Key point: the Setting
- What is the setting? Historical period! Country or locale? Season of the year? Weather? Time of day? What are the sights? Sounds? Tastes? Smells? What other details establish a sense of place?
- Are the characters in conflict with the setting? What do the characters want? Does the setting keep them from getting what they want?
- What does the setting tell us about the characters? What feelings or attitudes do the characters reveal toward the setting? Fear? Pleasure? Challenge? Dislike? Respect? Other feelings or attitudes?
- How would you describe the atmosphers or mood created by the setting? Is it gloomy? Cheerful? Mysterious? Threatening? Other descriptions
Key point 2: Characterization
- How is the character revealed through his or her own words?
- How does the character look and dress?
- What private thoughts of the character are revealed?
- What do other characters in the story say or think about the character?
- What does the character do?
- What does the writer say directly about the character: sneaky, honest, evil?
Key point 3: Theme
- What is the significance of the title?
- Does the main character change over the course of the story? Does the main character com to a new realization about something?
- What general statements about life or people do any of the characters or narrator make?
- Is the primary theme directly stated? If so, where?
- What is the story's primary theme?
Source: http://go.hrw.com/resources/go_mk/la/latm/E902LETP.PDF
Saturday, April 28, 2007
Sunday, April 22, 2007
Final Speaking Presentation - 15%
Here are the guidelines for the final speaking presentation: you have 10 minutes to present a short story of your own choosing.
- Work in pairs (find a different partner from the travel presentation).
- Choose a short story. A good source is www.classicshorts.com.
- You can talk about the author, the genre, literary elements of the story (plot, character, setting, theme, point of view and so on).
- See me for your choice of story and your approach to presenting the story.
- Presentations will take place Monday, May 14 and Friday, May 18.
- Work in pairs (find a different partner from the travel presentation).
- Choose a short story. A good source is www.classicshorts.com.
- You can talk about the author, the genre, literary elements of the story (plot, character, setting, theme, point of view and so on).
- See me for your choice of story and your approach to presenting the story.
- Presentations will take place Monday, May 14 and Friday, May 18.
Tuesday, April 3, 2007
Correction Guide for compositions
Correction Guide for Compositions
Contents / Organization / Development
1.
Thesis statement (main point of paper) weak or missing
2.
Topic sentence (main point of paragraph) weak or missing
3.
Supporting points or examples inadequate
4.
Transitions (linking devices between paragraphs) weak or missing
5.
Coherence (linking between sentences) weak or missing
6.
Coordination / subordination expressions used incorrectly (and, but, although, whenever)
Grammatical errors
7.
Sentence fragment – subject or verb is missing
8.
Run on sentence – two sentences running together without a conjunction
9.
Use of weak expressions: “There is/there are.”
10.
Starting sentence with “and” or “but.”
11.
Verb form incorrect – missing 3rd person “s” or “ed” on past or irregular verb
12.
Verb tense (time of action) incorrect
13.
Inappropriate shifting between present and past tense
14.
Incorrect use of reported speech (He said, “The class is fun.”
15.
Subject / verb agreement is incorrect (singular / plural)
16.
Pronoun (he, she, it …) incorrect
17.
Adjective / adverb incorrect
Language use (syntax, spelling, vocabulary, punctuation)
18.
Redundant word or phrase
19.
Wrong word
20.
Word order incorrect
21.
Incomplete comparison
22.
Apostrophe incorrect
23.
Spelling incorrect
24.
Unidiomatic expression
25.
Comma ( , ) or semicolon ( ; ) incorrect
26.
Capitalization incorrect (English, Canadian, Monday)
Contents / Organization / Development
1.
Thesis statement (main point of paper) weak or missing
2.
Topic sentence (main point of paragraph) weak or missing
3.
Supporting points or examples inadequate
4.
Transitions (linking devices between paragraphs) weak or missing
5.
Coherence (linking between sentences) weak or missing
6.
Coordination / subordination expressions used incorrectly (and, but, although, whenever)
Grammatical errors
7.
Sentence fragment – subject or verb is missing
8.
Run on sentence – two sentences running together without a conjunction
9.
Use of weak expressions: “There is/there are.”
10.
Starting sentence with “and” or “but.”
11.
Verb form incorrect – missing 3rd person “s” or “ed” on past or irregular verb
12.
Verb tense (time of action) incorrect
13.
Inappropriate shifting between present and past tense
14.
Incorrect use of reported speech (He said, “The class is fun.”
15.
Subject / verb agreement is incorrect (singular / plural)
16.
Pronoun (he, she, it …) incorrect
17.
Adjective / adverb incorrect
Language use (syntax, spelling, vocabulary, punctuation)
18.
Redundant word or phrase
19.
Wrong word
20.
Word order incorrect
21.
Incomplete comparison
22.
Apostrophe incorrect
23.
Spelling incorrect
24.
Unidiomatic expression
25.
Comma ( , ) or semicolon ( ; ) incorrect
26.
Capitalization incorrect (English, Canadian, Monday)
Sunday, March 18, 2007
102A Course Plan - Part 2
April 16 Unit 4 Ethics
Reading: College Plagiarists
Writing: “Introductions and Conclusions”
Listening: Buying an Education
Speaking: What are your ethics?
Grammar: TBA
April 23 Unit 5 A Good Read
Reading: Making a Living
Writing: Limericks and Observation
Listening: “Bookshop Memories”
Speaking: What do you like to read?
Grammar: Nouns and Adjectives
April 30 Unit 6 Violence
Reading: “We Mourn …All Our Daughters”
Writing: The Essay
Listening: An Interview With MRB
Speaking: TBA
Grammar: TBA
May 7 Unit 6 Violence
Reading: Violence Against Women
Writing: Review writing errors/Return all assignments
Viewing: Nasty Girls
May 14 Evaluations
Speaking Examination
(Whole class period)
May 17: Mar. 26 class
Writing Examination
Reading Examination
Listening Examination
Reading: College Plagiarists
Writing: “Introductions and Conclusions”
Listening: Buying an Education
Speaking: What are your ethics?
Grammar: TBA
April 23 Unit 5 A Good Read
Reading: Making a Living
Writing: Limericks and Observation
Listening: “Bookshop Memories”
Speaking: What do you like to read?
Grammar: Nouns and Adjectives
April 30 Unit 6 Violence
Reading: “We Mourn …All Our Daughters”
Writing: The Essay
Listening: An Interview With MRB
Speaking: TBA
Grammar: TBA
May 7 Unit 6 Violence
Reading: Violence Against Women
Writing: Review writing errors/Return all assignments
Viewing: Nasty Girls
May 14 Evaluations
Speaking Examination
(Whole class period)
May 17: Mar. 26 class
Writing Examination
Reading Examination
Listening Examination
Class of April 2
Reading: Work Abroad offers intro to local life, pp. 45-48
Grammar: Past Perfect Tenses, pp. 130-132
Oral Presentations
Grammar: Past Perfect Tenses, pp. 130-132
Oral Presentations
Monday, March 5, 2007
Class Blogs
elyze-lyzjazz26
juliebspace
maxtr
valeriet-102a
nicholasgaudreau
famoustranger
martin23
oriserdnuss
ag-jenkins
simon-pierre
juliebspace
maxtr
valeriet-102a
nicholasgaudreau
famoustranger
martin23
oriserdnuss
ag-jenkins
simon-pierre
Oral presentations Travel Project
March 19: 1
There is no class on March 26 due to the elections. Class is rescheduled to May 17.
April 2: 14 - 6 - 10 - 8 - 2 - 11 - 3 - 7 - 13 - 9 - 4 - 5 - 12
There is no class on March 26 due to the elections. Class is rescheduled to May 17.
April 2: 14 - 6 - 10 - 8 - 2 - 11 - 3 - 7 - 13 - 9 - 4 - 5 - 12
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