Friday, May 29, 2015

Old Man Signpost Notes

Take another look at your signpost notes for Old Man.  Do you notice any patterns or connections between your observations?  Is there an observation that you have made that you think is particularly significant and meaningful?  In the comment section below, please explain your insights into the book using your signpost notes as a springboard.


Contrasts and Contradictions: When a character does something 
that contrasts with what you would expect or contradicts his earlier
 acts or statement, STOP and ask “Why is the character doing that?”
Aha Moment: When a character realizes, understands, or finally 
figures out something, STOP and ask yourself “How might this
 change things?”
Tough Question: When a character asks herself a very difficult 
question, STOP and ask yourself “What does this question make me
 wonder about?”
Words of the Wiser: When a character (probably older and wiser) 
takes the main character aside and offers serious advice, STOP and 
ask, “What’s the life lesson and how might it affect the character?”
Again and Again: When you notice a word, phrase, or situation 
mentioned over and over, STOP and ask yourself, “Why does this 
keep happening?”
Memory Moment: When the author interrupts the action to tell 
you about a memory, STOP and ask yourself, “Why might this 
memory be important?”

Monday, May 11, 2015

Quiet Desperation in the Lecture Hall

Hi Everyone: In light of our visit from Henry David Thoreau, and our discussions about argumentation, write a response to the lecture in which you identify what you think Thoreau's principal claim is and what you think about it.  I understand that the lecture may have been hard to follow in the lecture hall, so I excerpted some crucial parts and handed them out in class.  Check the bookshelf if you didn't get one.  Please have your responses in by Wednesday evening.  Thank you, Mr. Telles.

Thursday, April 9, 2015

Macbeth Final Post

For this post, please copy a short passage from the later acts of the play, and discuss what you think the passage means and why it is significant to the play as a whole.  What complicated themes or ideas are being explored in the passage as well as in the whole play?  Why are these themes or ideas important (in other words, "it's interesting, but so what?").

Finally, just add a few thoughts about your personal reactions to the play and your final thoughts about the play now that you have finished it.

This blog post is due by Monday, April 13th.  Thank you, Mr. Telles.

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Macbeth, Act I Motif Study.

Now that we have finished Act I of Macbeth, and have scanned the text for examples of the motifs I listed before we began reading, write a response in which you use your annotations to help you 1) demonstrate an understanding of the passage in the context of the play and 2) identify and discuss the significance of your motif within the passage.  Why is it meaningful, and how is Shakespeare playing with motif symbolically?

Here, again, is a list of motifs, and if you find one on your own, that's even better.

Things that grow (seeds, eggs, etc.)
Blood
Paradoxes
Rings (things that fold back upon themselves).
Hands
Sharp Objects (cutting through coverings).
Darkness
Vision / eyes
Fog / Murk
Time
Garments that don't fit.
Jewels
"Manliness" / Femininity
Gluttony / over-eating

Dichotomies:
Healthy bodies / dismembered bodies
Cleanliness / Dirtiness
Fairness / Foulness
Illusion / Reality.
Health / Sickness.

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Hi Everyone: Here is the midterm vocab and other units.  Keep in mind that there is a significant part of the midterm devoted to text of Huckleberry Finn.

English 10
Mr. Telles
Midterm Vocabulary

  1. Antagonism                        41.  Scapegoat
  2. Ideology                               42.  Sagacious
  3. Paradox                                43.  Shrewd
  4. Iniquity                                 44.  Abhorrent
  5. Evasion                                45.  Aversion
  6. Parochial                             46.  Conscience
  7. Primal                                   47.  Jest
  8. Hysteria                               48.  Meddle
  9. Symbol                                 49.  Gaudy
  10. Cynicism                             50.  Trifling
  11. Communal
  12. Maturity                               GRAMMAR UNITS
  13. Romanticize                       1.  Subject, Object, Indirect Object I.D.
  14. Oracle                                   2.  Passive and Active Voice
  15. Ingenuity                             3.  Subject / Verb Agreement
  16. Irony                                      4.  Phrases and Clauses
  17. Authenticity                        5.  Verb Tenses
  18. Regionalism                       6.  Parallel Structure
  19. Identity                                 OTHER UNITS
  20. Satire                                     1.  Poetry Terms (see worksheet)
  21. Picaresque
  22. Oppression                         ESSAY
  23. Antebellum                         Question #1 (On Huck Finn and Modern Times)
  24. Dialect                                 
  25. Culture                                 Question #2 (On Huck Finn)   Sep. Handout.
  26. Pathos
  27. Equivocation
  28. Simile
  29. Metaphor
  30. Personification
  31. Onomatopoeia
  32. Assonance
  33. Consonance
  34. Hyperbole
  35. Alliteration
  36. Allusion
  37. Satire
  38. Apostrophe
  39. Imagery
  40. Class

Monday, January 5, 2015

Search-a-Word Format.

Hi Everyone:

Here is a description of the three graded parts of your search-a-word project:

1.  What You Found: For this part, simply create a little heading (e.g. Unabridged Dictionary or Oxford English Dictionary) and the simply copy down the information that you collected from that source. 

2.  Works Cited: For this part, create a Works Cited page based strictly on MLA format.  You can use on-line sources like Easybib, but make sure you proofread the final page and check for common problems (for instance, forgetting to alphabetize or use hanging indentations).

3.  Four responses: For this part, simply respond to each of the four follow-up questions which were handed out to the class before research.  Do this in a standard open response format (10 or more sentences).

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Huck Finn: Chapters 12-19.

Hi Everyone: For this post, choose a scene from Chapters 12-19 in Huck Finn that stands out to you as significant or meaningful.  In your post, explain what stands out to you in the passage and explain why the scene is essential or meaningful to the story so far.  Include a line or two from the passage.