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10-01-15 Understand “textual evidence” Evaluate summary/analysis drafts Continue to work on Paper 3 Goals: Summarize, analyze, compare.

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Presentation on theme: "10-01-15 Understand “textual evidence” Evaluate summary/analysis drafts Continue to work on Paper 3 Goals: Summarize, analyze, compare."— Presentation transcript:

1 10-01-15 Understand “textual evidence” Evaluate summary/analysis drafts Continue to work on Paper 3 Goals: Summarize, analyze, compare

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3 The grade will focus on the degree to which your thesis is supported by textual evidence, and on the clarity of the presentation. Clarity Textual evidence Thesis

4 Although some people dismiss arts education as non-academic and therefore unimportant, Barry disagrees. She sees art not only as important, but as vital. For her as a child, art was a “life preserver” in an otherwise unstable world (724). Working with pencils and crayons in school provided a security that she did not have a home.

5 Barry didn’t recognize the importance of school at the time; it took her years to come to the realization that school was really her place of sanctuary. In her article, she tells the story of a morning on which she awoke before dawn, got dressed, and went to school before anyone else in the house was even awake. At school she met Mr. Gunderson, the janitor; instead of chiding her for being out alone, he let her help him get the school ready for the day by turning on the lights and raising the shades in each room he unlocked. When her teacher, Mrs. LeSane, arrived, Barry ran to her and cried. When thinking about that incident, Barry writes, “it [is only] now, 28 years later, that I realize I was crying from relief” (724). For her, school was about much more than learning letters and numbers; it gave her a safe place to go every day.

6 Using textual evidence well: Choose “high quality, credible, and relevant sources” Summarize, paraphrase, or quote as appropriate; if you quote, use words and phrases rather than whole sentences Write sentences that are clear and that make sense Evidence is not a claim; use your evidence to support a claim Explain how your evidence supports the claim; connect the dots for your reader Follow appropriate conventions for citing your sources* *For Paper #3, because the assignment identifies the two articles, you need only to identify the articles by full title and author once; afterwards, you can simply refer to authors by last name, and you need to cite only the page numbers.

7 Evidence is not a claim; use your evidence to support a claim Explain how your evidence supports the claim; connect the dots for your reader Claim: A statement that can be argued. Evidence: Anything that can support a claim. Claim: Barry didn’t recognize the importance of school at the time. Evidence: She writes, “it [is only] now, 28 years later, that I realize I was crying from relief” (724). Connection: It took her 28 years to recognize that her relief came from being safe – and safety is important to every child. Barry sees art as important, because for her, art was a “life preserver” in an unstable world (724). Claim EvidenceConnection

8 Claim or potential evidence? Lynda Barry first snuck out of her house in the dark when she was seven years old. Barry says that her teacher “believed in the natural healing power” of art (723). Drawing was important to Barry as a child. She writes, “Drawing came to mean everything to me” (724). Barry says that a good educational system can save lives. Barry tries to persuade readers to support funding for schools. Barry’s readers probably come from a variety of backgrounds. Barry’s fifth grade teacher was Mr. Cunningham. The article includes a drawing of Barry holding a schoolhouse. E E C E E C C E E

9 Your turn to practice: Make a claim based on Linda Barry’s article, support it with textual evidence, then explain (as necessary) how the evidence supports the claim. Be ready to read your passage aloud in class.

10 Summary & analysis of “Does Monsanto Sue Farmers” Exchange papers with a classmate. Read the paper you get. When you finish, answer the following questions about the paper: *How accurate is the summary? *How thorough is the summary? (Does it include all key ideas?) *How accurate and thorough is the analysis? *How well does it explain the purpose of the article? *How well does it describe/explain the authors’ strategies? *What does it say about context? *Does it identify the readers? the publication and the date? Explain your answers to help your classmate revise.

11 9/24HW: summarize Monsanto articles, pp 683-704 and 875-79 9/29Bring one-page summary/analysis of “Monsanto’s Harvest of Fear”; discuss in class 10/1Bring one-page summary/analysis of “Does Monsanto Sue Farmers”; discuss in class 10/6Bring bullet-point list of similarities and differences between Monsanto articles 10/8Bring complete draft of Paper 3. HW: finish Paper 3 (Note: Parents’ Day is 10/10.) 10/13Paper 3 (comparison) due (midterm week). Use remaining class time to revise your summary/analysis as needed, to discuss the article(s) with a classmate, to work on your list of similarities & differences, or to work on drafting Paper 3.


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