Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
English 11 – Period 1 – Wed, Nov. 30, 2016
Due Today: Vocab/List 2, words #1-10 – template (turn in) Punctuation Packet – completed (turn in) ATDOAPTI – you should have all chapter materials with you today **Pick up Semicolon/Colon Practice worksheet! .
2
English 11 – Period 1 – Wed, Nov. 30, 2016
Semicolons/Colons: Punctuation Packet – (key to be posted) Worksheet Practice – complete #1-12 and review today (finish for HW) **QUIZ on semicolons/colons Tues, 12/6 ATDOAPTI – Work on prewrite for two extended response questions ONE full index card may be used for plot details, quotes, and Works Cited citation TURN IN TODAY; final typed summative for PART I on Friday .
3
Works Cited Citation In text: (Alexie 27). Template:
Last, First M. Title of Novel. City: Publisher, Year. Print. Example: Alexie, Sherman. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. New York: Little, Brown and Company Print. In text: (Alexie 27).
4
HW for Fri. Dec. 2, 2016 Semicolons/Colons:
Punctuation Packet – check key (posted) Worksheet Practice – finish for HW **QUIZ on semicolons/colons Tues, 12/6 ATDOAPTI – Final summative for Part I Friday (I will return your index cards) .
5
Types of Character Arcs
The Change Arc: the protagonist undergoes a radical personal change that transforms him/her from one type of person to a totally different type of person. The Growth Arc: the protagonist overcomes an internal opposition (weakness, fear, the past etc.) while he faces an external opposition; as a result, he becomes a fuller, better person. He’s still pretty much who he was, just upgraded to Protagonist 2.0. The Shift Arc (variant of the Growth Arc): the protagonist changes his perspective, learns different skills, or gains a different role. The end-result is not “better” or more than the starting point, just different. The protagonist has not overcome a grand inner resistance; he/she simply gained a new set of skills or assumed a new position, maybe discovered a talent he forgot he had, or began a different vocation. The Fall Arc: commonly known as a “tragedy”, the Fall Arc follows the protagonist as he dooms himself and/or others, and declines into insanity, immorality, or death.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.