Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Wednesday, December 16th - Final Projects

1) Introduction to the Final Projects for English 12
Choose one - due Wednesday, Jan. 22nd, 2010

Online sources and readings to add to your consideration:
What I Have Lived For
Truth, Beauty and Goodness Lecture Notes
Ode to a Grecian Urn
The Educated Imagination
  • Journey Project (mini version)
  • BTG Project
  • Educated Imagination Project
from Hamlet Act 2 scene 2 (Hamlet's writing to Ophelia), as it appears in the 1623 First Folio.
In modern form:

Doubt thou the stars are fire,
Doubt that the sun doth move,
Doubt truth to be a liar,
But never doubt I love.

2) Watch and discuss Hamlet.

Tuesday, Dec. 15th - Compositions and Hamlet Cont'd

1) Compositions in - will mark during silent reading.

2) Silent Reading

3) Feedback on compositions

4) New Topic - from last exam

5) Hamlet Viewing - the play within the play....

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Monday, December 13th - Compositions

1) Silent Reading

2) Provincial Exam Composition Topics
  • Handout
  • Groups of Two - look at student responses and grade according to the six point scale.
  • Whole Class - discuss scores and rationale and strategy
3) HOMEWORK: Composition Topics - Choose one and write a multi-paragraph narrative or essay in response. Shakespeare, were he alive today, would most certainly be working for the BC Ministry of education writing composition topics. Check it out:

"This above all: to thine own self be true" Polonious to Laertes (1.2)

or
 
"Frailty, thy name is woman!" Hamlet speaking of his mother (1.2)
 
or
 
"Brevity is the soul of wit" Polonious (2.2)
 
or
 
"There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so."

Hamlet to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern (2.2)

4) Hamlet Viewing

Savage Chickens on Hamlet

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Wednesday, December 8th

1) Silent Reading and Sign Up for Friday Pajama Poetry Cafe

2) Provincial Exam - Overview - Basic Introduction

BC Exam Website - English 12 Exam Specifications

3) Hamlet Viewing
  • What did we watch last time? - Act 1 - scene 1 and 2 - quiz
  • Watch the next two or three scenes. Quiz tomorrow before we go to library to finish poetry work.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Monday, December 7th - Hamlet Beginnings

1) Silent Reading

2) Reminder: Tuesday (and maybe Thursday, if you use Tuesday well) we are booked into the library to complete the following:
  • The Creative Writing Journal - see board for details
  • The Poetry Booklet (includes - autobiographical/confessional poem, absurdist poem or story, epitaph poem, poem analysis essay)
  • Selecting and preparing to present a dramatic reading of a poem - see the Poet's Cues for ideas on where to pause and where to place emphasis. Sign up sheet - pick a spot on Friday or Monday. See My Favourite Poem Project for video examples of good readings.
3) Announcement: Our next short unit will be a film study of Hamlet and beginning prep for the provincial exam. You will also be given the criteria for the final course project just before you leave for the holidays.

4) A Case-Study: Let's pretend you have gone off to college or university or to work away from your home for a year - you have just heard that your dad has died, your uncle has taken over the family business and your mom has shacked up with the very same uncle. Your dad's death is a bit suspicious and there are rumours stirring that people are seeing his ghost. You aren't sure who to trust anymore. Even your girlfriend is a bit dodgy because it seems her father and brother are hoping that she will spy on you to ensure that you are staying sane in this difficult time. How would you feel? How would you cope?

5) Hamlet - the complete film version (1996)





Let's start watching!

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Friday, December 4 - Delving In, A Close Reading

1) Silent Reading or Last Chance to do Poetic Terms Quiz

2) A Close Reading (Check out Discovering Literature, pp. 482 - 484, for tips on how-to, including a student example.)

3) In Class Example - The Fish by Elizabeth Bishop, p. 615

4) The Delve- In Model - not for everybody... but a model that can help you to see ways to add depth to your paragraphs. It's an easy way to say more.

5) The Poem Analysis Assignment - Due as a part of your poetry booklet Friday, Dec. 11th.
  • Read the following poems and select ONE to study, analyse and write about.
Fern Hill, p. 626 - an idyllic classic
anyone lived in a pretty how town, p.628 - an e.e. cummings masterpiece
The Windhover, p. 633 - a uniquely powerful look at faith
I Go Back to May 1937, p.664 - a brutal confessional poem about parents
  • Line by line consider the poem - take in the poem as a whole.
  • Determine the speaker, the setting, the tone, the diction (types of words used), figurative language, the theme. Refer to your Questions to ask of a Poem handout.
  • Brainstorm or List or Doodle or photocopy the poem and write all over it (I recommend this) - find the pre-writing tricks that work for you.
  • Organize your central idea, your thesis statement - know this first before you start writing.
  • Prepare a multi-paragraph explication of the poem you have selected. Yes, I wrote, EXPLICATION - it sounds like some Biology term... it sort of reminds me of dissecting a frog... but this won't smell as bad nor harm any small creatures. I think.

I have Tuesday (we will definitely go this day) and Thursday (if we need it) booked in the library.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Thursday, Dec. 3rd - Spoon River Readings

1) Silent Reading or do the poetry terms quiz if you missed that day.

2) Introduction to the Spoon River Anthology.  You can read all 244 dramatic poems here if you so desire. We will only look at a few in class. Terms - Monologue, Epitaph.

3) What makes for a great oral reading? First, take a moment to understand a poem's cues. Then watch three videos from the Favourite Poem Project. Develop our criteria ___/24

In groups read and present on one of the Spoon River poems. Discuss speaker, tone, diction (word choice), theme...
4) Write your own Epitaph Poem... about yourself, a public figure, a historical figure, anyone you know.

Home work: Begin the hunt for the poem you will read at our "poetry cafe" next week.



Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Wednesday, December 2nd - Parody Poems

1) Silent Reading

2) Announcement - Yup - I changed my mind... I tried and tried to find a way to talk about the dream state and poetry with a close look at Kubla Kahn but it all just sounded too preposterous even for me to tolerate. Instead, let's talk about Parody. But ,before we do, let's make some changes to the poetry project and the criteria... (will up date this with new document soon).

3) Dover Beach (p.597)   and  Dover Bitch.

4) Love is Not All and Ya, Love is not Meat.

5) Parody Poem - (instead of dream poem) Select any significant literary poem. Determine its qualities. Who is the speaker? What type of words are used? What is the tone? Theme?

Now write a parody of that poem. Mock the tone, address the presumptions of the original speaker. Be playful and witty.

Put the rough copy in your journal. The good copy will come in with your poetry booklet.