Expanding Our Vocab YOUR CHALLENGE WORD: Have a look at the word card that you have been given. Write the word and your own summarised definition in your.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Thinking & Writing about Poetry
Advertisements

Year 11S1 PERIOD 1 – 9 th OCTOBER. In each column which response is stronger? Why?
My Papa’s Waltz Analytical Paragraph.
Unit 1 : English Language
Unit 1 : English Language Section A : 15 mins reading 1 hr to answer questions Section B: 25 mins – shorter writing task 35 mins – Longer writing Task.
Standards ELACC8RI1: Students will be able to use close reading strategies to identify the main idea in selected articles. ELACCW9b1: Students will be.
Visiting Hour by Norman MacCaig
Understanding the Writing Process: The Seven Steps
By Norman McCaig.  To revise key techniques in ‘Visiting Hour’  To understand the depth of analysis required for Higher poetry  To annotate key sections/techniques.
Critical Essay Structure
Read the first stanza on page 8 of the poem “Papaya Tree.”
NOTE-TAKING IN LECTURES & READINGS. OUTLINE When & how to read How to approach academic reading Useful tips on drawing out important concepts, arguments,
Free Powerpoint Templates Page 1 Free Powerpoint Templates Of Mice and Men Curley’s Wife.
Inside Out and Back Again
‘Dulce et Decorum est’ It is sweet and right.
Writing in Social Studies Today I will be introducing the new short answer writing rubric, CSQT. Please take out your binders and set up a new page in.
Timothy Winters: Evaluation
What Makes a President Great? (48.5 page636) Read the evaluations from three historians in regard to President Kennedy. Place the historian’s name on the.
Responding To Literature A step by step process standard 2.2- Writing a review of a Novel Paragraph 1 1.Attention-getting opener 2.Title, author, summary.
What does the word ‘trust’ mean to you?
Critical Essay Reading. What is a critical response? A critical response is an essay where you can show your understanding and appreciation of a text.
Academic Essays & Report Writing
Writing about Literature Methods and Approches. Prewriting- Discovering Ideas Once a story has been read, it is time to write as a means of discovering.
COMM331 Effective Reading: Unpacking the text for better understanding Dr. Celeste Rossetto: Learning Development 2013.
1. WRITE DOWN THE QUOTE OF THE WEEK! 2. GET OUT YOUR VOCABULARY SHEET AND TURN TO THE SECOND PAGE 3. START MAKING FLASHCARDS FOR THE SECOND PAGE OF WORDS.
Poetry Analysis UsingTPCASTTPoetry Analysis UsingTPCASTT Ms. Wolf’s Language Arts Class.
+. + Close Reading & Annotation Or: Here’s what you’re going to do with the text so you can answer the questions later.
Exam revision 9ENG steps towards success Miss Macdonald’s tips and tricks.
Sight Words.
Show, Don’t Tell. Mavis was angry when she heard what the umpire said. Show me through a series of actions what you saw in your mind.
‘The Highwayman’ Alfred Noyes.
DIDLS: The Tone Acronym
Journal Response Assess the current state of public education in the United States. What are some flaws that exist in schools today? Does school have a.
Writing Exercise Try to write a short humor piece. It can be fictional or non-fictional. Essay by David Sedaris.
iGCSE – Question 2 Objectives:
What is religion? What is religion?. Assignment:  Read over the positions/definitions of religion.  Para. I - Pick a position that you feel either best.
Picking Poems to Pieces. Analysing Poetry No matter what the topic of a poem, you can apply the same method to analyse it. Picking a poem to pieces is.
English – two years in 30 minutes. IGCSE English Language Section A Reading activity Section B Reading activity – one anthology text Writing activity.
Student name: Current level: Target level: Year 9 Cycle 4 Romeo and Juliet: You will be reading and analysing key sections of Romeo and Juliet. You will.
Lesson Objectives Using quotations accurately Thinking about how to write about language devices.
Learning goal: Students will learn to elaborate ideas by adding relevant supporting details to their Big Idea paragraphs. Copyright 2014 by Write Score,
Paper 2 – 20th & 21st Fiction and Transactional Writing
Settler challenge For 7/8/9 grades, you need to use the correct technical terms when you’re talking about poetry. Re-write these sentences in the back.
How do these images make you feel?
National 5 RUAE Prelim.
Tuesday 16th May Unseen Poetry
Paper 1: Tues 6th June GCSE English Language Paper 2: Mon 12th June
Personal Response: The Émigrée
Aunt Julia TA Feedback / Revision.
‘A Kestrel for a Knave’.
To Begin This is Non – Fiction Paper 2 Section A Reading Skills
What is the American Dream?
Unit 1 – English III Mary Holmes
Bayonet Charge Learning Outcomes: All will be able to show that you understand the text and its meaning to you as a reader. Most will be able to write.
The Ghost of Thomas Kempe
AQA GCSE Paper 2 Glastonbury and Greenwich fair
Comparison Junction What can you remember?
Timed Paper 50 minutes to complete. Begin – 11:30. End – 12:20.
Bell Task: English Language Paper 1
English Revision.
How to Annotate a Poem.
Paper 1: Tues 6th June GCSE English Language Paper 2: Mon 12th June
Essay Tips Pick 1 title from the prose fiction section Write 1 essay
To develop our poetry analysis skills
Year 11 Assembly 11th October..
English Unit 1 exam revision
Annotation.
Explain how writers use language to create effects.
Active Reading Series: How to Critically Annotate
GCSE.
Presentation transcript:

Expanding Our Vocab YOUR CHALLENGE WORD: Have a look at the word card that you have been given. Write the word and your own summarised definition in your book.

Write your word on a post-it and place it next to the image that it best describes

Year 9S1 Friday 18 th October, PERIOD 1 1.To be able to explain and comment on the writers use language 2.To be able to identify and comment on the writers purpose and effect on the reader

GROUP ANALYSIS 1.In your groups, highlight and annotate the stanza that you have been given 2.Remember to identify and explain the use of poetic techniques CHALLENGE: Explain the writers purpose and the effect on the reader of the ideas in your stanza/allocated section. If you are stuck refer to the hint questions on the flip side of your analysis sheet.

The sparrow dips in his wheel-rut bath, The sun grows passionate-eyed, And boils the dew to smoke by the paddock-path; As strenuously we stride, - Five of us; dark He, fair He, dark She, fair She, I, All beating by. The air is shaken, the high-road hot, Shadowless swoons the day, The greens are sobered and the cattle at rest; but not We on our urgent way, - Four of us; fair She, dark She, fair He, I, are there, But one - elsewhere

Autumn moulds the hard fruit mellow, And forward still we press Through moors, briar-meshed plantations, clay-pits yellow, As in the spring hours – yes, Three of us; fair He, fair She, are, as heretofore, But – fallen one more. The leaf drops: earthworms draw it in At night-time noiselessly, The fingers of birch and beech are skeleton-thin, And yet on the beat are we, - Two of us; fair She, I. But no more left to go The track we know.

Icicles tag the church-aisle leads, The flag-rope gibbers hoarse, The home-bound foot-folk wrap their snow- flaked heads, Yet I still stalk the course - One of us … Dark and fair He, dark and fair She, gone: The rest – anon.

The sparrow dips in his wheel-rut bath, The sun grows passionate-eyed, And boils the dew to smoke by the paddock-path; As strenuously we stride, - Five of us; dark He, fair He, dark She, fair She, I, All beating by. The air is shaken, the high-road hot, Shadowless swoons the day, The greens are sobered and the cattle at rest; but not We on our urgent way, - Four of us; fair She, dark She, fair He, I, are there, But one - elsewhere Autumn moulds the hard fruit mellow, And forward still we press Through moors, briar-meshed plantations, clay-pits yellow, As in the spring hours – yes, Three of us; fair He, fair She, are, as heretofore, But – fallen one more. The leaf drops: earthworms draw it in At night-time noiselessly, The fingers of birch and beech are skeleton-thin, And yet on the beat are we, - Two of us; fair She, I. But no more left to go The track we know. Icicles tag the church-aisle leads, The flag-rope gibbers hoarse, The home-bound foot-folk wrap their snow-flaked heads, Yet I still stalk the course - One of us … Dark and fair He, dark and fair She, gone: The rest – anon.

PARAGRAPH RESPONSE Explain the way in which the poet has used language to portray a particular point-of-view in the poem P- topic sentence in response to the question E- QUOTE and poetic technique/s Ex- explain the distinctive viewpoint of the poet that is created through the technique and by drawing out particular words and explaining the effect. Challenge yourself (to push to the PINK step): explain the effects that this particular quote has on the reader (how do it make the reader feel? What does the reader learn from this particular viewpoint?

What are aiming for? There is a path through the willows and among the sycamores, a path beaten hard by boys coming down from the ranches Response: Steinbeck creates an image of a path through trees that is worn down because people have walked on it. Response: Through the use of willows and among the sycamores Steinbeck creates the image of a calm and peaceful path that is protected by trees. Steinbeck juxtaposes this with the metaphor beaten which makes the path seem worn and damaged as well as busy and boisterous because of all the boys from the ranches.

Critical Friends Circle swap books in your group 1.Peer mark each others paragraph by highlighting/underline in different colours the quote, identification of language techniques, explanation of the poets viewpoint and the effects on the reader 2.Now refer to the challenge steps below and indicate which challenge step your classmate achieved and write one EBI comment at the bottom. The absolute minimum (Pushing into Level 5) Explanations of inferred meanings based on evidence Explanations and comments on effects Identifies a poetic technique The next step (Pushing into Level 6) Detailed explanation, comment on effects at word level Comments based on textual evidence; consider wider implications; different layers Identifies and explains the effects of poetic techniques Pushing Boundaries (Pushing into Level 7) Precise and insightful explanation about the effects of poetic techniques and the affects on the reader Some judgment or comment on the poets purpose Refer to specific words and techniques and how they achieve the effects they do

Success Criteria 1.To compose a paragraph response that includes quotes and explains the effects of language comments on the writers purpose and effect on the reader

Dont Forget: TED-Ed Homework DUE WEDNESDAY 23 rd OCTOBER These clips are great for expanding your knowledge about the world and building your skills in communication and critical thinking