
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Monday, February 24, 2014
Rubric for Research/Literary Analysis Paper
The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn- Research/Literary Analysis Paper
DUE: March 11 for A day classes, March 12 for B
day classes
235 points
Late papers will receive half the credit they would have
otherwise received, and probably half the comments from me.
Please familiarize yourself with this rubric, as your grade
will be derived from it.
Name____________________________________________ Period_____
Date turned in______
1. Title page with name, date,
teacher’s name, title, class, and period
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5
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2. Typed, double spaced, 14 font, no spaces
between paragraphs, Times New Roman font.
I can’t accept a paper that is not typed. (Three pages minimum, and of course,
you will be docked far more than ten points if you come up short.)
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10
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3. Introduction has an attention-getting
device that is appropriate for this type of scholarly paper.
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15
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4. Thesis statement is
well-crafted, thoughtful, and gives the reader a road map of your paper. No laundry list thesis statements. Think “over-arching.”
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20
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5. Paper is
well-organized. Topic sentences are
clear, mini-thesis statements for each paragraph. All sentence belong in their paragraphs. Transitions are evident.
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20
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6. Sentence structure is sound
and varied.
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10
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7. Paper contains few or no
mechanical errors, such as punctuation, spelling, grammar, and usage.
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10
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8. Strong conclusion ties all
the information into a nice package.
Your thesis is proven. (No new
information in conclusion.)
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15
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A minimum
of three sources
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40
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10. This paper has accurate parenthetical
documentation throughout. Refer to:
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/01/
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40
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11. Ideas are fresh and
interesting. Research is obvious. You have not merely written off the top of
your head, rather you have studied and pondered. You have come up with ideas that are sound
and logical.
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25
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12. Meaningful quotations are
woven seamlessly into your own sentences.
Set up the quote. If you can
paraphrase, paraphrase. If, however,
the citation you found is oh-so-wonderful as is, by all means, cite it in all
its splendor.
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25
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TOTAL
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235
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Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Thursday, January 30, 2014
You need to do this.
If you were absent in class the day we watched the following video clips, you need to watch them at home. I need a half page written response to the first one. After you view the second one, make a T square on your paper, and write the main arguments of both professors.
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Term 3 Calendar
January 20 MLK
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1-21 Teacher Prep Day
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1-22 A
Review protocol, Intro: ACT, Twain Quotes
Intro: Huck Finn
Draw from hat for presentation date.
New vocabulary
|
1-23 B Review protocol, Intro: ACT,
Twain Quotes
Intro: Huck Finn
Draw from hat for presentation date.
New vocabulary
|
1-24 A
Mock ACT test #1, 50 pts
HF quiz 1-4 50 pts
Doll’s House Book Card Due: 100 points
Motif Groups
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1-27 B A Mock ACT test #1, 50 pts
HF quiz 1-4 50 pts
Doll’s House Book Card due: 100 points
Motif Groups
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1-28 A HF
quiz 5-8,
Three ACT quizlets, 30 pts Motif Groups
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1-29 B
HF quiz 5-8, three ACT quizlets, 30 points
Motif Groups
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1-30 A HF quiz 9-12, three ACT quizlets, 30 pts,
Motif Groups
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1-31 B
HF quiz 9-12,
ACT quizlets, 30 pts
Motif Groups
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2-3 A
HF quiz 13-16, three ACT quizlets,
Motif Groups
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2-4 B HF quiz 13-16, three ACT quizlets
Motif Groups
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2-5 A
HF quiz 17-19, three ACT quizlets,
Past Particples/prep for time writing
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FEB 6 B HF quiz 17-19, three ACT
quizlets,
Past Participles/ prep for timed
writing
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FEB 7 A
HF quiz 20-23,
Junior Timed Writing, 5th
floor lab
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FEB 10 B HF quiz 20-23, Junior Timed
Writing, 5th floor lab
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FEB 11 A HF quiz 24-26, three ACT quizlets,
Quotation Marks
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FEB 12 B HF quiz 24-26, three ACT quizlets,
Quotation Marks
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FEB 13 A HF quiz 27-30,
Mock ACT test #2
Parallel Structure
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FEB 14 B HF quiz 27-30
Mock ACT test #2
Parallel Structure
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FEB 17 Presidents Day
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FEB 18 A HF quiz 31-33, past participle
quiz, 50 points Motif Groups
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FEB 19 B HF
quiz 31-33, past participle quiz, 50 points Motif Groups
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FEB 20 A HF 34-37, comma rules, MOCK
ACT TEST, 50 points
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FEB 21 B
HF 34-37, comma rules, MOCK ACT TEST,
50 points
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FEB 24 A HF quiz 38-41, comma quiz,
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FEB 25 B HF quiz 38-41, comma quiz,
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FEB 26 A HF 42-end quiz, Vocab Quiz
Thesis statement due at the end of the
period: 50 Library points: 40
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FEB 27 B HF 42-end quiz, Vocab Quiz
Thesis statement due at the end of the
period: 50 Library points: 40
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FEB 28 A Outline due
Blending quotations in correctly, Verbs
to use in analysis
Mock ACT test #3
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MARCH 3 B Outline due
Blending quotations in correctly, Verbs
to use in analysis
Mock ACT test #3
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MARCH 4 ACT test for juniors. Everyone else stays home.
A/B day
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MARCH 5 A Huck Finn Final Test
Sentence variety
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MARCH 6 B Huck Finn Final Test
Sentence variety
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3-7 A
MLA
Memorized Mark Twain Quote Due: 30 points
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3-10 B
MLA
Memorized Mark Twain Quote Due: 30 points
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3-11 A
Huck Finn Paper Due: 200 points
I will model the presentation.
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3-12 B Huck Finn Paper Due: 200 points
I will model the presentation.
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3-13 A Presentations/
Critiquing (5) Individual for IB, pairs for Honors
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3-14 B Presentations/Critiquing
(5) Individual for IB, pairs for
Honors
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3-17 A
Presentations/
Critiquing (5) )
Individual for IB, pairs for Honors
|
3-18 B Presentations/
Critiquing (3) Individual for IB, pairs for Honors
|
3-19 A
Presentations/
Critiquing (5) )
Individual for IB, pairs for Honors
THIS IS THE LAST DAY I WILL ACCEPT LATE
WORK!
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3-20 B Presentations/Critiquing
(5) Individual for IB, pairs for
Honors
THIS IS THE LAST DAY I WILL ACCEPT LATE
WORK!
|
3-21 A
Presentations/Critiquing (5) Individual for IB, pairs for Honors
|
3-24 B Presentations/
Critiquing (5) Individual for IB, pairs for Honors
|
3-25 A Presentations/
Critiquing (3)
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3-26 B Presentations/
Critiquing (5)
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3-27 A See the message on
March 19, 20 about late work. L
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Spring Break
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Literature
Choices for presentations: The Crucible, The John and Abigail Adams
Letters, The Scarlet Letter, and The Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn. Honors students may also use A Doll’s House.
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
A Doll's House Vocabulary
1. Spendthrift
2. Tremendous
3. Caprice
4. Unassailable
5. Ascertained
6. Dissimulation
7. Obstinate
8. Inexorable
9. Amicably
10. Tarantella
11. Prudent
12. Apparition
13. Consternation
14. Repudiate
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Poetry Assignment
100 points
Memorized Poem: Due: On the day you signed up on the door
100 points
Poetry Log Guidelines: Due January 10 for A day, January 13 for B day
After reading several poems, you must select at least ten different poems by at least seven different poets to include in this collection. You may not use poems we have discussed in class, but you may use other poems by poets we have discussed in class.
Copy each poem into your collection. Be sure to include the title and the poet’s name.
You must annotate, using circles, arrows, whatever, to mark and label the poetic devices the poet used in each poem. Be thorough, as you will be deducted for glaring omissions.
You will then write (by that, I mean type) a paragraph for each poem, explicating each one. Look for a "door" into the poem. Is there a point of tension? Is there a shift at some point? You may discuss such as symbols, tone, allusions, alliteration, assonance, rhyme scheme, meter, rhythm, and any other poetic devices used, but be sure to say what those devices DO for the poem. Don’t just note their presence. That’s what the annotations were for. Make meaning. Consider the title. Consider meaning. Make a claim, and back it up. You can do this.
100 points
Original Poetry Booklet Guidelines: Due January 10 for A day, January 13 for B day
You will create ten original poems, using at least seven different forms we’ve learned about in class.
Three, and only three poems may rhyme. At least one poem must rhyme.
Use examples of every poetic device we’ve learned about. (Obviously, you can’t use them all on one poem, but over the course of this assignment, you should utilize each device at least once.)
Look back at some of our poetry experiences in class. Some can be worked up into fine poem.
You need to make an attractive cover, so that the likelihood that you will end up saving this booklet and showing it to your grandchildren is increased.
Please make every attempt to avoid clichés, those over-used, worn out expressions that we’ve all heard before. They have lost their luster, and they will detract from your poem, rather than enhance it. I’m looking for fresh perspectives, unique metaphors, the originality that only you can bring to this assignment. While I’m sure it would be very easy to get away with plagiarizing these poems, I would hope that your honor and your own sense of self would prevent that. Impress me. But more important than that, impress yourself.
Memorized Poem: Due: On the day you signed up on the door
100 points
Poetry Log Guidelines: Due January 10 for A day, January 13 for B day
Copy each poem into your collection. Be sure to include the title and the poet’s name.
You must annotate, using circles, arrows, whatever, to mark and label the poetic devices the poet used in each poem. Be thorough, as you will be deducted for glaring omissions.
You will then write (by that, I mean type) a paragraph for each poem, explicating each one. Look for a "door" into the poem. Is there a point of tension? Is there a shift at some point? You may discuss such as symbols, tone, allusions, alliteration, assonance, rhyme scheme, meter, rhythm, and any other poetic devices used, but be sure to say what those devices DO for the poem. Don’t just note their presence. That’s what the annotations were for. Make meaning. Consider the title. Consider meaning. Make a claim, and back it up. You can do this.
100 points
Original Poetry Booklet Guidelines: Due January 10 for A day, January 13 for B day
Three, and only three poems may rhyme. At least one poem must rhyme.
Use examples of every poetic device we’ve learned about. (Obviously, you can’t use them all on one poem, but over the course of this assignment, you should utilize each device at least once.)
Look back at some of our poetry experiences in class. Some can be worked up into fine poem.
You need to make an attractive cover, so that the likelihood that you will end up saving this booklet and showing it to your grandchildren is increased.
Please make every attempt to avoid clichés, those over-used, worn out expressions that we’ve all heard before. They have lost their luster, and they will detract from your poem, rather than enhance it. I’m looking for fresh perspectives, unique metaphors, the originality that only you can bring to this assignment. While I’m sure it would be very easy to get away with plagiarizing these poems, I would hope that your honor and your own sense of self would prevent that. Impress me. But more important than that, impress yourself.
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