Thursday, October 27, 2011

Homework Due November 2 2011

Homework for the week.

Read Textbook

REA
Read Character page 56-59

Read and Analyze

Online
Begin Reading Othello Reading Act 2 and III.
Feel Free to use Spark Notes companion to the play.


Add notes from these assignments to your notebook.

Prepare Presentation-
Prepare your presentation of your assigned Shakespeare play for next weeks class.
Your presentation should include...
  • Main Characters and brief descriptions
  • Plot Overview
  • A recitation of a passage of at least 12 lines. (not memorized)
  • The plays classification Drama or Tragedy and why.
  • Themes, Motifs, Symbols
  • Important Quotations
Your presentation should be 5-10 minutes for the class
You can make a companion PowerPoint if you wish
You should include a hand out for everyone in the class.

Feel free to shoot me an email if you have any questions.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Homework Due October 26th 2011

Homework for the week.

Read Textbook

Barrons
Review Part 4 Fiction and Drama.

REA
Read Drama and Theater and Plot Structure page 52-56

Online
Read this PDF on drama.


Read and Analyze

Online
Begin Reading Othello Reading Act 1 and 2.
Feel Free to use Spark Notes companion to the play.


Add notes from these assignments to your notebook.

Prepare for Notebook Check

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Test Oct 19

Didn't realize this hadn't been published.


For the test brush up on this quizlet.

The final will include some of this material as is and some will be implemented while analyzing pieces of literature.
See you in the morning.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Homework Due October 19th 2011

Homework for the week.

Read Textbook

Barrons
Part 3: What you Need to Know About Poetry
Read pages 170-173 Completing all the activities.

REA
Read Poetry Types of Poetry


Read and Analyze

Online

Classify all the poems as Villanelle, Idyll, Concrete, Lyric, Ode, Italian Sonnet, Shakespearean Sonnet, Epic, Ballad, or Elegy.

Complete a Poetry Profile for each of the following poems in your reading
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
When Lalacs last in the Door-yard Bloom'd
Ode to a Nightingale
Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night

For each Poetry Profile answer the following questions
What is the mood?
Who is the speaker?
What is the structure?
What is the theme?
Are the grammar and meaning clear? Why or why not?
What are the important images and figures of speech?
Are there repetitive words or phrases? Why?
What is the tone?
What are the literary devices used in the poem?
How many Stanzas?
What is the rhyme scheme?
Summarize the poem in one to two sentences.

Review Quizlet

Study for Quarterfinals

Prepare for Notebook Check

Monday, October 10, 2011

Study Skills: Memory

HOW WE REMEMBER


1. Memory itself probably cannot be developed; however, improvement in remembering comes from correcting certain habits or thoughts so that we use our memory to its’ fullest potential. Remembering is like seeing; improvement in either function does not depend upon how much we use it but, rather, how we use it.

2. The first and most important rule for remembering is: cultivate the habit of close attention to the thing you wish to remember. Be sure you have a clear, sharp impression of the face, name, date, or facts, which you will need to know at a future time. If you wish to remember a fact, make it meaningful to you.

3. When we are learning, we should try not only to get a strong impression but also to obtain as many different kinds of impressions as possible. Some people can remember colors distinctly, but have a poor memory for shapes. But anyone, by putting together and using all of the impressions our sense organs bring us about one thing, allows us to remember it much more clearly than if we were to rely on sight or sound alone. For example, try reading your lesson aloud. In doing this, your eye takes in the appearance of the printed word, your ear passes the sound of the words to your brain, and even the tension of the muscles of your throat add their bit to the total impression which your mind is expected to store away.

4. Try to visualize it. Either remember a diagram or a picture of the material to be remembered, or take short notes about it, which help you to visualize.

5. Intend to remember. The mere intention to remember puts the mind in a condition to remember, and if you will make use of this fact in studying you will be able to recall between 20 and 60 percent more of what you read and hear than you would if you were not actively trying to remember.

6. Think about it. A fact doesn't belong to you until you have used it. In making use of this principle, plan to spend not more than one-half of your study period in reading your lesson. Use the other half in doing something with what you learn. Think about what you have studied, write down notes on it, and explain it to somebody else.

7. Logical memory. One of the most important of all aids to the remembering process is the habit of associating a new idea immediately with facts or ideas that are already firmly lodged in your mind. This association revives and strengthens the old memories and prevents the new one form slipping away by anchoring it to the well-established framework of your mental world.

8. Remembering by brute force. We will forget more, on the average, during the first hour after learning than during the next 24 hours; and we will forget more, on the average, during the first day than we will during the next thirty days. Whatever is left after thirty days time, we will probably be able to hold on to without much further loss for years to come.

9. Reviewing is much more effective if carried out before memories have entirely escaped than it is after considerable time has elapsed. Repetitions should be strung out over as long a time as is available. We remember better if we pause a little between periods of study.

10. How much to study? You should study more than just enough to learn your assignment. Experiments have proven that 50% more study resulted in 50% better retention. After a week had passed, it was found that extra work had salvaged six times as much of the material as in the case when it was barely learned.



Academic Skills Center

California Polytechnic State University

http://sas.calpoly.edu/asc/ssl.html

used by permission

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Homework Due October 12th 2011

Homework for the week.

Read Textbook

Barrons
Part 3: What you Need to Know About Poetry
Read pages 145-170 Completing all the activities.

REA
Read Poetry Figurative Language and Poetic Devices


Read and Analyze

English Literature
Read pages 2-6; 12-15
Answering questions

Online

Complete a Poetry Profile for each of the following poems in your reading
The World is too much with Us
On His Blindness
To Be, or Not to Be
Sonnet 43

For each Poetry Profile answer the following questions
What is the mood?
Who is the speaker?
What is the structure?
What is the theme?
Are the grammar and meaning clear? Why or why not?
What are the important images and figures of speech?
Are there repetitive words or phrases? Why?
What is the tone?
What are the literary devices used in the poem?
How many Stanzas?
What is the rhyme scheme?
Summarize the poem in one to two sentences.



Extra Credit- Create a Poetry Profile for When I have Fears that I may Cease to Be

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Interesting Interview: How to grow as a reader

I found this interesting interview from the author of Lit!: A Christian Guide to Reading Well

I thought you might learn some interesting tips from this author in the interview found here.