Thursday, May 8, 2014

AP Lit. Circle Presentations



 I.         Background on your author’s life and literary career (awards, accomplishments, teaching positions) (PowerPt.)  [2 minutes]

II. A brief exposition of the story – the basics, sans Spoilers, in 60 seconds or less. Situate your audience in the setting, the characters, and the themes of this novel.  (No PowerPt.)  [1 minute]

III.  Notes on the critical reception of your book.  Quote published commentary on your book.  (No PowerPt.)  (See Part V, below.)  [2 minutes.]  

LITERARY RESEARCH ON JSTOR
JSTOR is a database for literary research.  Once you're inside  JSTOR, you can do literary research on almost any book published before the year 2000.  To enter the JSTOR portal and use the big database, COPY the number 21972069409410 and PASTE it into the window for the JSTOR portal in the Hennepin County Library Databases.  


IV. Read aloud two excerpts: one from the first half; one from the second half. Share an annotated close reading analysis of each excerpt, discussing your author’s style.  (PowerPt.)  [10 minutes]

V. ESSAY. Each group will be required to compose a short, AP-Lit-like essay. Choose a prompt from the website for the AP exam in Literature (12th grade exam/FRQ #3) and respond to the prompt using your novel. 4-6 paragraphs, Typed & double-spaced. READ THE FIRST TWO PARAGRAPHS OF YOUR ESSAY OUT LOUD during your presentation, and hand in your paper the day you present.  Your essay should effectively synthesize at least two of the sources you cite in Part III (above), reinforcing positions you take about your novel or play.  More on this after we get back from the AP exam.  [2 minutes]  This is the link to the exam page for AP English Literature and Composition.  See Essay Question 3.

VI.  Recommend this book.  Who should read it this summer?  Who should not read it?  How long will it take to read?   Q & A  [2 minutes]

PowerPoint segments must be delivered facing the audience.  No A’s for groups who read from the SmartBoard.  Present facing the house!

Rehearsals:  May 27 and 28          Presentations:  May 29 & 30

Friday, May 2, 2014

Week of May 5 - 9 -- THIS IS IT!

WEEKEND READING FOR MONDAY
"Women's Brains," by Stephen Jay Gould (LOC, pp. 349-354)  Answer the five "Questions for Discussion," p. 354.  Bring your copy of "Tone Words" to class every day this coming week.

Monday, May 5
In class:
Score I-CE #4.  Discuss "Women's Brains"!  Whether you're a man or a woman, please be accountable for "Women's Brains."  Lit Circle groups meet and determine reading schedules.  All outstanding homework:  graded & back to you.

Monday homework:  Advance in your Lit Circle novel, per your group's reading schedule.

Tuesday, May 6
In class:
AP Argument Essay -- full out.  2004 Form B argument essay.

Tuesday homework:  Advance in your Lit Circle novel, per your group's reading schedule.  Please bring Lit Circle selections to Wednesday's class.

Wednesday, May 7
In class:
Discuss 2004 Form B Argument Essay.  (See the three student essays (9, 8, 6), and review the AP Scoring Commentary for the three essays online.)  Vocabulary review.  Tone word exercise.  Grammar challenges.  Schedule reading in Lit Circle selections.

Wednesday homework:  Sleep Soundly.

Thursday, May 8
In class:  Scrabble Day / Nap Day.

Thursday homework:  Sleep Soundly.

Friday, May 9
THIS IS IT.  7:45 a.m., Downstairs Gym entrance.  #2 pencils.  Dark ink pens.  Wristwatch.  And GOOD LUCK.