1. Again, let me reinforce the strong suggestion for you to go back through the text and annotate elements of POINT OF VIEW, if you haven't done so already.
2. After instruction on our next literary convention, VOICE, you need to annotate the passage from The Road for evidence of character voice. What is revealed in your findings. Your annotations can start the analysis process along with the introductory findings.
3. In further examination of voice, we will be starting to look to author voice. To do so, click on the All the Pretty Horses link. You will find a list of quotes from another McCarthy novel, All the Pretty Horses. In your notes, I would like for you to spot/identify stylistic similarities in McCarthy's two works.
REMEMBER: 52 LITERARY TERMS TEST ON FRIDAY.
This is the on-line home for Schulenberg-Cole's IB English 11. It is at this site where students can find class announcements, homework postings, inquiry requests, and class handouts.
Friday, September 2, 2016
Due: Friday, September 2nd
1, Upload to Google Classroom 10 thesis statements/claims addressing McCarthy's use of Point of View in The Road. Utilize the checklist/formula provided during class on Wednesday. Reference the active verbs and the literary thesis links for assistance.
Monday, August 29, 2016
Due: August 30th
1. Take a section of the Road passage that I printed off for you. Identify the point of view. Rewrite a small section of the text from an alternate point of view. (You are not expected to be professional writers). Think about some elements that change because of the specific point of view.
- What is included?
- What is left out?
- What diction choices are telling of the point of view?
- What was lost? Gained?
- How has the overall impact of the passage changed?
- What information does the reader now have?
- Did the author choose the best POV? Why?
You are all doing GREAT! Keep up the great work!!
- What is included?
- What is left out?
- What diction choices are telling of the point of view?
- What was lost? Gained?
- How has the overall impact of the passage changed?
- What information does the reader now have?
- Did the author choose the best POV? Why?
You are all doing GREAT! Keep up the great work!!
Due: Monday, August 29th
1. Go through the second passage from The Road. You are, again, using the point of view questions as your point for analysis. As you read, look for evidence for your findings. Make notes... Underline things you notice.. look for patterns. As you are finding... be considering the "Why?" "What is the significance of this?" "What does this do to the meaning of the text?" "How does it shape/form meaning?"
All you need is notes/annotations. We will work on developing the arguments. Bit by bit... just be patient.
All you need is notes/annotations. We will work on developing the arguments. Bit by bit... just be patient.
Thursday, August 25, 2016
Due: Friday, August 19th (Point of View)
After annotating the passage of The Road with the sole focus upon Point of View, you should have a collection of findings/questions/patterns emerge. From your annotations, you are going pick one aspect of point of view that you feel has been revealed.. .and/or you feel has legs to be developed.
I think the questions... What details does the narrator tell us? What order are things presented to us"
are pretty important in the passage we worked with in class. I examined the text carefully looking at details we have/what was left out/what order is it presented.
With some of my findings... I ask myself... So? What are the implications/ What is the significance of these findings? What do they do to the text? The characters? The meaning? Why does the author do this?
My conclusion...
For an example: The omniscient narrator in The Road often emphasizes the father's coping with a world lost by including mundane details of a previous society juxtaposed with his new reality.
After you have used the questions on point of view to bring new points of interest to the surface, and you have come up with the implications/significance of this usage (see example), you will simply list examples from The Road under your argument.
So I would present...
"In the livingroom the bones of a small animal dismembered and placed in a pile. Possibly a cat. A glass tumbler by the door". . .
"Wearing masks and goggles, sitting in their rags by the side of the road like ruined aviators . . . He sat.. . and read old newspapers while the boy slept"
I think the questions... What details does the narrator tell us? What order are things presented to us"
are pretty important in the passage we worked with in class. I examined the text carefully looking at details we have/what was left out/what order is it presented.
With some of my findings... I ask myself... So? What are the implications/ What is the significance of these findings? What do they do to the text? The characters? The meaning? Why does the author do this?
My conclusion...
For an example: The omniscient narrator in The Road often emphasizes the father's coping with a world lost by including mundane details of a previous society juxtaposed with his new reality.
After you have used the questions on point of view to bring new points of interest to the surface, and you have come up with the implications/significance of this usage (see example), you will simply list examples from The Road under your argument.
So I would present...
"In the livingroom the bones of a small animal dismembered and placed in a pile. Possibly a cat. A glass tumbler by the door". . .
"Wearing masks and goggles, sitting in their rags by the side of the road like ruined aviators . . . He sat.. . and read old newspapers while the boy slept"
Monday, August 22, 2016
Due: August 22nd The Study of Literature and The Road
Today we have been introduced to the first assessment in the IB Programme, the Individual Oral Presentation. This will provide you a target for the skills you will need to accumulate and hone over the next few weeks in conjunction with The Road.
You will become very familiar with the scoring guide found here: Individual Oral Presentation Rubric
For Tuesday, you will need to read the article:
"Lit Classes Under Attack? Standford's Joshua Landy to the Rescue"
Half of the battle of performing literary analysis is recognizing a larger purpose to the text. Therefore, in order to practice this, we need to exercise this.
From this article, I have pulled out some key statements... key quotes... addressing literature/study or literature/purpose of literature.
For Tuesday, You will need to find aspects/examples/passages of The Road that exemplify the spirit that is revealed in the statements about the purpose/goal of literature. Please put these in your notes.
The challenge is to 1. recognize an underlining goal/ purpose of literature. 2. See how that goal/purpose is achieved by McCarthy.
You will become very familiar with the scoring guide found here: Individual Oral Presentation Rubric
For Tuesday, you will need to read the article:
"Lit Classes Under Attack? Standford's Joshua Landy to the Rescue"
Half of the battle of performing literary analysis is recognizing a larger purpose to the text. Therefore, in order to practice this, we need to exercise this.
From this article, I have pulled out some key statements... key quotes... addressing literature/study or literature/purpose of literature.
For Tuesday, You will need to find aspects/examples/passages of The Road that exemplify the spirit that is revealed in the statements about the purpose/goal of literature. Please put these in your notes.
The challenge is to 1. recognize an underlining goal/ purpose of literature. 2. See how that goal/purpose is achieved by McCarthy.
Sunday, August 21, 2016
Due: August 22nd
1. Define and start your study of the 52 literary devices found below.
2. Intro survey found on Google Classroom.
Literary Devices (52)
Literary Definitions
2. Intro survey found on Google Classroom.
Literary Devices (52)
Literary Definitions
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