Wednesday, December 19, 2012

English 11 E: Peer Editing, Studying for the test

If you were absent today, luckily you checked this blog so you can be all prepared for tomorrow's test.

Ensure that your notes have definitions, examples, explanations of techniques, themes, and your opinions on the following topics:
19 terms
What is a personal essay? Why choose it over a poem or story or tweet?
What techniques should we watch out for when reading or listening to persuasive arguments?
What are the most effective techniques? Favourite essays etc
Be sure that you have notes on all of the essays as you will be asked 5 questions on topics such as effective introductions, use of humour, indirect or implied thesis statements, use and purpose of incongruity, how to essayists placate hostile audiences etc

Hand in your notes at the end of the period.

If you have not yet had your essay peer edited by at least 3 people. Be sure to do so tomorrow at lunch as you need to submit an edited draft with the good copy on Friday. If you need an extension, you must ask tomorrow. You also get marked on your editing abilities. We discussed the criteria for editing during class today. If you were absent, ask a peer. Use the editing checklist to prepare your good copy.

Let's get these essays published! Your voices should be heard.

FRIDAY'S CLASS: PLEASE BRING A SMALL BIT OF SCRUMPTIOUSNESS TO SHARE. THANKS.

English 10: Complete the Manly Heart paragraph

Be sure to have a provocative thesis that demonstrates an insightful interpretation of Donald's character.

Include:
3 pieces of evidence, cited correctly
3 opinions about the evidence
3 explanations of how the evidence proves your thesis
2 transitions
1 concluding sentence

Use all of the handouts to support your writing.
This piece is a summative assessment so you will not have a chance to re-do it. I want to see what you can do after four months of instruction and several years in school. Yay.

If you run out of time tonight, come use room 321 aka UTOPIA at lunch tomorrow.

Writing 12: Change of plans for some . . . .

Those of you who were absent today may need to switch groups. Don't forget to email your story to your group members.

Gillian, Marc, Marissa, (Be sure to send your story, Gillian)
Jesse, Christina,
  Justin, Antony, Evann (Send stories)
Gurpreet, Shannon, Whitney
  Frankie, Jacqueline, Alyx (Alyx and Frankie, get your stories to J.P.)
Victoria, Brittany, Chesea (Brittany, Vic and Chel. need your story!!)
Joel, Courtney, Erika
Sara, Terra, Aubrey

Your BEST version of your story (double spaced) is due Friday. 

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Fiction Workshop Groups: Bring 3 copies . . . .

If you have not yet given a copy of your story to your workshop group, please email a copy to them this evening so they can read it before hand.

Final copies are due Friday. I'll mark them and return them to you and then you can make adjustments before submitting it again in your manuscript. If you are not planning to be here Friday, please email it to me. NO lates accepted. If you need an extension, however, let me know.

Gillian, Marc, Marissa,
Jesse, Christina,
Alyx, Justin, Antony
Gurpreet, Shannon, Whitney
Evann, Frankie, Jacqueline
Victoria, Brittany, Chesea
Joel, Courtney, Erika
Sara, Terra, Aubrey

Those students who left the library early, I have your stories in my room. If you don't get this message in time, email the author for a copy. Please do not arrive without having read the stories you plan to workshop tomorrow. Thanks.

English 11E: You are almost there: Praise to the buns!

Congrats to those students who received the cinnamon bun awards this morning. You are using your time well. You all worked efficiently today so I look forward to seeing the edited drafts tomorrow for our peer editing session. After the session, you'll have time to revise and prepare the essays for submission on Thursday. Thursday is test day:

Open book

Make sure you have titles, authors, notes, themes, key techniques, and examples of key points for each essay or you may find yourself in trouble on Thursday morning. Also, please submit your notes at the end of the class.


Monday, December 17, 2012

English 10: BRING CANS FOR OUR BOX

Wednesday, Dec. 19th is the last day to contribute to our Spartan can drive. If each student brings 6 items, we can donate 6, 000 items to our local food bank. Can you imagine not having enough food for your family? How might you help? Thanks for thinking of others at this time of year.

Today, we added two new words to our vocabulary list: preposterous and to console.

We also checked to ensure we all had the key handouts needed to write a strong, literary paragraph. Check that you have and refer to the following;
1. Literary Must-Haves
2. Incorporating Quotations
3. Persuasive Language (transitions)
4. How to Cite Correctly (You may need this one)

Create a chart and a literary paragraph as a way of analyzing the Hugh Garner story, "A Manly Heart".

Question: In a literary paragraph of 250 to 350 words, discuss the lesson which Donald is not yet able to learn.

Sample Thesis Starter (if you need one)

     In the story, "A Manly Heart," by Hugh Garner, Donald has not yet learned to ___________________________________________________________ because ___________________________________________________________.

Make sure that your thesis answers the question in an insightful manner.
I am looking for the BEST literary paragraph you can muster at this late stage in the semester.

English 11E: Write another 200 words of your essay tonight

We spent the entire period in the computer lab using databases from our library's website. A good one is elibrary and also Different viewpoints. We also created our works cited page using Bibme and remember it must be MLA style.

You must use at least one article as a base from which to write your personal essay. Use the article in several ways:
  • as a source to corroborate/defend your opinions
  • as a source which you wish to argue against
  • as a source from which to educate yourself about the topic 
You must also use several other techniques. Be sure to follow the criteria list and the essay outline. You will have tomorrow's class to work on the essay which is due in draft form Wednesday for peer editing.

Think of someone you can interview or several people you can interview as primary sources make the essay so much more powerful. Use anecdotes from real experience or tell the stories of others.

Remember, your test is on Thursday. Open notebook. Make sure that you have all of the techniques defined. Hand in the notebooks on Thursday. 

Wr 12: Mon. Dec. 17: Editing the short story

If you were absent today, plan to stay in at lunch for two or three periods to catch up. We discussed four levels of editing. Get the notes from a friend. You will also need a handout regarding how to edit a short story. We worked in the lab for the entire period, reading, editing, and making copious notes on our partner's story. Bring the notes to class tomorrow to give to the student. We'll edit during class tomorrow and then Wednesday we will do the actual workshop. You will need to bring three copies of your story to class Wednesday but you may not workshop until you have done a handsome job of editing a peer's story.

Also, those students who have not yet read to a class, this is your final week.
Please do not read to a class that has already been read to. Find a new one.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Staff Meeting: Dec. 12 / 12

I want to express my appreciation to Nick Ollis for all of the time spent to teach me the program and for his suggestions regarding what types of projects might work well. I also want to express my gratitude for the vision and extraordinary fortitude needed to set up this Maclab.

I chose to focus on IMovie first and designed three projects, one for each course.

English 10:    Video Poems on Authors They Like
English 11:  Book Trailers for their independent novels
Writing 12:    Video Poems of poems they have written

Sample Writing 12 Poem: First Date by Justin Beddington
                                          Elegy for a Vase Gillian Jose

Sample English 11E book trailers:
April Raintree Book Trailer based on a template 

A Book of Negroes

Sample English 10 video poem: November by Kenneth and Ryusei
                                                   Robert Frost by Annie and Nathan

I found this website helpful: Book Trailer Rubric and Storyboard site  

English 11: Read the first half of "Little Lake Nellie"

We had two essays presented today. The Allen essay is not in the book so ask me for a copy when you return to class. Remember, when absent, you are still responsible for the creative writing parts of the class so we wrote 400 words today.

We did "Why Be Polite?" and "My Speech to the Graduates".

Tomorrow, We'll be doing a long piece from Sports Illustrated, which is why you need to read half of it tonight.

Thanks. 

Essay Unit Open Book Test: Thurs. Dec. 20. Hand in your notes at the end of the test. The test will be asking very specific questions about the essays studied and about the literary terms and their effects so study.

Draft version of your personal essay for completion marks due: Dec. 19.



Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Wr 12. . . Write On!

Keep up the fantastic work. I've read a few of the openings and they are fantastic. Filled with imagery, style, and verve! Bring a laptop to class if you have one.

English 11: We did two essays today . . . and

The essays covered today are "The Strange Case of the English Language" and "Why Canada Must Beat Its Literacy Problem". Read and make notes on both essays and be sure to write 200 words on any topic where you imitate the key techniques you found in the essay.

Remember: Your feedback on the essay of your choice is due tomorrow.

If you were absent today, you need the personal essay package. Draft is due Wed. Dec. 19th.

Good copy plus draft is due Dec. 21.

Eng 10: Terms on Quizlet to Study

The list of terms is now on Quizlet so you can go on there and practice in order to be fully prepared for the English final exam.

Quizlet: Eng 10 terms

There are 79 terms in all. Many of these terms are review: hyperbole, symbol, theme, plot, character, etc

A few are new: satire, jargon, ballad, blank verse, exposition,

Go over the sheet I gave you in class today. Highlight all the terms that you already know and then go onto quizlet and create a set for yourself of just the terms that you need to know.

Homework: Create a quizlet set based on the 20 or so new terms.

You may want to divide them into two sets, one for poetry and one for prose.

Here are the poetry terms:

ballad
blank verse
cliché
connotation
contrast
denotation
description
figurative language
free verse
genre
hyperbole
image
imagery
lyric
metaphor
mood
onomatopoeia
oxymoron
paradox
personification
refrain
rhyme
rhyme scheme
rhythm
simile
sonnet
stanza
style
symbol
theme
tone
understatement 

ENGLISH 10 PROVINCIAL EXAM DATE AND TIME AND PLACE:
TUES. JAN. 29TH AT 9 A.M. TO NOON IN THE BIG GYM.
BRING TWO PENS, TWO PENCILS, AN ERASER, AND WATER.

Monday, December 10, 2012

English 10: Mock Provincial today and tomorrow

 This mock exam will expose you to the format, give you an opportunity to take your time in order to feel comfortable on exam day, discover which sections you feel confident in and which sections you would like more practice. It is really a good idea to go onto the website provided by the Ministry of Education to practice as these exams always follow the same pattern. The first time you do the multiple choice questions seems hard but as you practice, your mark improves. Check to see if there are words used frequently on the exams that you do not know.

For those students absent today, we'll get you caught up. 

We have a special presentation on bullying on Thursday. 

Because this week is busy you MUST keep up the amazingly fast silent reading at home this week. You want to exercise that brain. Those reading muscles atrophy quickly. Show me how many pages you are reading. I'll check Friday.


I have marked all of the descriptive writing compositions and I handed them back.

The following students need to submit their creativewriting:
Julia, Morgan, Victoria, Annie, and Quinn. Thanks.

Writing 12: What does it take to write a strong story?

The best way to find out? Write one. Bring it to class next Monday for workshop.

Double space. Follow the criteria.

If you were absent today, you missed USSR time. We were quite fussy about our post-it noting today. Obviously Ms. Stenson needs more sleep. No students were hurt during the lesson. Well, not seriously hurt.

Also, you will need two handouts.

1. How to punctuate speech. Your BIBLE. Do not, never, not no how submit a story to your workshop group without bothering to check the rules. (Next week a lesson on double and triple negatives in sentences).

2. A handout from the wonderful Bill Gaston. 16 rules for good dialogue. Lucky you. Ask Gurpreet for more details. She knows the only reason one would want dialogue in a story anyway . . . (No, I can't share it here. You must ask Gurpreet.).

Bring a laptop or other suitable word processing device to class this week so that you can keep your story fresh.

English 11 E

I put the schedule on the board today for the essay presentations so be ready to present. If you do not manage to write 200 words that you are pleased with during class time, you can finish it at home. I will collect your essay notes and creative writing responses next week.
Also, if you were absent today, read the following essays and write 200 words imitating each essay style. You may choose a topic of your choice. Imitate the style.

Today we did:
"Why We Crave Horror Movies" page 27 and "And May the Best Cheater Win" page 34. THIS WEEK IS NOT A GOOD ONE TO BE ABSENT SINCE WE ARE COVERING TWO ESSAYS PER DAY. Stay well. Don't eat the Xmas cookies yet.

Due Wednesday: Complete the handout I gave you today based on any essay of your choice in the text book.

Start thinking about a topic and start the research now. Our library has databases and magazine article subscriptions that are much more precise than a simple google search. You can also include anecdotes from friends and family and try to make friends with people in higher positions this week so that you can use the appeal-to-a-higher-authority technique in your essay.

Also, the English dept. uses MLA style works cited pages for your bibliography so if you are using an electronic site, choose MLA. If you are not using an electronic site, ask me for a handout on the MLA style bibliography.

Planning to write the essay: 

Find an essay in the text that you really LOVE and imitate that style. 
Bring a copy of your essay to class Wed. Dec. 19th for peer editing. 
If you need more time after the 19th to truly edit, you may hand it in Jan. 7. Otherwise, the essay and the edited draft are due, Friday, Dec. 21, after pancakes and before the teacher skits. 

I will be giving you guidelines for the essay and a style sheet. 



Friday, December 7, 2012

Eng 11: Go shopping . . .

Next week we will be presenting the essays and practicing writing. You will be writing/researching your essay next weekend so use this weekend for holiday projects.

If you were absent today, take notes and read the essay about the Grim . . . and write a 200 word beginning to an essay which reflects Layton's style. 

WR 12: YOUR STORY

First draft-edited as best as you can is due for peer editing: Monday, Dec. 17th. You will hand it in for marks, Thurs. Dec. 20th.

Follow the criteria on the sheet and imitate the types of stories you have been reading in your USSR books or in The Claremont Review or other literary venues.

We do not accept fantasy, science fiction or romance.
Be sure to follow the criteria and you will succeed. Use all your knowledge of poetic use of language, style, rhythm and character development.


Eng 10: Compositions due . . .

If you asked for an extension, I will accept your compositions and the revised good copy on Monday.

If you have not yet handed in your Mockingbird corrections, please stop by to explain your complacent attitude. (Notice the new vocabulary word, eh?)

Today: We added two new words to our list: pompous and complacent.

We read two stories to prepare for the mock exam and to determine how to do the synthesis question. If you were absent today, ask for a copy of the handout.

The introduction for this essay must refer to the main similarity and the main difference in the two stories.

Sample from today's stories:

Both Teresa and Jordin receive strong support from their family; however, Teresa often feels frustrated by her parents' concern for her. While Jordin's friends and community remain loyal, Teresa's friends have drifted away in "Skating Across Cultural Gap" and "The Kayak".

Study the format: Start with Both . . . and name the two characters and what they have in common. Start the next sentence with however, and then explain one difference. Start the third sentence with the final main difference.

That is all you need for your introduction. Remember, you can do practice exams on the BC exams site. Google: BC provincial exam samples or find the link on yesterday's blog.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

English 10: Party Program People--your work due Fri.

If you were absent today, be sure to complete your 5th composition at home. We did the topic: "Confidence comes from the support of others" today. If you have already done this one, you may choose another topic from the list.

I gave the class two more student sample compositions to read. Be sure to ask me for a copy.

Follow the format below to create a new composition.

Sample of a composition that begins with dialogue: 
   
      "You can do it, Johnny. Do your job now," the coach said quietly.
     
     Johnny simmered on the bench in the puree of peewees scrambled in the midday heat of the dugout. The bat glowered at Johnny, refused to cooperate in the small boy's weak grip and fell back into the dust. Even the sun ducked behind the clouds, knowing there were two out, knowing Johnny Falter's name was next on the roster. Knowing they wouldn't make it to the next round. 

What techniques dominate this short introduction?


(verbs, alliteration, personification, repetition, dialogue)

Using the model as a guide, follow the 7 steps below and you will create a scintillating composition worthy of a 6 / 6 on your provincial exam.

Think of a character, a sport, a problem (If you can't think of a sport, you may use music or dance or drama or a test situation of some kind--math, science, French, Spanish).

1. Write a line of dialogue to support the character.
2. Describe the character, the setting, the problem. Use strong verbs. Re-read the above paragraph.
3. Create a flashback--think of the first time this character encountered this sport and how much fun it was. (Use specific, concrete details. Be original. Create 2 to 3 short paragraphs for this section).
4. Describe an altercation of some kind. A sparrow chasing a crow, a crow eating roadkill and dodging cars, a deer crossing the road, something inadvertent. Don't mention the sport or the boy but let your description become a symbol for the boy's feelings.
5. Add a second line of encouraging dialogue.
6. Describe how the boy is feeling. Be original. It's good to use a description of a piece of clothing or some used equipment at this point. Describe the old cleats or the torn t-shirt, the sub-par golf set etc. Again, let the description show the feelings but never state directly how the boy feels. Let the reader infer.
7.  Always end with an image. In this paragraph, allude more directly to confidence coming from the support of others. Perhaps a memory of someone who always knew what to say or a slogan from a poster, or an unexpected comment from the captain of the team, or a dream the character had. End on an image--something we can see, taste, touch, hear or feel.

Thursday: You will have the entire period to revise and edit. You will hand in all five compositions and ONE which has been completely revised to reflect the criteria. Make sure that your writing models the sample compositions we have studied in class.

PARTY PROGRAM PARTICIPANTS: SUBMIT ALL 5 COMPOSITIONS PLUS THE ONE GOOD COPY TO ME ON FRIDAY. YOU WON'T HAVE ANY MORE COMPUTER TIME. BE SURE TO MAKE TIME TO EDIT TONIGHT OR TOMORROW NIGHT.

Monday: Mock Provincial Exam--This exam will take two periods. It will be marked so be prepared. You can take practice e-exams on the website:

Sample provincial exams







Wr 12: Three pieces of writing due tomorrow . . .

Today: I collected the Fiction Reports. All students should be at least 30 pages into their new short story books. Finish it before Xmas break, please. Second fiction report will be due then.

I read aloud a story written in 2nd person, present tense. It is called "Orientation" by Daniel Orozco. If you were absent today, be sure to read a copy during USSR tomorrow. We imitated his style by writing at least 120 words on some kind of orientation. We focused on the use of truly unique and memorable detail.

You also need to have your classroom visits completed before Xmas. As soon as you do the reading, hand me the marked evaluation form.

Tomorrow, I'll read aloud the final story in the series, one by M.A.C. Farrant, Claremont grad. It's called "Sick Pigeon" and is written in the first person, present tense.  Almost all the Farrant books are out of the library right now. She's very popular. You can pick up copies of her books at the Victoria library as well.

Friday, we will start writing our stories. Yay!! You can start now of course.

THREE 100 WORD DESCRIPTIVE PIECES DUE TOMORROW.
See yesterday's blog and refer to your Gaston notes for more details.



Eng 11: 200 word Visser imitation

If you were absent today, be sure to make time to catch up on your USSR reading! December is a great month to get ahead . . . Try reading a classic novel this month: Austen, Dickens, Bronte, Hardy, or a new Shakespeare play: Macbeth, The Tempest, Twelfth Night.

We reviewed the expectations and the criteria for the essay presentations: 
  • The class will have read your essay so your job is to demonstrate its brilliance: in theme, style, structure, use of techniques, etc.
  • Be sure to prepare well. Look up in advance key vocabulary words which the class will need to know.
  • Be sure to know what any symbols mean and explain them to the class.
  • Prepare an oral reading of key passages.
  • Demonstrate the effectiveness of 3 to 4 techniques 
  • Prepare a well-thought out writing exercise to get the class to imitate a key aspect of the essay. 
Today's exercise imitated the Visser essay. If you were absent, be sure to complete it tonight.

Think of a time when your rights were violated. (For this exercise, the incident does not have to be truet).
Now imagine trying to explain the violation to someone who believes it is your fault. What hurdles must you overcome as you write? Think of how Visser approaches her adversaries. 

Write a 200 word opening using as many of Visser's techniques as appropriate. You may wish to choose one of the topics below or think of your own.

  • accused of plagiaring an essay or cheating on a test
  • all of the rules for teen drivers seem unfair to you
  • accused of loitering outside a business or being a nuisance on a bus
  • spoken down to because of your age (Children should be seen and not heard).
  • feeling invisible at home or at school or at work (or not being heard)
  • pressure to do something you do not want to do (find arguments to convince the peer to stop pressuring you)
  • gossip or bullying or cyber-bullying
  • use of technology in school
  • Claremont's hat rule 
You will need to submit all 9 of these writing exercises at the end of the unit. 

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

English 11E: Start thinking about your essay presentations

Thursday: Our judges will arrive to watch your book trailers. The winner receives a prize. The best ones will be put on our library website.

Wednesday: Make sure that you have chosen a new and exciting USSR book. I have a room full of great choices in the book room. Ask me if you need a new one.

We will have time to respond to the Visser "Locker Room" essay during class tomorrow and then time to start your group presentations.


English 10: Composition 4 due tomorrow

We will write composition five during class tomorrow. I will be giving you prompts.

Due today: For those students whose essays where in the 71 to 85 % range, you need to revise and re-submit a strong body paragraph to demonstrate that you know and can use all the formal literary must-haves, the stylistic expectations at the grade 10 level and your ability to prove your thesis!

Get these in asap.

Those of you re-writing the essay. It is due Friday.


BC Exam Section C prep:

Complete #4 this evening on a topic of your choice. You have a list of the topics on one of the handouts which I gave you last week. Choose a new one. Do not re-do the one on courage or the one on lessons.

Thursday: Submit all 5 typed composition drafts AND ONE revised composition which you feel best reflects your work.

PARTY PROGRAM PEOPLE: You will have to complete your paragraph on Friday. However, Friday is a shorter block, so start half of it at home Thursday night.

Writing 12: Assignments due Wed. and Thurs . . .

Today, we returned our short story texts to the library and signed out a new one so you will have two weeks to read the new one and submit a second fiction report the week before school ends.

You will also submit your best attempt at a literary short story --1500 to 2000 words before the Xmas break.

Due:
Wed: fiction report
Thurs: Three descriptive scenarios (similar to the Bill Gaston scene in the story I read aloud today)

Sit yourself down in a cafe or a library or student lounge and surreptiously write a description of the person and / or the setting/mood of the area.

Do three 100 word descriptions. This technique is essential for limited omniscient stories because a character can't randomly reveal something about him/herself just so the reader knows. That kind of writing feels banal and untrue. (We took a lot of notes today so check with a partner to catch up!)

If you were absent today, you will need to read and analyze the Bill Gaston story, "Driving Under the Influence". Ask me for a copy during USSR tomorrow.

One of these days we'll discuss your bedrooms!! IS THIS A CHEESE SHOP?

Monday, December 3, 2012

English 11 E

If you were away, borrow the notes as we started a new unit today. You can get a copy of the essay text from me.

Study the terms we went over so far:

1. Allusion
2. appealing to a higher authority
3. diction
4. empathy/sympathy
5. imagery
6. motherhood statements
7. parallelism
8. anecdote
9. hyperbole
10. reciprocals--supplying the opposite
11. sound devices: rhyme, alliteration, assonace, consonance, onomatopoeia, rhythm, See the example of consonance in the Visser essay.
12. descriptive writing-- describing the football players' locker room behaviour--eating the circles out of their sandwiches (implying they do not eat their crusts which implies what? )


English 10

Excellent work in the lab today.

If you are in the 70% or less range, your revised essays, stapled to the original submission are due Friday.

70 to 86%--your paragraphs are due tomorrow.

87-100--Your paragraphs are due tomorrow.

Check yesterday's blog for confirmation on the three provincial exam essays that should be typed up by now. We will write a new one during class tomorrow and one more new one during Wednesday's class. On Thursday, you will pick one to revise and hand me the revision and all five drafts.

I collected USSR forms today. If you asked for an extension, I will accept those forms tomorrow.

It's good to see your enthusiastic response to the essay revisions. Go, Spartans, go!

WR 12: See you tonight. Come early to set up . . .

Thanks to Terra, Courtney and to Marc and Erika for their special contributions to this evening's events. I'm really looking forward to it.

Your fiction reports are due Wednesday if you did not complete them today.
If you need an extension, please ask me tomorrow.