Today we are going to review the prologue again, and then give you time to work on either the questions from yesterday or your personal narratives. Final drafts will be due when you return from Thanksgiving Break.
Friday, November 19, 2021
Thursday, November 18, 2021
The Canterbury Tales
Today you will have some time to finish filling out the outline sheets that I gave you and to answer questions 1-3 and 5 on page 167.
Tuesday, November 16, 2021
Monday, November 15, 2021
The Cantebury Tales
Today we will be looking at the prologue of the Canterbury Tales. You will need your green book - it's on page
A framed collection of stories told by a group of pilgrims on their way to Canterbury. Let's look at an introduction
Themes:
Social Class and Convention
Corruption and Exploitation in the Church
Battle of the Sexes (or Old Men and Young Wives, or Who's in Charge?, or What makes a good spouse?)
Lies and Deceit
Courtly Love
What Makes a Good Story?
The are many "types" or "genres" of stories here:
Sermon
Romance Tale
Fabliau
Beast Tale
The Trickster Tricked Tale
Symbols:
Physiognomy
Clothes
Time of Year
The following are tales that you're need to know for the final:
The Pardoner's Tale
The Wife of Bath's Tale
And the tales presented in class
Canterbury Tales
Objective: To Demonstrate a thorough understanding of a character and literary devices used in Chaucer by dressing up as one of the characters from The Canterbury Tales and presenting their story.
REQUIREMENTS:
Part 1: You must dress up as the character as described in the Prologue of the poem (note: you should also read very closely the character’s prologue to their own story for it will give you insight into how the character acts, thinks, and relates to the other characters). As part of the presentation you’ll need to discuss what you are wearing and why (or what it represents)? You will also need to present your character traits. What your character is like—what do they believe, how do think of themselves, how do they act towards others or towards God. You may wish to do some research on your character or your character type (example you might wish to look at Friars and what Friars where about and how they where suppose to act and compare those ideas with how your character acts and believes).
Part 2: You’ll need to present your tale to the class. You can do it in one of two ways: 1) D.I. or Dramatic Interpretation of the story (this means you pick the highlights, write a script based on the highlights and act it out). 2) Rewrite the story in your own words and language and present it as a transcript—meaning you read it, but give a dramatic reading
(not just a reading like we do in class)
Part 3: Teach the class the following: 1) what type of literary tale is your story? 2) What does the tale mean (if anything). Connect the tale to a THEME? What does the tale reveal about you character and who your character is? What—if any—kinds of literary devices does your tale use?
Part 4: Make a brief argument why your character won the bet: Who can tell the best story.
Canterbury Tales, “The General Prologue” (35
points)
You
will find below all the pilgrims mentioned in “The General Prologue.” Be able
to answer the following:
- How does Chaucer characterize each one? Offer two details with line numbers to support this (include figures of speech or Cicero’s aspects of characterization).
- Describe Chaucer’s attitude toward each pilgrim.
- Rank this person in the chart at the end of this handout.
|
Pilgrim
|
Chaucer’s Characterization
|
Two Details
|
Chaucer’s Attitude
|
|
The Knight
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Squire
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Yeoman
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Prioress
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Monk
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Friar
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Merchant
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Clerk
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Sergeant-at-Law
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Franklin
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Haberdasher, Carpenter, Weaver, Dyer, Tapestry Maker
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Cook
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Shipman
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Doctor of Medicine
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Wife of Bath
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Parson
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Plowman
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Miller
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Manciple
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Reeve
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Summoner
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Pardoner
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Host
|
|
1.
2.
|
|
|
Best Pilgrims
|
Worst Pilgrims
|
|
1.
|
1.
|
|
2.
|
2.
|
|
3.
|
3.
|
|
4.
|
4.
|
|
5.
|
5.
|
|
6.
|
6.
|
Tuesday, November 9, 2021
Monday, November 8, 2021
Personal
Narrative
A Personal Narrative is a form of writing in which
the writer relates an event, incident, or experience in his or her own life. It
is usually focused on one idea. The
events of a personal narrative are most often presented in chronological order,
the order in which they actually occurred in time. The personal narrative
incorporates vivid descriptive details as well as the thoughts, feelings,
and reactions of the writer.
Remember the first paragraph, just like an essay, should have
a grabber or an attention getting statement and it can set up your reason for
writing—it could contain a controlling idea and can also state a list of topics
that you will discuss in your essay (these are not bad things to practice and
you should look at the student examples). It should follow a plot with an exposition,
inciting event and a resolution.
Some things
you can discuss:
1) Who
are you and where are you from? What is
your family like? What do your parents
or relatives do?
2) Tell
me something was important in your life (example: describe winning a race, or
attending your sister’s marriage, etc.)
3) Tell
a story about your past (maybe this past summer—such as your job)?
4) Overcoming
some problem or situation (example: I had a girl in the Marshall
Islands write about battling
anorexia).
5) Take
an experience from your life, an experience that taught you something about
life (either about suffering, about healing, about people, about yourself)
–Think about F. Scott Fitzgerald’s statement: “What most people are ashamed of
usually makes a good story.”
I’m looking for passion,
excitement, description, dialogue, and your voice coming out and calling the
reader to pay attention because what you have to say is important!
Please use details, imagery and if
possible figurative language (metaphors, similes, personification, etc.) If you don’t know these terms do not worry,
we will cover them in class during the year.
Before you begin writing I’d like you to begin by pre-writing and
thinking about organization. Never just
start writing without jotting down ideas or writing out some sort of map or
outline.
The purpose of this assignment is
for you to start to format letters/ideas for you to use as a senior when you
apply to colleges and for scholarships.
It will also give you valuable writing practice for writing is a skill
that needs constant practice and developing.
Requirements: Your narrative needs to be at least 3 pages
long (it can be double-spaced). There is
no maximum length. You will be graded on
a rubric broken into ideas, organization, voice, word choice (usage), sentence
fluidity (structure), and conventions.
Grade: This assignment will be worth 150 points.
Unit
Learning goal: Students will demonstrate knowledge of the structure of
fiction by breaking down the essential building blocks (literary elements) of
short stories by plot, dialogue, imagery, character development, figurative
language (metaphor, symbolism, irony), point of view, connecting these blocks
to the overall meaning (or theme) of the text, and final writing a personal
narrative using some of these devices.
Scale/Rubric relating to learning goal:
4 – The student can analyze the elements of a short story come up with a valid theme (or themes) of a text and relate this theme to other texts and/or movies and real world situations. The student is able to write a personal narrative using these elements to create a text with a realistic theme that relates to the student’s life.
3 – The student can analyze elements of a short story and come up with a valid theme for a text. The student is able to write a personal narrative using some of these elements to create a text with a valid theme that relates to the student’s life.
2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student can analyze the elements of a short story and come up with a theme for a text. With some direction/help from the teacher the student is able to write a personal narrative using some of these elements to create a text with a valid theme that relates to the student’s life.
1 – Even with help from the teacher the student is unable to analyze elements of a short story and come up with a theme for a text. Even with help from the teacher the student in unable to write a personal narrative using some of these elements to create a text with a valid theme that relates to the student’s life.
Personal Narrative Rubric
4
|
3
|
2
|
1
|
|
Ideas:
Introduction to the topic. Engaging
and orienting the reader by setting out a problem or a situation. This should include a controlling idea or
suggested theme.
(W2a,
W3a)
|
Topic
– controlling idea or theme is clear, and engaging. There is a problem or conflict in the
personal narrative. The controlling
idea links all sections of the narrative.
The presentation is near poetic in effect.
|
Topic
– controlling idea or theme is clear and engaging.
|
Topic
– controlling idea or theme is not clear, or the introduction is not
engaging. There might be no conflict
or problem or the intro. is wordy and /or rambles without getting to the
point.
|
The
introduction is hard to read or to understand as far as it relates to a
central idea or theme.
|
Details:
Use of narrative techniques such as dialogue, descriptions, concrete
details. This could include figurative
language (metaphor, similes, symbols, personification), use of allusions, irony,
and/or effective dialect.
(W2b,
W3b, W3c, W3d)
|
Details
are effective and add depth to the narrative.
The use of strategies such as figurative language relate back to the
controlling idea or theme. Use of many
techniques or strategies.
|
Details
are effective and concrete. Use of
many techniques or strategies.
|
The
narrative could use more details to develop the setting, problem or the
readers understanding of the storyline.
|
No
specific details. Narrative is a
collection of generalizations.
|
Organization:
Use of transitions to idea with idea, sequencing of events or plot
strategies, the presentation of ideas in a logical format.
(W2c,
W2f, W3b, W3c, W3e)
|
The
sequence of events and/or use of transitions to connect ideas and adds to the
text’s meaning or is innovative.
Techniques such as flashback, foreshadowing, use of parallelism, and
sentence organization (loose and/or periodic structures) might be used.
|
The
sequence of events and/or use of transitions is effective.
|
Narrative
is either missing transitions or the sequence of events are out of order,
illogical, or confusing as presented.
|
Narrative
lacks structure or organization.
|
Word
Choice/Syntax: Use of precise language, interesting word choice, SAT
vocabulary and varied syntax
(w2d,
w2e, L3)
|
Impressive
and effective vocabulary. Effective
and engaging syntax. Use of high-level
vocabulary and many types of sentences and sentence lengths for effect.
|
Precise
and effective language/vocabulary.
Varied syntax.
|
Overuse
of “to be” verbs or repetitious language.
Syntax is not varied much.
|
No
variation in syntax. Word choice is
simplistic.
|
Conventions/Spelling
(L1,
L2)
|
No
noticeable grammar errors
|
1-3
noticeable errors, but errors do not distract from the readability of the
narrative.
|
3
or more noticeable errors, or an error or errors that distract from the
readability of the narrative.
|
Narrative
is plagued with grammar errors and is hard to read |
Friday, November 5, 2021
Friday
First, I am going to give you some time to finish yesterday's assignment and to write a paragraph comparing Sir Gawain and the Green Knight to Le Morte d'Arthur by either character, symbol, or theme.
Today we are going to look at "A History of the English Church and
People" by Bede. You will need your textbooks. Turn to page 96.
HW: Questions 1-4 on page 101.
So - next week you will be starting a personal
narrative. This narrative needs to be 3-5 pages long and explore some
aspect of your life. Lifeless or irrelevant papers will receive low
grades. If you're not interested in what you are writing about, I'm not
going to be interested. The final draft will be due when you return from Thanksgiving Break.
Scale/Rubric relating to learning goal:
4 – The student can analyze the elements of a short story come up with a valid theme (or themes) of a text and relate this theme to other texts and/or movies and real world situations. The student is able to write a personal narrative using these elements to create a text with a realistic theme that relates to the student’s life.
3 – The student can analyze elements of a short story and come up with a valid theme for a text. The student is able to write a personal narrative using some of these elements to create a text with a valid theme that relates to the student’s life.
2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student can analyze the elements of a short story and come up with a theme for a text. With some direction/help from the teacher the student is able to write a personal narrative using some of these elements to create a text with a valid theme that relates to the student’s life.
1 – Even with help from the teacher the student is unable to analyze elements of a short story and come up with a theme for a text. Even with help from the teacher the student in unable to write a personal narrative using some of these elements to create a text with a valid theme that relates to the student’s life.
Personal
Narrative
A Personal Narrative is a form of writing in which
the writer relates an event, incident, or experience in his or her own life. It
is usually focused on one idea. The
events of a personal narrative are most often presented in chronological order,
the order in which they actually occurred in time. The personal narrative
incorporates vivid descriptive details as well as the thoughts, feelings,
and reactions of the writer.
Remember the first paragraph, just like an essay, should have
a grabber or an attention getting statement and it can set up your reason for
writing—it could contain a controlling idea and can also state a list of topics
that you will discuss in your essay (these are not bad things to practice and
you should look at the student examples). It should follow a plot with an exposition,
inciting event and a resolution.
Some things
you can discuss:
1) Who
are you and where are you from? What is
your family like? What do your parents
or relatives do?
2) Tell
me something was important in your life (example: describe winning a race, or
attending your sister’s marriage, etc.)
3) Tell
a story about your past (maybe this past summer—such as your job)?
4) Overcoming
some problem or situation (example: I had a girl in the Marshall
Islands write about battling
anorexia).
5) Take
an experience from your life, an experience that taught you something about
life (either about suffering, about healing, about people, about yourself)
–Think about F. Scott Fitzgerald’s statement: “What most people are ashamed of
usually makes a good story.”
I’m looking for passion,
excitement, description, dialogue, and your voice coming out and calling the
reader to pay attention because what you have to say is important!
Please use details, imagery and if
possible figurative language (metaphors, similes, personification, etc.) If you don’t know these terms do not worry,
we will cover them in class during the year.
Before you begin writing I’d like you to begin by pre-writing and
thinking about organization. Never just
start writing without jotting down ideas or writing out some sort of map or
outline.
The purpose of this assignment is
for you to start to format letters/ideas for you to use as a senior when you
apply to colleges and for scholarships.
It will also give you valuable writing practice for writing is a skill
that needs constant practice and developing.
Requirements: Your narrative needs to be at least 3 pages
long (it can be double-spaced). There is
no maximum length. You will be graded on
a rubric broken into ideas, organization, voice, word choice (usage), sentence
fluidity (structure), and conventions.
Grade: This assignment will be worth 150 points.
Unit
Learning goal: Students will demonstrate knowledge of the structure of
fiction by breaking down the essential building blocks (literary elements) of
short stories by plot, dialogue, imagery, character development, figurative
language (metaphor, symbolism, irony), point of view, connecting these blocks
to the overall meaning (or theme) of the text, and final writing a personal
narrative using some of these devices.
Scale/Rubric relating to learning goal:
4 – The student can analyze the elements of a short story come up with a valid theme (or themes) of a text and relate this theme to other texts and/or movies and real world situations. The student is able to write a personal narrative using these elements to create a text with a realistic theme that relates to the student’s life.
3 – The student can analyze elements of a short story and come up with a valid theme for a text. The student is able to write a personal narrative using some of these elements to create a text with a valid theme that relates to the student’s life.
2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student can analyze the elements of a short story and come up with a theme for a text. With some direction/help from the teacher the student is able to write a personal narrative using some of these elements to create a text with a valid theme that relates to the student’s life.
1 – Even with help from the teacher the student is unable to analyze elements of a short story and come up with a theme for a text. Even with help from the teacher the student in unable to write a personal narrative using some of these elements to create a text with a valid theme that relates to the student’s life.
Personal Narrative Rubric
4
|
3
|
2
|
1
|
|
Ideas:
Introduction to the topic. Engaging
and orienting the reader by setting out a problem or a situation. This should include a controlling idea or
suggested theme.
(W2a,
W3a)
|
Topic
– controlling idea or theme is clear, and engaging. There is a problem or conflict in the
personal narrative. The controlling
idea links all sections of the narrative.
The presentation is near poetic in effect.
|
Topic
– controlling idea or theme is clear and engaging.
|
Topic
– controlling idea or theme is not clear, or the introduction is not
engaging. There might be no conflict
or problem or the intro. is wordy and /or rambles without getting to the
point.
|
The
introduction is hard to read or to understand as far as it relates to a
central idea or theme.
|
Details:
Use of narrative techniques such as dialogue, descriptions, concrete
details. This could include figurative
language (metaphor, similes, symbols, personification), use of allusions, irony,
and/or effective dialect.
(W2b,
W3b, W3c, W3d)
|
Details
are effective and add depth to the narrative.
The use of strategies such as figurative language relate back to the
controlling idea or theme. Use of many
techniques or strategies.
|
Details
are effective and concrete. Use of
many techniques or strategies.
|
The
narrative could use more details to develop the setting, problem or the
readers understanding of the storyline.
|
No
specific details. Narrative is a
collection of generalizations.
|
Organization:
Use of transitions to idea with idea, sequencing of events or plot
strategies, the presentation of ideas in a logical format.
(W2c,
W2f, W3b, W3c, W3e)
|
The
sequence of events and/or use of transitions to connect ideas and adds to the
text’s meaning or is innovative.
Techniques such as flashback, foreshadowing, use of parallelism, and
sentence organization (loose and/or periodic structures) might be used.
|
The
sequence of events and/or use of transitions is effective.
|
Narrative
is either missing transitions or the sequence of events are out of order,
illogical, or confusing as presented.
|
Narrative
lacks structure or organization.
|
Word
Choice/Syntax: Use of precise language, interesting word choice, SAT
vocabulary and varied syntax
(w2d,
w2e, L3)
|
Impressive
and effective vocabulary. Effective
and engaging syntax. Use of high-level
vocabulary and many types of sentences and sentence lengths for effect.
|
Precise
and effective language/vocabulary.
Varied syntax.
|
Overuse
of “to be” verbs or repetitious language.
Syntax is not varied much.
|
No
variation in syntax. Word choice is
simplistic.
|
Conventions/Spelling
(L1,
L2)
|
No
noticeable grammar errors
|
1-3
noticeable errors, but errors do not distract from the readability of the
narrative.
|
3
or more noticeable errors, or an error or errors that distract from the
readability of the narrative.
|
Narrative
is plagued with grammar errors and is hard to read |
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
Wednesday
So, if you have your projects finished you might want to look over this guide from Hamlet. Your semester final will be partially on Hamlet,...
-
Today we will try and finish Act 5. Thursday and Friday we will be working on study questions and review. You will have a test next week an...
-
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight New Vocabulary Words Guerdon Aghast Recreant Roister Tryst Largesse Covetous Beldame Doughty Pa...
-
Today we are going to take a quiz on Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Afterwards (if everyone finishes) we will be looking at a selection f...
