Wednesday 13 February 2019

Huck Essays

Today we are going to go over your essay and then begin your essays.  Note - essays should be 2-3 pages and will be due on Monday.  There is a rubric below.













Unit Learning goal: Students will demonstrate knowledge of nineteenth century foundation works of American Literature by analyzing satire in Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and relating one of its main themes to another text and issue of the time. 
 
Scale/Rubric relating to learning goal:
4 – The student can analyze Mark Twain’s use of satire to address an issue of the day and compare/contrast multiple themes in the text with other texts of realism
3 – The student can analyze satire used in Huckleberry Finn and connect a major theme of the book to another text and issue of the time
2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student can analyze the satire in Huckleberry Finn and connect the novel to a issue of the day
1 – Even with help from the teacher the student is unable to analyze satire or connect the novel to an issue of the day.



  
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 reading
A – it is three pages or longer
B- It is at least two full pages in length
C – it is not quite two pages in length
D – it is under two pages
 
ESSAYS:

COMPARE AND CONTRAST ESSAY: outline

Paragraph 1: Thesis Statement and order of development (you might even think about a hook)

HOOK:

THESIS:

ORDER:  1)
           
                2)

               3)

You can use either block or alternating paragraphs.

Block means you compare or contrast both characters in a paragraph.  Example: Pa Sexton and Granddaddy Cain react to problems differently.  You would show how they react to problems differently in a paragraph

Alternating Paragraphs

You could say Pa gets angry when confronted with problems and his eyes dance fire.  He doesn’t think he reacts with a violent temper.  This could be one paragraph.

The second paragraph would be about Granddaddy Cain.