Sunday, December 15, 2024

Review Guide for FINAL

 Today you need to work on this practice guide. We will go over answers you do not know.

English 10 FINAL

 

PART 1: Short Stories

 

1)    For following stories please give the type of conflict

 

a)     The Pedestrian

 

 

b)    Their Will Come Soft Rains

 

 

c)     The Possibility of Evil

 

2)    For the Following stories please give a central symbol and discuss the meaning of that symbol:

 

a)     The Lottery

 

b)    Harrison Bergeron

 

c)     Everyday Use

 

 

3)    For the following stories list all the major characters:

 

a)     Everyday Use

 

b)    Harrison Bergeron

 

c)     The Pedestrian

 

4)    For the following stories list the main idea or theme.

 

a)     Their Will Come Soft Rains

 

b)    The Lottery

 

c)     The Possibility of Evil

 

5)    Give a summary of the following story.

 

There Will Come Soft Rains

 

PART II: Oedipus Rex

 

1) How does Oedipus Rex fit the traditional role of a Tragic Hero?

 

 

 

 

2) What does the chorus do in a Greek play?  What is their function?

 

 

 

3) How does this play fit the theme: Person vs. Fate.

 

 

 

 

4) List two ironies in this play and discuss why they are ironic.

 

 

 

 

5) Why does Iocaste tell Oedipus about her baby?  What detail of her story catches Oedipus’s attention?  What does he begin to suspect?

 

 

PART III: Catcher in the Rye

 

CATCHER IN THE RYE: FINAL (150 points – questions 1-10 = 10 pts each, question 11 = 30 pts).

 

 

1) Explain the following themes and give examples of three scenes that fit each theme:

Loss of Innocence

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rebellion From Society

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2) Explain the following symbols – what they represent and why they are important:

 

The Duck Pond

 

The Carrousel

 

 

The title

 

3)  List and explain three allusions.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4)  Explain the major conflict.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5)  List the point of view.

 

 

 

 

 

6) Discuss how Holden is an unreliable narrator.

 

 

 

 

 

 

7)  Discuss how Catcher in the Rye is a Bildungsroman novel.

 

 

 

 

8) Outline the plot.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

9) Briefly discuss Holden’s relationship with girls (Jane, Sally, Sunny, Bernice, Marty, Larverne, Faith Cavendish, Mrs. Morrow)

 

 

 

 

10) Discuss the importance of the following characters:

Achey

 

Stradlater

 

Horwitz

 

Ernie

 

D.B.

Phoebe

 

Allie

 

Maurice

 

Carl Luce

 

Lillian Simmons

 

Mr. Antolini

 

Mr. Spencer

 

11) Compare Holden Caulfield to Scout Finch. Make sure you have a thesis statement and use evidence.

Thursday, December 12, 2024

Thursday

 Today we will hear Seth's, Luca's and maybe Gwen's presentation. Remember tomorrow is the last day for late work. 

I will then give you some time to finish the study questions from yesterday and earlier this week as only two of the class turned them in.



Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Wednesday

 Today we will review Oedipus Rex. 


In groups answer the following questions:

Oedipus Rex
Be able to answer the following:
1) How does Oedipus Rex fit the traditional role of a Tragic Hero?
2) What does the chorus do in a Greek play?  What is their function?
3) How does this play fit the theme: Person vs. Fate.
4) List two ironies in this play and discuss why they are ironic.
6) What is the climax of the play?
7) What is the resolution?
8)   Discuss the purpose of the following parts of a Greek tragedy:
Prologue:

Exodus:

9) Why does Iocaste tell Oedipus about her baby?  What detail of her story catches Oedipus’s attention?  What does he begin to suspect?
10) Who is the Messenger?  What message does he bring and what does he reveal about Oedipus’s past?
11) What does the shepherd finally reveal?  Why is he so reluctant to say it?
12) Who does Oedipus say is responsible for his actions?
13) What moral does the Chorus see in all this?
14) Why do Oedipus and Teiresias quarrel? 


Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Tuesday

Today we will continue to read Oedipus Rex. You will have some time at the beginning of class to work on study questions. 




Oedipus Rex

Prologue: A monologue or dialogue preceding the entry of the chorus, which presents the tragedy's topic or theme.

Parodos: (Entrance Ode) Refers to the section of the play following the prologue, in which the chorus enters chanting or singing verses.

Odes - Refers to songs sung by the chorus throughout the play. There are two sections:
1) Strophe: (turn) A stanza in which the chorus moves in one direction
2) Antistrophe:(counter-turn) A stanza in which the chorus moves in the opposite direction

Exodus: (Exit Song) Refers to the section of the play in which the chorus leaves chanting or singing.

Chorus: 12-15 actors. The chorus comments on themes, and shows how an ideal audience might react to the drama. It also can represent the general city or town people within a story. 



Monday, December 9, 2024

Monday



 

Today we will continue to read Oedipus Rex. You will have some time at the beginning of class to work on study questions. 

Oedipus Rex

Prologue: A monologue or dialogue preceding the entry of the chorus, which presents the tragedy's topic or theme.

Parodos: (Entrance Ode) Refers to the section of the play following the prologue, in which the chorus enters chanting or singing verses.

Odes - Refers to songs sung by the chorus throughout the play. There are two sections:
1) Strophe: (turn) A stanza in which the chorus moves in one direction
2) Antistrophe:(counter-turn) A stanza in which the chorus moves in the opposite direction

Exodus: (Exit Song) Refers to the section of the play in which the chorus leaves chanting or singing.

Chorus: 12-15 actors. The chorus comments on themes, and shows how an ideal audience might react to the drama. It also can represent the general city or town people within a story. 



Thursday, December 5, 2024

Thursday/Friday

Today we will continue to read Oedipus Rex. You will have some time at the beginning of class to work on study questions. 

Oedipus Rex

Prologue: A monologue or dialogue preceding the entry of the chorus, which presents the tragedy's topic or theme.

Parodos: (Entrance Ode) Refers to the section of the play following the prologue, in which the chorus enters chanting or singing verses.

Odes - Refers to songs sung by the chorus throughout the play. There are two sections:
1) Strophe: (turn) A stanza in which the chorus moves in one direction
2) Antistrophe:(counter-turn) A stanza in which the chorus moves in the opposite direction

Exodus: (Exit Song) Refers to the section of the play in which the chorus leaves chanting or singing.

Chorus: 12-15 actors. The chorus comments on themes, and shows how an ideal audience might react to the drama. It also can represent the general city or town people within a story. 







Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Wednesday

 Presentations. 

I'll give you a few minutes at the beginning of class to get your material together and then we will be presentations.

Monday, December 2, 2024

Tuesday

 Please work on either your presentations or your essays.

The presentation can include or should include 1) A hook, 2) an overview of what you learned reading the book, 3) a overview of what you wrote your essays on, 4) a visual aid, and 5) a conclusion.

You should put your presentation on note cards.  You could also do your presentation as a PPT.

Presentations will be tomorrow - Tuesday, December 3rd.

It's up to you.  I will introduce the Oral Presentation Rubric.


Criteria
Exceeds Standard (3)
Meets Standard (2)
Needs Improvement (1)
Volume: How well you can be heard
Voice is loud and clear without the student yelling.  All words are heard.  Student projects words from their diaphragm.
Voice is loud throughout most of presentation.  One or more words might be lost because of projection of volume, but the idea is still clear.
Voice fades in places so that the listener loses or misses parts of the presentation, or parts of the idea
Pronunciation: How well you say all your words
Words are pronounced perfectly and sentences flow off of tongue
The speaker trips in one or two places either in the pronunciation of a word or in reading a sentence.  The presentation is effected only slightly by the mistakes.
The speaker trips in quite a few places.  The presentation is effected more than slightly by the mistakes.   Mistakes either make the presentation hard to listen to or cloud the ideas of the writing
Tone: Do you vary how you say your sentences
Speaker as Actor:  The speaker’s delivery makes the writing come alive by giving it emotion, character, emphasis, by breathing life into it
Speaker varies most of sentences to express emotion or to emphasis importance of parts, but there are still places when the speaker spoke in a lifeless monotone
Speaker speaks in a monotone that reveals no emotion or does not emphasis any importance on any idea
UHMS or AHS
NONE
1 or 2 but the uhms or ahs do not distract the presentation
3 or more uhms or ahs
Eye Contact: do you look at your audience
The speaker made a point to look at everyone in the room and rarely looked as if they were reading from a paper
Some eye contact is made, but mostly the presenter read off of his or her paper
Little or no eye contact. 

Saturday, November 30, 2024

Monday

Please work on either your presentations or your essays.

The presentation can include or should include 1) A hook, 2) an overview of what you learned reading the book, 3) a overview of what you wrote your essays on, 4) a visual aid, and 5) a conclusion.

You should put your presentation on note cards.  You could also do your presentation as a PPT.

Presentations will be tomorrow - Tuesday, December 3rd.

It's up to you.  I will introduce the Oral Presentation Rubric.


Criteria
Exceeds Standard (3)
Meets Standard (2)
Needs Improvement (1)
Volume: How well you can be heard
Voice is loud and clear without the student yelling.  All words are heard.  Student projects words from their diaphragm.
Voice is loud throughout most of presentation.  One or more words might be lost because of projection of volume, but the idea is still clear.
Voice fades in places so that the listener loses or misses parts of the presentation, or parts of the idea
Pronunciation: How well you say all your words
Words are pronounced perfectly and sentences flow off of tongue
The speaker trips in one or two places either in the pronunciation of a word or in reading a sentence.  The presentation is effected only slightly by the mistakes.
The speaker trips in quite a few places.  The presentation is effected more than slightly by the mistakes.   Mistakes either make the presentation hard to listen to or cloud the ideas of the writing
Tone: Do you vary how you say your sentences
Speaker as Actor:  The speaker’s delivery makes the writing come alive by giving it emotion, character, emphasis, by breathing life into it
Speaker varies most of sentences to express emotion or to emphasis importance of parts, but there are still places when the speaker spoke in a lifeless monotone
Speaker speaks in a monotone that reveals no emotion or does not emphasis any importance on any idea
UHMS or AHS
NONE
1 or 2 but the uhms or ahs do not distract the presentation
3 or more uhms or ahs
Eye Contact: do you look at your audience
The speaker made a point to look at everyone in the room and rarely looked as if they were reading from a paper
Some eye contact is made, but mostly the presenter read off of his or her paper
Little or no eye contact. 

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Thursday

 Today you should be working on your personal response essay. Tomorrow you should start to prepare your presentation.

Book Review/ Personal Response:  Give a detailed summary of the book.  What did you like?  What did you not like?  Would you recommend this book to a friend?  Why or why not?
 
THE LITERARY ANALYSIS: Choose one literary element of the book and develop a thesis around it.  Back up your thesis statements with proof from the text.  This paper should be at least 3 pages.
 
THE CONNECTION: 1-2 pages connecting the novel to a short story read in class.  You may focus on theme, characterization (think dynamic), or figurative language.
 
THE PRESENTATION:  3 minutes—this should be an overview of your project and what you learned.  It should include a visual aid. 

Monday, November 18, 2024

Wednesday

If you have finished you'll analysis essay please let me know and I will look over it. You should be on your 2nd essay by today. If you are not, you will probably be working on these essays over the break.

The 2nd essay is the "Connection/Comparison" - you should compare The Catcher in the Rye with another book/short story read in class - "Harrison Bergeron" "The Pedestrian" "There Will Come Soft Rains" and Fahrenheit 451 , To Kill A Mockingbird should be easy fits.  

THE CONNECTION: 1-2 pages connecting the novel to a short story read in class.  You may focus on theme, characterization (think dynamic), or figurative language.

Book Review/ Personal Response:  Give a summary of the book.  What did you like?  What did you not like?  Would you recommend this book to a friend?  Why or why not? This should be 1 - 1 1/2 pages. (50 pts).

CREATIVE PART/VISUAL AID:

 


GRADING SCALE for READING LOGS:
4 – The student analyzes what happens in a chapter and the noteworthy literary elements in the chapter to larger ideas (themes) and how they relate to the novel as a whole. Journal has a short but detailed summary (synopsis), 3-4 noteworthy literary elements, and 3-4 unfamiliar words (vocabulary). 
3 – The student can analyze what happened in a chapter and make connections with larger themes or how the action in the chapter connects/relates to the novel as a whole.  The student is beginning to analyze the meaning of literary devices in connection with larger meanings (example how symbols reinforce main ideas).  Journal has a short detailed summary (synopsis), 2-3 noteworthy literary elements, and 2-3 unfamiliar words (vocabulary).
2 – The student can summarize the events in a chapter discussing what happened with good detail.  The student can list literary devices but might not be able to analyze them and connect them to larger ideas.  The student is beginning to make connections between what happened in a chapter and how it reinforces larger themes.  Journal could also be missing vocabulary words or might only list literary elements.
1 – The student can summarize events in the chapter, but is not able to accurate list literary devices or make connections on how the chapter reinforces larger themes or ideas.  
 
 
Unit Learning goal: Students will be able to create a multi-part literary project that details the following items:
 
The Literature Project  
Rationale: The purpose of this project is to assess your ability to read, summarize, analyze, and connect pieces of literature as well as assess your writing skills.  This is your chance to show me everything you know and have learned.  This is your chance to dazzle, shine, dance, sing, shout (during your presentation).
 
Assignment: You will read A Brave New World.  This final project will consist of five parts. 
 
1) A reading log revealing your engagement with the literature.  This part should be very thorough and should contain all the things listed below.
2) A creative connection
3) A book summary/personal response paper
4) An analysis focusing primarily on the development of one striking element in the novel: symbolism, characterization, figurative language, theme, plot and how that element contributes to the development of the novel’s overall meaning.
5) A connection—a one page paper connecting the book to a short story or novel read last year by either symbolism or theme. 
6) A presentation (this could be creative—and has to be 3 minutes with visual aids): this is an overview of your project and your understanding of the novel.
 
POINT VALUES: The analysis is worth 100 points each.  The log, creative connection, personal response, presentation, and connections are worth 50 points each.  Therefore, the total point value is 350 points.  This is nearly your entire project grade for the semester.

EXPECTATIONS:

THE READING LOG:  The reading log reveals your engagement with literature.  Furthermore, a detailed reading log will significantly aid you in the development of the rest of the project.  After reading each chapter, you should write in your log:
n  A short synopsis of the action and character development
n  Your interpretation of the significant events occurring in the chapter
n  Noteworthy figurative language and other literary elements
n  Vocabulary—unfamiliar words
 
Please note that the copying of Cliff Notes or Internet Sites is plagiarism.  I want only your thoughts, don’t steal.  Cheating will equal a ZERO. 
 
THE CREATIVE PART:  Choose one of the three options below:
A) Take a minor character and write a 1-2 page monologue / journal entry about what they think of the situation / action / motivations in the book so far. 

B) Make a newspaper story about one of the major events of the novel. How would a journalist take on those events and how would that story be different than John or Bernard's perspective.

C) Draw a picture (or some sort of visual representation) drawing from the reading. Be sure to include a written component explaining why you chose to create your visual representation.

 
Book Review/ Personal Response:  Give a detailed summary of the book.  What did you like?  What did you not like?  Would you recommend this book to a friend?  Why or why not?
 
THE LITERARY ANALYSIS: Choose one literary element of the book and develop a thesis around it.  Back up your thesis statements with proof from the text.  This paper should be at least 3 pages.
 
THE CONNECTION: 1-2 pages connecting the novel to a short story read in class.  You may focus on theme, characterization (think dynamic), or figurative language.
 
THE PRESENTATION:  3 minutes—this should be an overview of your project and what you learned.  It should include a visual aid. 

Monday

 Today we need to take notes on dashes and commas and discuss your review guide and test. The test will be on Wednesday. We also need to dis...