Thursday, May 15, 2014

TODAY IN CLASS
Counselor visit--senior graduation focus.
Reading time.

BY TOMORROW and BEYOND
Fences

  • finish Act I for Friday 
  • finish the play by TUESDAY (May 20)

Song of Solomon--

  • be finished with Ch. 5 for Friday. Lots to digest from 1-5.
  • By MONDAY (May 19), be finished with Ch. 7.  (So Ch. 6 for tomorrow or for Monday--whatever works for you.)



Tuesday, May 13, 2014

TODAY IN CLASS
Song of Solomon people just reading--the goal during class was Ch. 3, but you might well have gotten farther.  Continue adding to patterns, notice elements that may not repeat but seem really significant, and most definitely be ready to discuss troubling elements ("troubling" can have many shades of meaning).

The Glass Menagerie--I was really impressed with the knowledge and insight that came out in the pull-out discussion groups today.  Apologies to the second group from 1st period--you did fine, but you definitely got short shrift.  Do think about a couple of other things we didn't get to at all--the elements/motifs of interest besides the "glass menagerie" itself  (we'll take just a moment for this tomorrow) and note that there really is a set composition that the text refers to when it's speaking of music. And even though I was determined to split the time evenly in 5th, the first group was exceptionally willing to carry on discussion on their own, and I just can't stop that sort of thing!  Keep up the good reading.

FOR WEDNESDAY
S of S--read Chapter 5 for sure.
The Glass Menagerie--you should easily be able to finish the play for tomorrow.


Monday, May 12, 2014

TODAY IN CLASS
Students began reading their choice of final works:

  • Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon (only for people who actually DO have the book in hand already
  • Two plays from the Perrine text:
    • The Glass Menagerie,  by Tennessee Williams (starts on p. 1156)
    • Fences by August Wilson (starts on p. 1565)
First-round heads-up for Song of Solomon:
Keep track of the FLIGHT motif, pay attention to COLORS; know that every single person introduced in Chapter 1 (whether by name or description) will recur throughout the novel.
Your job as you're reading Ch. 1-2--what other obvious categories come to mind just based on these opening chapters?  

FOR TOMORROW
Song of Solomon:  read to the end of Chapter 2 (p. 55)
The Glass Menagerie:  read to the end of Scene 6 (p. 1191)

I'll be chatting with the Perrine people about The Glass Menagerie, probably in at least two groups. I'll be trying to find out what's going well, and what isn't--so you can get squared away.

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Good Luck Tomorrow!

Just a very brief post today. If you didn't read yesterday's, particularly the "Final Advice"--please DO SO!

AP Test Takers--
Report to the Aux Gym by 7:15, well-rested and breakfasted,  with a pencil and two dark blue or black pens in hand.

5th period--yes, you need to come to class later, but don't worry.  It's a kick back and relax day for you.

Non-AP Test Takers--
Report to the classroom as usual.  First period students will do their final poetry timed write in 2303; 5th period people, I'll be moving you elsewhere, but come to class first.

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

VIP (Very Important Post)

Final Advice for AP Exam

Two additional things not on this list.

  • Be sure you have 2 or even 3 of your favorite pens.  Dark blue or black ink.  No exceptions. 
  • Re: Part II, Question 3:  if you know and can write on a work listed, that is the safest bet because sometimes students substitute something that does not actually fit the parameters of the question.  But of course you can use something else studied at school that seems to work.

TODAY IN CLASS
Full period:  Multiple Choice practice exam

  • Will count (slightly adjusted) as assignment grade; thus must be made up if you missed it (regardless of whether you are taking the actual AP exam or not)
  • If you miss class tomorrow, you can come by tomorrow to see where the missed items clustered (if there was a pattern
  • You can check particular questions if you wish, but I'm not actually giving these back
FOR TOMORROW
Be studying.  

If you'll miss class tomorrow, utilize the hand out you received today to think through how  Crime and Punishment could be used in an exam setting for Question 3.  Some would also apply to Tess. Students will participate in a short "speed-dating" exercise using this hand-out during class tomorrow.

Choices from this year:
Franz Kafka--Metamorphosis (best to use only if it's on the list)
Joseph Conrad--Heart of Darkness
Henrik Ibsen--A Doll House
George Bernard Shaw--Pygmalion
Mary Shelley--Frankenstein
Fyodor Dostoevsky--Crime and Punishment
Thomas Hardy--Tess of the D'Urbervilles

Choices from last year (only if you pick one tonight and review!!)
Nathaniel Hawthorne--The Scarlet Letter
Mark Twain--The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
F. Scott Fitzgerald--The Great Gatsby
Harper Lee--To Kill a Mockingbird (in years past I'd have called this too "young" a book for AP Lit, but it was actually on the list for last year's question)

Do not write about Harry Potter, Hunger Games, or Game of Thrones, volume anything.







Monday, May 5, 2014

Tonight's essay instructions in case you've lost the sheet . . .

TODAY IN CLASS

  • Returned the Keats/Longfellow timed write; went over the Chief Reader's account
  • Briefly returned the Cardinal Wolsey speech for students to self-score, using the real AP rubric for that prompt.  Scored and returned in class.  
Students quickly assessed and annotated the "Century Quilt" prompt--general surprise that the particular essay read aloud had not received an upper-half score.  Students wrote a thesis (individually) and compared them in groups.

I handed out a prose passage from George Eliot's Middlemarch ("Question 2"); it's the longest I ever recall seeing, but recent enough that it could easily happen again.  Try to find just a few minutes before class tomorrow to READ and lightly mark; how long did it take?  How long (out of 40 minutes) would be worthwhile spending on this prompt?  Can you get a handle on how to respond to the prompt?

FOR TOMORROW (tonight, really)
The Crime and Punishment Epilogue assignment.  Be sure to utilize all the guidelines in the hand-out. 
You should have it, but it's also available here  .

If you've done that . . . be reviewing Tess, especially by thinking how the book is like/unlike C and P. Someone said the other day that she wished the endings for these protagonists could have been swapped. 
Do you agree?

I am too hungry to proceed right now, but I may link a couple of things to this post later on. (Will be of value tonight only to those who have finished the short C and P essay!)   


Thursday, May 1, 2014

TODAY IN CLASS
Some time to recognize college choices. Congratulations to all!

Crime and Punishment:
Yesterday's homework discussed in table groups and collected.
Hand-out provided for "Epilogue" assignment due on Monday night

Finished "When I do count the clock . . ." in 5th; finished form to content match/but with a wrinkle in 1st.  Need to add  just a bit on sound features in 1st.

Two poems "at home" timed write:  Covered both poems pretty thoroughly in first--didn't really finish the 2nd in 5th. If you have not done this prompt yet, you can no longer do this one for credit.  For excused absences, there is a substitute prompt. Be sure to ask for one tomorrow!

So for "Mezzo Cammin"--
  • note that the Italian sonnet structure corresponds to the content of ONE essential "issue" (I haven't accomplished the writing I had hoped for--"Some tower of song with lofty parapet"--because of unnamed grief and cares. It is that "sorrow" rather than other possibilities (laziness, time spent on pleasure, or by scattering attention on various pursuits).  All of this is in the octave.
  • the sestet switches to his sense of his current status--at the midpoint of his life(halfway up the hill [of life], though there could be a literal hill as well)  he sees "the Past" [note the cap] as a city laid out beneath him .  
  • but still in the sestet, as he reflects on the past, he feels the chill of autumn and hears a waterfall that he equates with death above him
Thus the water imagery that seemed positive in the Keats poem as his own problems seem to sink in the presence and realization of the vastness and beauty of the world becomes a more negative force for Longfellow.  He sees nothing but death looming in the future, and apparently has limited expectations for the second half of his life.

(And for both--if you didn't hear this in class--use the dates at the bottom of each poem to understand the actual situation of both writers as they were composing these poems)

Re: the rubric--these are never very exact, even when the rubric relates to a specific prompt as this one does.

But there is some language that has been repeated for most rubrics over the past several years:
9-8 essays offer a persuasive response
7-6 essays offer a reasonable response
5 essays offer a plausible reading
4-3 essays fail to offer an adequate analysis
2-1 essays compound the weaknesses of the 4-3's
Note particularly this phrase within the 4-3 description:  
evidence may be slight or misconstrued

Not clear in this rubric as usual is the following:
leaving out any part of what is designated in the prompt results in a score no higher than a 4
(here, it's "covered" by the phrase "the analysis may be partial" . . . )

In first, I returned the "Judging Distances" papers but we did not have a chance to do much with them.  We'll do so briefly tomorrow in both sections.

FOR TOMORROW
Assign the score and justify it.  Turn the rubric back in with your essay.

Be working on C and P assignment.

If you are taking the AP exam, choose one major work from last year (Gatsby/Huck/Scarlet Letter) and start reviewing it as a backup option.

Find Tess.