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READ SILENTLY e ither your independent SEM-R novel or your Literature book

December 6, Winter Poetry TPCASTT - Cat on a Night of Snow Ho mework S tudy RIU flashcards for Thursday's quiz! Remember, media center checkout on Thursday. LA formative on Friday! Les son Essential Question How can the TPCASTT poetry analysis strategy help me better comprehend poetry? Warm Up Number 1-10 in your notes. I will hold up a picture which illustrates one of the words from your Rev It Up list. Look carefully at the picture and write the vocabulary word that you think it represents.

Let's review...What does TPCASTT stand for???

T - Title - make a prediction. Ask yourself...What about that topic or subject could this poem be about? P - Paraphrase - put the poem's LITERAL meaning into your own words. You can chunk it up, but make sure you cover everything! C - Connotation - mark rhyme scheme, identify figurative language and other sound devices, pull text to support, discuss the overall meaning on the overall poem's message or idea A - Attitude (author's tone) - How does the author feel about the subject? What are words or phrases that prove this? S - Shift - Where do changes occur in the poem? What kind of changes are they? What is their impact on the text? T - Title revisited - Is this title accurate? What would be a good alternate title based either on the main idea or the theme of the poem? T - Theme - what BROAD, not selection specific, lesson can the reader take away from this? What does the speaker / author want the audience to learn from this poem?

Let's try to TPCASTT a poem together... The following poem is Cat on a Night of Snow

Cat on Night of Snow - Elizabeth Coatsworth Ca t, if you go outdoors, you must walk in the snow. A You will come back with little white shoes on your feet, B little white shoes of snow that have heels of sleet. B Stay by the fire, my Cat. Lie still, do not go. A See how the flames are leaping and hissing low, A I will bring you a saucer of milk like a marguerite, B so white and so smooth, so spherical and so sweet - B stay with me, Cat. Outdoors the wild winds blow. A Outdoors the wild winds blow, Mistress, and dark is the night, C strange voices cry in the trees, intoning strange lore, D and more than cats move, lit by our eyes green light, C on silent feet where the meadow grasses hang hoar - D Mistress, there are portents abroad of magic and might, C and things that are yet to be done. Open the door! D Number 1 or 3 Number 2 or 4

T - I predict Cat on a Night of Snow will be about a cat that gets lost on a snowy night, a cat goes exploring in the snow, someone sees a cat on a snowy night, a kid finds a cat in the snow. P - The owner warns the cat that he will get snowy and cold and icy if he goes outside. She suggests that the cat stay inside by the fire, and she will bring it a saucer of white milk. She tells the cat to stay with her because outside it's very windy. The cat says that the wind is blowing outside and it is dark. The trees are rustling in the wind, it's mysterious outside. There are other animals outside that the cat can see. I have to get out because there are many things to do, mysteries to discover. Open the door! C - rhyme scheme shifts as there is a shift in the poem. repetition - Outdoors the wild winds blow onomatopoeia - hissing - refers to the fire alliteration - so white and so smooth, so spherical and so sweet metaphor - little white shoes on your feet = snowy cat feet simile - saucer of milk like a marguerite personification - flames were leaping and hissing, strange voices cry in the trees A - both perspectives are given, trying to convince each other that the other one knows better Mistress - cautionary the cat - determined, impatient S - shift in speakers - it goes from the Mistress's perspective to the cat's T - My Wishes, Two Separate Sides, Mistress vs. Cat, When the Winds Blow T - There's always a positive and negative, depending on which side you are on. Situations can be viewed from different perspectives.

Homework Stud y for Thursday's RIU quiz!