Thursday, September 30, 2010

Fun with Figurative Language, Part II

 Today we began with the warm up below and spent the rest of the day playing a little game to practice figurative language.
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Examine the quotation below.  Identify the figurative device Silko relies on here.  How does her use of this device impact the meaning of the quotation?  Be specific.
“[Tayo] could get no rest as long as the memories were tangled with the present, tangled up like colored threads from old Grandma’s wicker sewing basket when he was a child, and he had carried them outside to play and they had spilled out of his arms into the summer weeds and rolled away in all directions, and then he had hurried to pick them up before Auntie found him”(7).

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Fun with Figurative Language

Today we spent the period reviewing figurative language and going over the figurative language handout.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

"Evolution" & Ceremony

We began the day with a look at Sherman Alexie's poem "Evolution" and wrapped up with a discussion of Silko's Ceremony.

New Due Dates:
  • Read the first half of Ceremony, due 10/4.
  • Finish Ceremony, Due 10/11.
  • Post at least once to the Ceremony discussion board at MoodleHub by 10/4.
  • Post at least once more to the Ceremony discussion at MoodleHub by 10/11.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Oedipus PC

Today we had the Oedipus Tyrannus timed writing.

Bring Ceremony tomorrow.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Wrapping Oedipus

Today dealt with a few final questions about Oedipus Rex, mostly regarding the study guide. We spend the rest of the period looking over the scoring rubric for timed writings and analyzing the Doll's House pressure comp in preparation for Monday's Oedipus Rex PC.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

More Presentations and a CRA

We began the day by wrapping up the Oedipus presentations we started yesterday. After some discussion of theme, we concluded the period with our second CRA (see below).

The Oedipus timed writing has been postponed until Monday, 9/27.

HW: Finish CRA if necessary. Due 9/24.
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Term Paper: Apostrophe & Stichomythia

Choose either your stichomythia/antilabe example or the example of apostrophe from the warm up, and write a formal CRA paragraph. Your paragraph should address the theme and/or tone of the passage, should begin with a clear topic sentence (see below) and include direct references to the passage and quotations where appropriate.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Stichomythia All Day

Today we took a long look at stichomythia, starting with a warm-up, moving into some group work and wrapping up the day with some informal presentations based on the work in groups. We'll wrap up the presentations tomorrow.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Swift, Allusion, & Apostrophe

We started the day looking a bit of irony by Jonathon Swift. Then we reviewed allusion, stichomythia, and antilabe, before writing a bit and talking a bit on the apostrophes in one of Oedipus's speeches. (See below.)

"Paying special attention to his use of apostrophe, examine Oedipus’ long speech near the end of the play (page 99 in the Cambridge translation) in which he explores the crimes against him. What are the effects of the apostrophe on the meaning of Oedipus’ speech and perhaps on the meaning of the work as a whole?"

HW: Find and mark one interesting example of stichomythia and/or antilabe for class tomorrow.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Oedipal Irony

After a short quiz and some discussion of the play in general, we focused on the examples of irony that the students found for homework. We wrapped up the period with a definition of stichomythia.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Good News x2

Upon further internet digging, I found this simpler online text of Oedipus the King: http://records.viu.ca/~johnstoi/sophocles/oedipustheking.htm If the link doesn't work, I linked to it at MoodleHub as well.

Also, in a fit of benevolence, I have decided that the online irony assignment isn't due until Wednesday before class, so focus on Oedipus and its irony this weekend.

Enjoy the weekend! (Looks like some good reading weather.)

Mr. Staiano

The Greeks and Irony

Today we finished the introduction to the Greeks we began yesterday and spent the rest of the day talking about three types of irony: situational, dramatic, and verbal.

HW
  • Read Oedipus Rex and note on a separate sheet one example of each type of irony as you do so. Due Monday.
  • Do the Irony Assignment at MoodleHub. Due 9/22.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Picture Day and the Greeks

We sandwiched a bit of an intro to the Greeks, Sophocles and Oedipus Rex around school pictures.

New Due Dates:
  • Read Oedipus Rex by 9/20
  • Oedipus PC & SG tentatively scheduled for 9/24

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Timed Writing #1

Today, after handing in study guides for A Doll's House, we spent a few moments dissecting the prompt and considering our approach to the task. The remainder of the period was spent writing.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Theme and the Study Guide

Today we focused a bit on theme and then spent the rest of t5he day going over the second page of the study guide.


First pressure comp tomorrow. Bring your completed study guide.

Monday, September 13, 2010

The Study Guide

We began the day writing a brief summary of Ibsen's play and spent the rest of the day working through page one of the study guide.

New Due Dates:
  • A Doll's House PC and SG, 9/15 (tentatively)
  • Have Oedipus Tyrannus, 9/16

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Stuff and Character

After a bit of writing about the title of A Doll's House, we had a look at a few exemplary CRA paragraphs from Neruda's "The Three Lilies," and wrapped up by adding some character terms to the notes (flat, round, static, and dynamic).

Wednesday

We began the day with a very brief quiz on the first act of A Doll's House. We then discussed act 1, focusing primarily on gender roles, foreshadowing, and symbols and motifs in Ibsen's text. We wrapped up the period with a short paragraph highlighting activity using the "Three Lilies" CRA from last week. I collected these.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

A Quiz and A Doll's House

Today we began the day with a short quiz on the "Reading and Responding to Literature" article. After taking some notes on the article and discussing it for much of the period, we had a brief introduction to A Doll's House.

HW Read Act 1 of A Doll's House by 9/8 and finish it by Friday.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Finally the Course Description

Today we briefly discussed our definitions of "literature" and literary merit" and then spent much of the period on the course description. We wrapped up the day by writing our first CRA paragraph of Neruda's "The Three Lilies."

The Write-Up
Choose ONE element of Jan Neruda’s short story.
Write a single-paragraph analysis of the passage that reflects on this element and how it contributes to theme and/or tone. 
Your paragraph should begin with a clear statement of purpose (topic sentence):

  • Through… Neruda creates… 
  • By… Neruda explores…
Be sure to support your assertion with copious examples/quotations from the story.
HW Read "Reading and Responding to Literature" at the online course. Take notes and prepare for a short quiz.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

"The Three Lilies"

Today we did the first step of a close reading analysis of Jan Neruda's "The Three Lilies." We were going to write about it, but once we talked through the analysis there was no time to write. Writing tomorrow.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

We began a warm-up about theme and its relation to the stories we have been working with. After some housekeeping (collecting honor statements, announcing the next few books, revisiting my quest for a TA, etc.), we spent the rest of the period discussing "This is what it means to say Phoenix, Arizona."

HW: Reread "The Three Lilies" for tomorrow.