Monday, October 28, 2013

Monday/Tuesday



Choose one of the following (or devise one of your own) to present individually or in teams of two:

1. With a partner or not, make a case for or against

Boy Willie's rights to the piano

Berniece's rights to the piano

    Introductory arguments (generalities that you intend to prove)

    Presentation of evidence

    Visual aid to enhance arguments (not to replace or substitute for them)

    Closing arguments

2. With a partner or not, present an argument detailing the roles of dreams, visions, and mysterious monologues in the play. You must present with a visual aid that enhances your argument but does not replace or substitute for it. You must build a case for a purposeful role.

3. With a partner or not, present an argument detailing the role of songs in the play. You must use a visual or audio-visual aid. You must build a case for a purposeful role.

4. With a partner or not, present an argument detailing Berniece's role in the play with regard to her various relationships. You must use a visual or audio-visual aid.You must build a case for a purposeful role.

5. With a partner or not, develop a case on a topic of your own device. You must use a visual or audio-visual aid. You must build a case for a purposeful role. (ghosts? trains? prison? money? whiskey? marriage?)

6. With a partner or not, present an argument detailing the role of competing world/spiritual views in the play. You must use a visual or auido-visual aid. Build a case for a purposeful role.

Presentations should last for 8-10 minutes.

If you have wishes or desires to contribute to the rubrics and timelines, think of them for next class (Wednesday/Thursday). This will be a major grade for the nine weeks. Presentations due November 21-26.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

ALERT

Blog assignments must be done by grade deadlines – before tomorrow, Friday!

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Tuesday/Wednesday

What is the importance of music? Think of your personal experience with it and with your understanding of its effects on groups of people. Does it have a...purpose?

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Wednesday

3. Classify the characters who have appeared so far with a brief description and some evidence of their character cited from the text. (Boy Willie, Lymon, Doaker, Berniece, Maretha, Avery, Wining Boy)
4. What or who are the "Ghosts of the Yellow Dog"?
5. Compare and contrast Boy Willie's attitude toward the piano with Berniece's.
6. Compare and contrast Doaker's railroad speech on page 18 with Avery's speech about the three hobos. Let your thoughts dwell here a while. Note the content and images of each speech. Which one seems to you the most authentic? Then look at Doaker and Wining Boy's convesation on Pages 28-30. Then read Wining Boy's "piano" speech on page 41. What conflict is Wilson setting up among these various viewpoints?
7. How does the allusion at the end of the scene influence your evaluation of Boy Willie's attitude toward the piano?
8. Combine with at least two others. Determine the crux of Act 1.i -- the absolute central moment. Then, with the others, prepare a tableau of the scene.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Tuesday

Vow today upon a stack of all you find holy never to say "it's basically saying" again in your life.

A commentary is not about what a poem "basically says" but about all the poem suggests during the process of the reading experience and then all it suggests in its totality after reading -- and it must be done with an emphasis on craft: HOW does it do that suggesting?

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Tuesday

Today we tried a timed commentary. Good efforts, it appeared...

Next class meeting, have the play read and plan a TABLEAU of what you consider the most important part of the first scene (pages 1-28).

Monday, October 7, 2013

Monday

Consider what you find to be the very center, the crux, of the play's first scene. That is SCENE.

Plan a still-life demonstration of the tensions and stress-points in that moment. It is called (thanks, Mr. Chrismon!) a TABLEAU!

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Tuesday

Today we finally completed class efforts at a practice oral. Expect a timed written commentary on October 8. We will meet as an entire class in the auditorium to conduct the commentary.

Next class period we begin work on August Wilson's play The Piano Lesson.

Friday, September 27, 2013

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Orals

It is important that your commentary be continuous: do not stop the recording to doll it up. Keep the recorder going the whole time, keep looking at the poem, and keep talking about it.

 

Send me the file. Listen to your own oral and assess yourself.

 

After that, you are clear to delete the file from your phone.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Tuesday

Today we discussed and annotated "Love's Alchemy." Students then annotated "Song" and will perform an oral commentary on it Thursday.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Thursday Deadline Alert!

We can discuss the final explication due date when I have returned the second drafts! They obviously will not be due on the 23/24.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Tuesday

Today we read and studied “Holy Sonnet X” and worked on the imaginaterpretive thing, which is due for B-day tomorrow and for  A-day Thursday and B-day Friday.

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Thursday

Today we studied "Holy Sonnet XIV" and worked on either explications (due 15/16) or imaginative interpretations (due 19/20).

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Tuesday

I hereby submit for your perusal a draft rubric for the Imaginative Interpretation. No comment means it becomes the official scorecard. If the one requirement -- that the poem be clearly apparent either visually or aurally during the interpretation -- is lacking, you just have to apply for a do-over.


Scoring guide for Imaginative Interpretation

Time: 3-6 minutes
Over/under 30 secs
Over/under 1:00
Over/under 1:30
Over/under 2:00
20
15
10
5
0
Clear, precise, internalized understanding apparent
Good understanding of the poem apparent
Basic understanding apparent
Gaps and inconsistencies in understanding apparent
No or very little grasp of the poem’s literal meaning apparent
40
35
30
25
20
Extremely creative, brilliant illumination of poem; it creates a new insight or movingly makes personal use of it
Creative adaptations that provoke alternative  understandings
Some creative adaptations to provide some interpretation of the poem; somewhat insightful
Attempt at creative adaptation that may not lead to new understandings; flat interpretation
Standard, get ‘er done attempt to illustrate the poem; no new insights
40
35
30
25
20
Awesomeness bonus meter
5
4
3
2
1

Monday, September 9, 2013

Monday

Grades are current in the gradebook.

 

Please bring in any supplies necessary to work on your imaginaterpretive thing. A-day set a high standard with their recitations!

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Wednesday

Please be sure to bring whatever materials (laptops, cameras, whatever) that you will need to prepare for your assignments in case we have a little class time we can set aside for that.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Tuesday/Wednesday

Look at the poems in the packet linked to the right as "Donne Packet." Rank about 10 of them in order of preference: one poem for a memorization, one for an explication, one for an IMAGINATERPRETIVE WORLD ROCKER THING. See the ManageBac calendar for due dates. You may have up to THREE (no more, absolutely not) working on the IWRT.

Here is the complete set of assignments for the first five weeks:



English 5 IB, Q1, Weeks 1-5
J. Koon, instructor

The first set of assignments consists of a drafted writing piece (an explication of a John Donne poem), a performance piece (a memorized recitation of a separate Donne poem), and an imaginative interpretation of a third Donne poem. For the third piece (the imaginative interpretation), students may pair or form groups of three.
First, students should prioritize their choices from the Donne packet of poems posted on my website. I will attempt to spread the assignments for maximum exposure for each poem, so students might not get their first choices for all three assignments. Have these choices prioritized by class on August 30 for B-day and September 3 for A-day.
On September 9/10, two assignments come due: students should perform their memorized recitations, and they should submit a draft of an explication covering at least the first five lines of their assigned poem. I will mark the explication drafts and return them. Students then should explicate the remainder of the poem to the best of their abilities, address all comments and suggestions from me, and turn in a typed, MLA-formatted draft attached to all previous explication work.  I will mark again and return them. Students then revise as instructed to the final, which is due attached to all previous explication work on September 23/24. Students MUST submit preliminary drafts before the subsequent ones. They must follow that process to receive credit. There is no rubric: students are finished when they have done as instructed.
On September 19/20, students should present their imaginative interpretations of a third Donne poem. The poem should be presented in its entirety as at least a soundtrack to the interpretation. Students may create video, Powerpoints, Prezis, musical scores, paintings, dances, or other creations I have not thought of. Students should be prepared to discuss their interpretive choices after the presentations.

September 9/10            *First draft (five lines) explication (Drafted essays)
                                    *Recitation performance (Performance task)

September 16/17          *Entire poem explicated in MLA style (Drafted essays)
                                   
September 19/20          *Imaginative interpretation project (Project)

September 23/24          *Explication final (Drafted essays)



           


 

Monday, August 26, 2013

Monday, B-Day

Continue the assignment started by A-day below. Be sure to add something substantive to the conversation. Some of you with interest in visuals might link or paste some Seventeenth Century art that reveals something about the poetry of Donne. Be sure to comment on it in  a way that makes it clear to us -- and REMEMBER to cite your source informally. Right, Jeb?

Friday, August 23, 2013

Friday, A-Day

Some of you have not complete the first blog assignment!

Do a little research. Document it informally. Report it as a comment on the blog. Someone volunteers to go first. Then, the next post should provide a clear and MEANINGFUL transition that connects his post to the previous one. Say, for instance, that Dara starts with. "According to William Benson in 'A Poet's Life,' John Donne was born to Catholic parents in 1572." Then Morgan follows with, "Although Dara reports that Donne was born Catholic, according to 'The Life of Donne' in The Literary Journals of the Seventeenth Century by James Jones, he later renounced his faith." Due Tuesday.


Connections to investigate

Henry VIII to Elizabeth
Catholic/Protestant tensions
relations of Donne with Thomas More (who was Thomas More?)
relations of Donne with Anne Moore (who was Anne Moore?)
relations of Donne with Ben Jonson (?)
contempory critical responses to his poetry
family life

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Thursday

Do the same thing as assigned to A-day on Wednesday, but put your comments after this post. Also, in the same comment box, tell which quote from a classmate is your favorite (after your own, of course). You may choose from either A-day or B-day quotes.

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Wednesday

Look into any source you want and find a quote from a smart person that you find very striking, profoundly true, or highly inspiring. Post the quote, spelled and punctuated exactly right, as a comment under today’s post.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Exam!

Focus on HOW, not what.

How do the writer's choices (of image, metaphor, subject, structure) develop meaning and emotional effects?
Only analysis -- no paraphrase! No paraphrase. No paraphrase. This note is especially for prose selections.
Write with awareness of speaker/narrator perspective.

How is the piece organized?
Open up metaphors. What is compared to what? Add to what has come before and develop meaning.
What is the subject and predicate of each sentence? Read to see the relationships within the sentences as a way of understanding other relationships in and beyond the poem.

Honor what the sentences actually say.
Overwrite and edit afterward.
Write sensibly, create meaning, and make sense of vagueness and ambiguity.

Good luck! You are ready. Write confidently.

Wednesday

Here is the blog with a teacher's attempt at "July Man." It might help you prep a little. I responded to the link as well. It is much easier managed on a phone or iPad than with a computer, which will ask questions before opening the commentary.

Good luck on the exam. My best hopes are with you.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Thursday Room Change!

MY BAD!

 

We will again meet in Room A123 tomorrow, Thursday, to accommodate HSAP testing.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Tuesday

Good start on the presentations. Meet in A123 tomorrow. Back in regular room Thursday. Keep calendar and deadlines in mind. Who's going to be the first to recite?

Monday, April 15, 2013

Monday 2

B-day Tuesday and A-day Wednesday, meet in Room A122. Isn’t that Mrs. Koon’s room?

Monday

The explication, due as email on Tuesday, must show a good response to my comments, cover the entire poem in detail, and make use of at least one named, published critic.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Thursday

Second draft explications are due Tuesday. I am relaxing my grip just a little because of prom. HOWEVER, study guides for both classes are due as hard copies on MONDAY.

I prefer electronic files for the explication. Hard copies for guides, e-files for explications.

I will check email often this weekend since I am missing Friday.

Your recitation is due sometime before the exam. Don't all be at once!

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Re-post: Basics of reading

Basics of reading a poem:


1. Identify the speaker. What can you tell about the speaker? You may not know a name or gender or anything else, but identify the perspective: poems, at some level, will always have a consistent perspective if they have nothing else. The lines do not drop from the sky but from a perspective.

2. Identify the audience. Often the audience is the general reader, but just as often there is an audience for the speaker within the poem, a person or idea that the speaker addresses. Occasionally, as in Hughes, the audience will be white Americans or black Americans specifically. Determine which, and be clear and consistent.

3. Identify the subject. The subject of the poem is literal and clear. Be sure you recognize it and give it a name.

4. Identify the plot. In a poem, this task can be a little tricky, and the plot, or narrative, might not be very strong or complete, but something happens. What?

5. Identify the big structural components of the poem. Does it have a beginning, middle, and end? How do you know where the poem progresses from one part to another? There might be more than three parts. What does each part do, or what is its function?

6. When identifying structural components, explain how the poem works as it progresses from one part to another. If “God” appears in the first part, and “Lucifer” appears in the next, explain the connection, or how the first part moves into the second with contrast or opposition as one organizing principle.

7. Identify key small structural components. Are there patterns of line length, of repetition, of rhyme? What patterns do you notice at the “micro” level, and if they have an effect you can identify, make that effect explicit and explain.

8. Identify the theme. How does the poem’s concrete language suggest universal abstractions or social commentary? (Social commentary is a poet’s judgment of some aspect of society).

9. Identify the mood. The mood can shift as the poem progresses. A definition of mood and a great many words to describe mood can be found here. Explain how you know the mood using evidence from the poem.

10. Identify the tone. Tone is usually quite consistent. A definition of tone and many useful words for describing it are also here. Explain how you know the tone using evidence from the poem.

11. What part do musical devices (sound devices, like alliteration, assonance, consonance, repetition, internal and end rhyme, caesuras, end stops, line length, meter) play in accomplishing any of the poem's effects? Do not emphasize these without pointing out their effects!

Monday, March 18, 2013

Tuesday

I'll miss you today! Good luck!

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Saturday

For the explication, you need critics on the poem you're investigating. Essays with titles like "Chick Fleas: Extended Metaphors and the Rhetoric of Love in the Poetry of John Donne." School library has several collections edited by Harold Bloom and a big reference set on poetry. Winthrop and the state system (jstor and others) would have all you need. You can use Wordsworth's own "Preface to Lyrical Ballads" as one source on Wordsworth. That's a critical essay explaining what he and Colerige intend.

Use ESSAYS and BOOKS by legitimate critics, not Sparknotes. Are SNs referenced? If so, sure, use them to find other sources and for first ideas, but don't rely on SN as a critic. You are not looking for background but for the opinions of educated, published, "expert" readers on your chosen poem. You use little short, perfect insights from the critics to enrich your explication, to make it a little bit of a conversation between you and a few critics -- a few other readers -- rather than a monologue. Cite their published, copyrighted words as research using MLA style.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Monday

Bring in your Hughes and Wilson books.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Tuesday addendum

Review “Poem to a Dead Soldier,” “Open Letter to the South,” and “Dark Youth of the U.S.A.” Here is a .pdf of the IOC rubric.

Tuesday

Game day tomorrow! Here is the pack of notes from your fellow students. It has all notes turned in today, including those from late in the class period.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Thursday

Please bring your Langston Hughes book to class tomorrow, A-day. Everybody, work on your assigned poem for next class.

Orals begin Wednesday.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Monday

Read “How the Poor Die” for next class. Expect a reading check!

Monday, February 4, 2013

Monday

Complete your guide on “Down the Mine” and read “The Spike” for next class.

Friday, February 1, 2013

Friday

Read and annotate "Down the Mine."

Alert: Your free eight-minute section of your oral commentary WILL BE ON HUGHES. The twelve-minute discussion will be on Wilson and Orwell.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Wednesday

For those students who insist that the handout for "A Hanging" is not on the blog, please check the previous posting labeled "Wednesday, January 9" and click on the text "A Hanging." HA HA HA.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Wednesday

Prepare for your essay on Thursday (report to the TOK room) and for your orals Friday, Monday, and Tuesday.

Here are the handouts from Wednesday concerning "A Hanging" and "Marrakech" for those who might have been absent.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/nkp4g7st5edm4rb/Marrakech.pdf

Monday, January 7, 2013

Monday part deux

Finish writing your Orwell emulation.

 

Read “A Hanging” and note how Orwell makes a persuasive case.

Monday

You will all meet with me on Thursday, January 10, for the timed essay. You are responsible for all we have read this semester.

Orals begin Friday.

See the links at the right of this page for the entire Orwell packet consisting of seven essays.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Thursday

We are about to begin the Orwell essays. Be sure to sign up for a time for your oral commentary: the sign-up sheet is on my door.

Remember that we all meet together on January 10 for the timed essay.

Friday, December 14, 2012

Monday, December 10, 2012

Monday

To ensure that your files open on my computer, I advise you “save as: filename.rtf.” An “.rtf” is a Rich Text Format document, and in that format, you can open it almost anywhere.

 

.pdf is also a good choice.

Monday, December 3, 2012

Monday

Read below for the list of poems and the order of presentation. The flipchart page is linked in the November 16 post below.

Friday, November 30, 2012

Friday: The Basics of Reading a Poem.

Basics of reading a poem:


1. Identify the speaker. What can you tell about the speaker? You may not know a name or gender or anything else, but identify the perspective: poems, at some level, will always have a consistent perspective if they have nothing else. The lines do not drop from the sky but from a perspective.

2. Identify the audience. Often the audience is the general reader, but just as often there is an audience for the speaker within the poem, a person or idea that the speaker addresses. Occasionally, as in Hughes, the audience will be white Americans or black Americans specifically. Determine which, and be clear and consistent.

3. Identify the subject. The subject of the poem is literal and clear. Be sure you recognize it and give it a name.

4. Identify the plot. In a poem, this task can be a little tricky, and the plot, or narrative, might not be very strong or complete, but something happens. What?

5. Identify the big structural components of the poem. Does it have a beginning, middle, and end? How do you know where the poem progresses from one part to another? There might be more than three parts. What does each part do, or what is its function?

6. When identifying structural components, explain how the poem works as it progresses from one part to another. If “God” appears in the first part, and “Lucifer” appears in the next, explain the connection, or how the first part moves into the second with contrast or opposition as one organizing principle.

7. Identify key small structural components. Are there patterns of line length, of repetition, of rhyme? What patterns do you notice at the “micro” level, and if they have an effect you can identify, make that effect explicit and explain.

8. Identify the theme. How does the poem’s concrete language suggest universal abstractions or social commentary? (Social commentary is a poet’s judgment of some aspect of society).

9. Identify the mood. The mood can shift as the poem progresses. A definition of mood and a great many words to describe mood can be found here. Explain how you know the mood using evidence from the poem.

10. Identify the tone. Tone is usually quite consistent. A definition of tone and many useful words for describing it are also here. Explain how you know the tone using evidence from the poem.

11. What part do musical devices (sound devices, like alliteration, assonance, consonance, repetition, internal and end rhyme, caesuras, end stops, line length, meter) play in accomplishing any of the poem's effects? Do not emphasize these without pointing out their effects!

Friday, November 16, 2012

Friday: Instructor rubric

Here is the "Instructor for a Day" rubric. Please LOOK at this rubric as you prepare.

Here is the list of poems and instructors and their order. I have updated this list to include the numbers for B-day, which had originally been written outside the margins of the flipchart page.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Thursday: Daily rubric

Here is the daily rubric, which I will use to determine 20% of the quarter grade -- along with other daily grades that may come up from time to time.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Poetry choice for absentees

If you want to claim a poem, email me. See the final list on the earlier post, and you may not teach a claimed poem. A-day claims are in orange, B-day claims are in red.

Wednesday

A-day made poem choices. All choices are shown here.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Tuesday: Final 20

B-day has finalized the twenty poems by Hughes, and here is the list with each student's choice to teach. "Instructor for a Day" begins on November 20. A-day students may teach the same poem as B-day students.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Monday: Poetry choices

Here is the flipchart (in .pdf format) with B-day's choices on the first two pages highlighted in yellow. There are twenty of them. On the third page are A-day's choices. The poems both classes chose are highlighted in orange. A-day's other chosen poems are highlighted in yellow.

See, B-day picked twenty, A-day picked twenty, and there were six poems on both lists. Those six are in, no further debate. Twenty minus six equals fourteen. Half of fourteen is seven. Therefore, A-day picked, from its original twenty, seven more poems. Thirteen poems are now in the final list. Now B-day should, from its original twenty, select its seven favorites to complete the final twenty.

Monday

Here is today's handout on "Harlem: Whatever Happens to a Dream Deferred?" and "Dreams."

Friday, November 9, 2012

Friday

Here is B-day's list of titles from Langston Hughes. The twenty finals are highlighted in yellow.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Thursday

Here is today's markup of Langston Hughes' "Mother to Son." Your homework is to determine which twenty poems you would like to study. Keep a thought on the calendar.

Monday, October 29, 2012

Grades

A-day grades are not complete on the report cards. The district office declared that grades should be due at 11 am on the work day rather than at the end of the work day. I will supply you with a printout in the morning if you wish, but about half of you will have an incomplete until I enter a grade change, which I will do as soon as the office says I can. This incomplete will be printed on the report card, but of course the changed grade will be the transcript grade.

 

Late papers or papers without all the requisite parts (prior drafts and my printed feedback) also ended as incompletes for the quarter. Incompletes for these students are appropriate until I get to them or until they get the missing pieces in place.

 

JKoon

Friday, October 12, 2012

Friday

For your presentations next week, be sure you meet the rubric criteria!




Here is a good web site instructing you how to compose and structure body paragraphs in literary analysis -- you know, like commentary papers.

Here is a simple guide for constructing paragraphs in literary analysis. The "comment" part can be many sentences long:
1. Topic containing critical concept
2. Transition and set up: provides context for quote.
3. Quote from book punctuated correctly, or a very clear, direct reference to the literary work
4. Explanation and comment: what does your quote prove about your topic?
5. Wrap: last sentence says something worthwhile AND contains a key word from the topic sentence AND transitions forward.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Wednesday

Hope you're having a good day job shadowing (wink). See the post to the right: examine the rubric and see if you can pinpoint problelms or make suggestions on it. (The two-person and four-person rubrics are combined into one .pdf document).Otherwise, use it to structure your presentations. You might need Flash or a computer to see the embedded file. Or you can use the link right here.

Note that there is an element set aside for professional attire.

Friday, October 5, 2012

Friday -- about due dates and requirements

1. On Monday for A-day, and on Tuesday for B-day, revise your commentary drafts. Your papers are due regardless of other activities such as history tests. Bring me your papers on the due date. Late papers will be docked 20 points, and I do not guarantee in-depth feedback for them. After the due date for the final, the second draft will not receive credit at all.


2. Bring in the entire packet: your first draft, the feedback you received from another student, and the second draft. Put the first draft on the bottom, the feedback in the middle, and the second draft on top. Staple all of it together. Failure to follow this instruction means you have NOT turned in your drafts on time. Failure to staple them together in order, but with all elements present, will result in a 10-point dock for not following the assignment instructions. Why would anyone not do this as instructed?

3. Format your paper according to MLA style. I have a sample paper on the blog. It is a commentary on Arna Bontemps’ “Southern Mansion.” Better yet, you can look up “mla style” and choose “The OWL at Purdue” for a great resource on writing. There is an MLA section that gives examples and explanations, though formatting does not really require a lot of expertise. Just do it as it says. Failure to format according to MLA style, including the use of 12-point, Times New Roman font and double spacing, will result in a 10-point dock of your second draft grade. Express your individuality in the content and thought, not in your font selection.

4. On my end, I will do my best to give you in-depth, personal feedback on each of your papers in a very timely fashion with plenty of time for revision before the final due date of October 22/23.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Wednesday

For a grade: all students should have their commentary files with them or easily accessible on the web (email, web lockers, Google docs, Dropbox) so that they can work productively during class.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Wednesday

Somebody -- let's call him X for short -- has book #39...

Three of you have still not claimed any text for your commentary.

Here is my suggestion for your introduction:

The beginning should contain the title, the author, the genre, and general comments about setting and subject. It should contain the specific context of the passage you choose: This passage comes from a middle scene when Boy Willie brings a girl home from a night out and Berniece sends her out. It should contain the significance of the scene you have chosen: The extract serves to introduce the need the characters have for love and physical comfort and contrasts Boy Willie’s lively desires with Berniece’s rule-bound, self-restricted behavior. Finally, it should introduce the principles of division you intend to employ: First, this passage employs disruptive sound effects and actions in the stage directions to intrude on the peace of the house. Second, the language of Boy Willie contrasts with the language of Berniece, emphasizing the difference in their views of their own selves and their culture. Finally, the stage’s physical arrangement provides further information about Boy Willie, Berniece, and their relationships to each other and their history.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Tuesday

Hardly anyone from A-day has chosen a passage for commentary. If you simply show up on Friday with a passage, do NOT expect credit. Your parts must be run through an approval process to be sure there are not endless repetitions. Part of the reason for this assignment is to teach each other about various sections of the play. Not everyone can have the first page.

Friday, September 14, 2012

First deadline

First draft of written commentary is due on Thursday 27/Friday 28. Pick your passages and some backups.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Thursday/Friday

Preliminary notice of quarter assignments:
      A. Choose 30-60 lines on which to do a written commentary of 4-6 pages in length (MLA format, Times New Roman 12 point font). No more than two people may do a single extract.
AND
B. Choose one of the following (or devise one of your own) to present in teams of two or four (four people per team simply means you prepare both sides with two "lawyers" per team):

1. Make a case for or against
Boy Willie's rights to the piano
Berniece's rights to the piano
Present with an opposing team in the form of a trial
  • Introductory arguments (generalities that you intend to prove)
  • Presentation of evidence
  • Visual aid to enhance arguments (not to replace or substitute for them)
  • Cross examination of the opposing team
  • Closing arguments

2. Make a case for or against
The piano as blessing
The piano as curse (you may change the dichotomy if you like)
Follow form of trial as above.

3. With a partner, present an argument detailing the roles of dreams, visions, and mysterious monologues in the play. You must present with a visual aid that enhances your argument but does not replace or substitute for it. You must build a case for a purposeful role.

4. With a partner or not, present an argument detailing the role of songs in the play. You must use a visual or audio-visual aid. You must build a case for a purposeful role.

5. With a partner or not, present an argument detailing Berniece's role in the play with regard to her various relationships. You must use a visual or audio-visual aid.You must build a case for a purposeful role.

6. Develop a case on a topic of your own device. You must use a visual or audio-visual aid. You must build a case for a purposeful role. (ghosts, trains, money, burdens, or  others).

Presentation of trials should last for 20-30 minutes. Presentations of roles should last for 10-15 minutes.

If you have wishes or desires to contribute to the rubrics and timelines, think of them for next class (Thursday/Friday). You may also choose parts and teams on those days. These will be the major grades of the nine weeks.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

for Thursday/Friday

Revise this passage, an exchange between Lymon and Avery, into correct Standard English. After doing so, think about the difference the change in language would make in the scene.

LYMON:  How you know the rope ain’t gonna break? Ain’t you scared the rope’s gonna break?

AVERY:   That’s steel. They got steel cables hold it up. It take a whole lot of breaking to break that steel. Naw, I ain’t worried about nothing like that. It ain’t nothing but a little old elevator. Now, I wouldn’t get in none of them airplanes. You couldn’t pay me to do nothing like that.


Here are the classwork guiding questions for note-taking:

Act I, Scene 1 (continued)
3. Classify the characters who have appeared so far with a brief description and some evidence of their character cited from the text. (Boy Willie, Lymon, Doaker, Berniece, Maretha, Avery, Wining Boy)

4. What or who are the "Ghosts of the Yellow Dog"?

5. Compare and contrast Boy Willie's attitude toward the piano with Berniece's.

6. How does the allusion at the end of the scene influence your evaluation of Boy Willie's attitude toward the piano?

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Tuesday

Today’s class created posters of quotes and discussed “The Social Me,” by William James. No additional work yet assigned. Please join the blog if you have not done so. There are still 24 open invitations. When I make an assignment to post on the blog, some of you will have problems if you do not get them resolved now.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Monday

On Friday/Monday, we read “The Social Me.” You are to finish up your three interpretive questions per person by next class. You have turned in your “culture” single drafts.

 

Please become a member of the blog if you have not done so already. I encourage you to put Dropbox on your smart phones and home computers.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Blythwood game

Follow this link for live updates of the South Pointe-Blytheqood game:

http://soc.li/aNsR3Ud

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

First day! Wednesday/Thursday

Create a response to the following:
6. What is most important to you about your own culture? How do you keep it going, and how will you pass down this important element of culture to your own children?

Also, find from any source an inspirational, funny, or powerful quote and bring it with you. Be sure to get it exactly right and remember to note WHO said it. We will make wall posters Friday/Monday with your results.

My favorite, so you can't have it:
"It is not the critic who counts: not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs and comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without error or shortcoming, but who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself for a worthy cause; who, at the best, knows, in the end, the triumph of high achievement, and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who knew neither victory nor defeat." – Teddy Roosevelt

Find your greatness and those who can help you reach it!