Thursday, November 8, 2012

English 11 E: Essay due Wed . . .

Thanks to Kalina, Emma and Rachael for creating the Remembrance Day slide show.

Today we reviewed the criteria for the quotation log and for the notebook.
Discussed the cover page and the conclusion.
You must edit your own essay at home with the checklist below. Be sure to check off each item after you have scanned the essay to ensure you've covered the point.

I will not accept essays that have not completed this stage. To be safe, email the essay to yourself Tues. night so if you forget the checklist, you can do it at school, make changes and reprint the essay with the necessary corrections.


 

The Cover Page

Ensure that your essay has a title: Bestial Imagery in Othello by William Shakespeare

                                                           Iago as Stock Character in Shakespeare's Tragedy, Othello 

 

In the bottom left hand corner of the cover page include

Name

Course

Teacher Name

Date

 

Quotation Log

Minimum 30 lines, plus interpretation of the lines, cite correctly, include ah-ha interpretive statements, no need to include plot of quote summaries, move beyond the obvious, make connections to other scenes, themes, and/or relevant characters, attempt to uncover interesting aspects of your topic here 

 

Notebook

Organized by date, Act and scene, ensure all board notes, handouts, assignments, plus your own interpretations, class discussion notes are included. I'm looking for your insight here. Marks awarded for completeness, organization, literary term definitions must be highlighted. 

   

 

English 11 Essay Coversheet


The items below must be in your essay. Do not submit an essay with any of the items below missing. ATTACH THIS FORM (WITH ALL POINTS CHECKED OFF) TO YOUR ESSAY.

Introduction Checklist


  1. _____ Begin the essay with a catchy opener: a quotation, question, anecdote.
  2. _____ All verbs are in the present tense and no contractions are used.
  3. _____ The thesis answers the question So What??? and meets the other thesis criteria discussed, and includes the author’s name. The title of the novel or play is italicized.
  4. _____ Each body paragraph is represented by a summary sentence in the introduction. If you have three body paragraphs, for example, you will have three sentences about the body in your introduction. Be clear and forthright here.
  5. _____ Your last sentence repeats your thesis but it appeals more to the reader’s emotions: justice, passion, righteousness, honor, sympathy, etc.
  6. _____ You have varied your sentences so that they do not all start in the same manner. You have varied your verbs so that is, does, makes etc. are used rarely. Use strong verbs such as emphasizes, exemplifies, elucidates, depicts, reflects, demands, reveals, portrays, etc.

Body Paragraph Checklist

  1. _____ Each body paragraph is equal in length and no paragraph is less than 350 words.
  2. _____ All verbs are in the present tense and no contractions are used.
  3. _____ All quotations are followed by a page or line number (19) or (3.1.35). and a period comes after the bracket but not before the bracket.
  4. _____ Each opinion is followed by evidence followed by an explanation followed by a transitional phrase or word. Each piece of evidence (a quote or paraphrase) is connected clearly to the thesis and is discussed insightfully.
  5. _____ You do NOT re-tell the story. You focus on proving your thesis.
  6. _____ All paragraphs have a strong concluding sentence, emotional in tone.
  7. _____ The introductory sentence covers all the material in the paragraph and makes you want to read on. It adds insight to the overall thesis you are proving.
  8. _____ Somewhere in each body paragraph you mention your thesis and how these points are proving it.
  9. _____ You vary your sentence beginnings and use good verbs like emphasizes, exemplifies, illustrates, portrays, depicts, shows etc. Is, has, makes, seems are used rarely. Your arguments are persuasive. Sentences are clear.
  10. _____ You vary your sentence lengths so no one style takes over. Some sentences are really short and some are really long.
  11. _____ You have edited and spell-checked your work so no typos get through.
  12. _____ You solemnly believe that you have proven your thesis with clear evidence from the text and you are not simply retelling the story. Logical development is evident.
  13. _____ You substitute pronouns with persuasive nouns. No It shows or this means or this quote says.
  14. _____ You integrate all of your quotations into your sentences. No quotes float.

Conclusion Paragraph Checklist


  1. _____ You have not added any new information here.
  2. _____ You repeat your thesis right away and do not repeat the author or title.
  3. _____ Each body paragraph is represented by a summary sentence.
  4. _____ You end the conclusion by repeating your thesis emotionally.
  5. _____ You use the present tense of the verbs and no contractions are used.
  6. _____ You re-read your introduction and check that you have not veered off topic.
 
Style Checklist
1. _____ You have cut slang or colloquial expressions. Diction is formal. Transitions are clear. You have revised awkward sentences. Your prose flows well and you stay on topic.