Agenda 9/9 BW: New Vocabulary Terms (#2)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Professor Sanjoy Bandopadhyay Ustad Alauddin Khan Professor of Instrumental Music Rabindra Bharati University, Kolkata.
Advertisements

AP Literature and Composition November 30, 2012 Mr. Houghteling “It’s a ‘Final Wrap’ Friday, and because it’s Friday, you know what that means…”
By: Jennifer, Malik, Tony. Literary Terms Authors purpose Diction Imagery Characterization Setting Symbolism.
British Literature April 29, 2009 Ms. Cares. Freewrite: Consider the following: How do you read? What is your favorite book and why? What types of literature.
Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class Abridge – condense or shorten The book had been abridge from a 600 page novel to a 10 page summary.
How to Read Literature Like a Professor by Thomas C
Analyzing literature What does it mean?.
THE CANON VS. YA LITERATURE By Juliann Little. The Classics  The three most taught books of 2010 in high school English classes were:  The Adventures.
Literary Analysis The parts in literature are: * Setting * Plot
British Literature April 29, 2008 Ms. Cares. Agenda Letter to the SophomoresLetter to the Sophomores Literary CriticismLiterary Criticism Remember to.
HAMLET and THE SCARLET LETTER
Advisory Advisory period: Mondays & Thursdays: 2:41-3:15pm  Executive Functioning  Peer Relationships Role of Advisor  Your child’s adult advocate at.
Literature Circles Mrs. Saufroy September 14 th, 2015 Class Notes.
AP English Language and Composition
 Reading is a tool to help you understand and function in your daily life.  Reading is a skill. It takes work to achieve proficiency. You have to practice.
VOCAB QUIZ THIS FRIDAY Vocabulary Lesson 1. Abhor To feel hatred or disgust toward something; to loathe i.e. I abhor homework over the weekend!
GOALS 1.FINAL EXAM PROJECT 2.CRITICAL LENS: BODY PARAGRAPHS AND CONCLUSIONS ENGLISH 9H MS. BUGASCH JUNE 11, 2014.
Crazy But True: Headline “Hooks” Mental Floss Crazy But True Facts.
Approaching Literary Criticism. Commentary A literary analysis, which is essentially a close study of the elements that contribute to the success, or.
Discussion Focus: New Criticism/Formalism & Reader’s Response Theory AN INTRODUCTION TO CRITICAL LITERARY THEORY.
1)Review The Best of 1 st Quarter Vocabulary 2)American Dream Activity 3)Begin reading Chp. 9 Homework: Finish reading chapter 9 and respond to reading.
Plagiarism Ms. Castillo. Don’t forget: You can copy- paste this slide into other presentations, and move or resize the poll. Poll: I didn't have time.
English III – Of Mice and Men Literary Analysis – Outline (I – Ex – L)
November 17, 2010 Literature: Novel. Housekeeping Due today Vocabulary Paragraph, p Character Assignment, Part 1 (do not hand in yet) Exam is.
Using Ethos, Pathos and Logos.  Rhetoric (n) - the art of speaking or writing effectively (Webster's Definition). According to Aristotle, rhetoric is.
Literary Criticism Research Paper English III Honors Mrs. Templeton.
CRITICAL APPROACHES TO LITERATURE Literary Theory.
Middle School- The Worst Years Of My Life By: Hannah Lichwalla.
AP Literature and Composition
Introduction to Criticism
Happy Tuesday!  WHAT DO YOU NEED? ACT I Questions in the Homework Bin
Literary Analysis Essay
Format of Research Samuel T. Ramos, Jr. MCM
Jovana Milosavljevic Ardeljan PEDAGOGICAL IMPLICATIONS
Paraphrasing Class #8 February 14, 2013.
Annabel Lee & The raven By Edgar Allen Poe.
“ The Most Dangerous Game” Vocabulary
English /26/17 Mr. Verutes Aim: How do we prepare to read a novel? What elements of fiction and background information affect our understanding.
PRE-Ap Independent Novel
Lesson Frames and Agendas: Quarter 2 - Week 7 Nov. 27-Dec. 01, 2017
Literary Analysis Essay
Agenda 9/11 Journal #4: Norris is a freshman to Heritage High School and he recently asked me “What is plagiarism?” I tried to explain it to him, but he.
WRITING STRONG BODY PARAGRAPHS TO SUPPORT YOUR THESIS
Year 2: How to help your child
Agenda 10/28 The Best of 1st Quarter Vocabulary Who’s To Blame?
Digression – wandering away from the subject.
Q2 FINAL EXAM DAY WORDLE PROGRESS CHECK
Agenda BW: Vocabulary Practice
Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class
“ The Most Dangerous Game” Vocabulary
Today you will need… Pencil “In Stranger’s Glances…” text Book/Novel
Ms. Geiss’ English III Class
Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class
Agenda 8/27 BELL WORK: Favorite Tree Review Vocabulary
positive assertion; confirmation
Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class
Agenda BW: Vocabulary Practice Vocabulary Quiz
Organizational Strategies for the open ended question
Writing History Essays
Agenda BW: Review vocabulary words Review Homework Assignment
Intro to Poetry and Romeo and Juliet
Agenda 9/9 BW: Review Vocabulary Present Mini-Projects
Digression – wandering away from the subject.
Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class
Bellringer: Dec. 1 Question:
Character Types.
Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class
English 11 4/15-4/18.
Summarizing, Quoting, and Paraphrasing: Writing about research
Using Phonemic Awareness &
Presentation transcript:

Agenda 9/9 BW: New Vocabulary Terms (#2) Share Translated Quotes with class Work on Mini-Project Homework: Complete Mini-Project

Vocabulary List #2 15 of the terms you have already seen 15 of the terms are new All 30 are fair-game for the quiz Remember that on ALL homework assignments you should be incorporating 2-3 (at min.) of the vocabulary and/or literary device terms.

positive assertion; confirmation Affirmation – positive assertion; confirmation The cat affirmed that he would eat ALL of the hotdogs.

Easily approachable; warmly friendly Affable – Easily approachable; warmly friendly The Zombie’s found Janet affable, because she gave them jelly donuts.

Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class Alleviate – Relieve Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class

artistic; dealing with or capable of appreciation of the beautiful Aesthetic – artistic; dealing with or capable of appreciation of the beautiful Thomas did not believe that the art had any aesthetic appeal.

unselfishly generous; concerned for others Altruistic – unselfishly generous; concerned for others In the future, even though George was having a bad day, he altruistically helped his friend change the spaceship’s flat tire.

Analogous – comparable Bees and a bee hive are analogous to ants and an ant hill.

the state of having contradictory or conflicting emotional attitudes Ambivalence – the state of having contradictory or conflicting emotional attitudes Patricia felt ambivalent about ambulances; they had cool sounds and light, but often carried hurt people.

unclear or doubtful in meaning Ambiguous – unclear or doubtful in meaning It was ambiguous whether they were eating with their Grandma or actually eating their Grandma.

Advocate – urge; plead for Tommy’s good conscience advocated that he not steal the new X-Men movie.

Aloof – apart; reserved Aloof Cat taught Aloof Cat Jr. how to ignore people who tried to pet them.

unfavorable fortune; hardship; a calamitous event Adversity – unfavorable fortune; hardship; a calamitous event The snake experienced adversity when being bullied by the school of possums.

Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class Abstruse – obscure; profound; difficult to understand The child didn’t understand the abstruse internet article on Dark Matter and the String Theory. Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class

Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class Abstract – theoretical; not concrete; nonrepresentational Gina did not understand what the abstract painting was suppose to mean. Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class

sparing in eating and drinking; temperate Abstemious – sparing in eating and drinking; temperate Huston believed that the restaurants serving of one potato encouraged an abstemious lifestyle.

easy to approach; obtainable Accessible – easy to approach; obtainable The walkway was blocked by a tree, making the building inaccessible.

applaud; announce with great approval Acclaim – applaud; announce with great approval This weekend Mr. Holland decided to see the summer’s most highly acclaimed movie.

Adversary – opponent After viewing the new Star Trek movie, Grumpy Cat found the villainous Khan an unworthy adversary.

Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class Acknowledge – recognize; admit Ms. Geiss’ AP English III Class

Adulation – flattery; admiration Mr. Yorkson was a very critical boss, but he finally gave adulation during a meeting. Unfortunately, it was for his own idea.

Abridge – condense or shorten The book had been abridge from a 600 page novel to a 10 page summary.

Steps of Research Quotable Quotes: Translate the quotable quotes into the Toulmin model. Due : 9/5 Evidence: Complete an in-depth class jigsaw on The Grapes of Wrath using the topics indentified in How to Read Literature Like a Professor: Journey, Eating Together, Character Types (stereotypes), Water (Baptism), Violence, Symbol, Political, Christ Figures, Sex, Geography, Season, The Hero, Physical Conditions, and Architecture. Each group will be assigned one topic and will find occurrences of the topic in the novel. With this information, they will identify three paraphrases and/or quotes with citations, briefly analyze each quote, and synthesis the purpose of these quotes. Due: 9/11 (A Day) and 9/12 (B Day) for presentation via RocketSlider, Prezi, or GoogleDocs.