  Make sure you number your entries.
2) A completed dialectical journal should be brought to class each day a reading assignment is due.
3) On some short fiction and poetry reading assignments I may ask you to keep a dialectic journal on the reading (usually I’ll ask for 5-10 entries for shorter works).
4)  Dialectic journals will be used as part of class discussion and will be randomly collected and graded for homework.

When should you write things down?
When certain details seem important to you
When you have an epiphany
When you learn something significant about a character
When you recognize a pattern (overlapping images, repetitions of idea, details, etc.)
When you agree or disagree with something a character says
When you find an interesting or potentially significant quote.
When you notice something important or relevant about the writer’s style.
When you notice effective uses of literary devices.
When you notice something that makes you think of a question

That is all there is to it. This way, once you have read your text you will already have a great set of notes on which to draw when you write your paper. You also should have gained a great deal of insight about your particular text.

Note: Should you rather type this, just use the COLUMN function in your tool bar and complete steps two-four electronically.

Grading  (based on 55 entries, if you have 45 entries an A= B, B= C, 35 entries A=C)

A—Detailed, meaningful passages, plot and quote selections; thoughtful interpretation and commentary about the text; includes comments about literary elements (like theme, diction, imagery, syntax, symbolism, etc.) and how these elements contribute to the meaning of the text; asks thought-provoking, insightful questions; coverage of text is complete and thorough; journal is neat, organized, numbered and readable.
B—Less detailed, but good selections; some intelligent commentary about the text; includes some comments about literary elements (like theme, diction, imagery, syntax, symbolism, etc.) but less than how these elements contribute to the meaning of the text; asks some thought-provoking, insightful questions; coverage of the text is complete and thorough; journal is neat, organized, numbered and readable.
C—A few good details about the text; most of the commentary is vague, unsupported or plot summary/paraphrase; some listing of literary elements, but perhaps inadequate discussion, but not very thoroughly; journal is relatively neat.
D—Hardly any good or meaningful details from the story; notes are plot summary or paraphrase; few literary elements, virtually no discussion on meaning; no good questions; limited coverage of text, and/or too short.

American Romantic Movement



Today we will finish presenting Unit I Projects, and then we will go over Unit 2: The American Romanticism

Finally, we will read the overview of the unit - pages 305-313.

Homework, finish reading this sections.





Unit Learning goal: Students will demonstrate knowledge of nineteenth century foundation works of American Literature by determining how a theme is developed over the course of text by analyzing structure, author’s choice of details, and character; and, by writing an essay on how these elements (or one of them) influences the meaning of the novel as a whole.



Scale/Rubric relating to learning goal:
4 – The student can write a 5-10 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel. 
3 – The student can write a 3-5 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel. 
2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student can write a 3-5 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel. 
1 – Even with help from the teacher the student is unable to the student can write a 3-5 page essay that explores how structure, details (symbol, imagery, figurative language) is developed of the course of the novel and how it influences the meaning of the novel. 

Objectives (smaller chunks of overall goal) and suggested time periods

At the end of this Unit the Students will be able to

1)  List and explain 3-5 symbols from the novel The Scarlet Letter
2)  Discuss the basic structure(s) of The Scarlett Letter
3)  Given the main ideas of various pieces of Romantic Literature
4)  List the key aspects of Romanticism
5)  List the key aspects of transcendentalism
6)  Discuss who the Fireside poets were and what they believed in
7)  Keep a dialectical journal while reading The Scarlet Letter
8)  Evaluate the purpose and argument of public advocacy
9)  Determine two or more themes in a text
10)          Discuss the importance of rhyme scheme and stanza structure and how they create meaning
11)          Compare Emerson and Thoreau

 Major Themes addressed:


The idea of individualism and the purpose of nature.
The meaning of sin and forgiveness.
Sometimes to be patriotic means to protest one’s government.
The meaning of truth and the idea that everyone has a dark side.
Is the price of progress ever too high?




Anchor Text(s)/Additional Instructional Resources:

The Scarlett Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne

EARLY ROMANTIC LITERATURE

“The Devil and Tom Walker” by Washington Irving



FIRESIDE POETS

“A Psalm of Life” and “The Tide Falls” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
“The Chambered Nautilus” and “Old Ironsides” by Oliver Wendell Holmes

THE TRANSCENDENTALISTS

“Self-Reliance” and “Nature” by Ralph Waldo Emerson
“Walden” and “Civil Disobedience” by Henry David Thoreau

GOTHIC

“The Fall of the House of Usher” by Edgar Allan Poe.