Open House Letters!
Pass out Poetry Project Requirements sheet
HW: Begin thinking about the poet you want to study for your poetry project.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Monday, March 30, 2009
AGENDA 3/30
TPS-FAST Analysis of two poems: "I Hear America Singing" by Walt Whitman and "I, Too Sing America" by Langston Hughes
HW: Think about the poet you might want to study for your poetry project...
HW: Think about the poet you might want to study for your poetry project...
Monday, March 23, 2009
AGENDA 3/23
Everything you ever wanted to know about rhyme and sound but were afraid to ask:
onomatopoeia - words that sound like what they do--"Batman" words or "Rice Krispies" words (snap, crackle, and pop; buzz, clang, howl, flutter, etc.)
end rhyme - words that sound alike on the final syllable (contains assonance AND consonance) (begin and win)
masculine rhyme - words that sound alike on only one syllable (begin and win; undo and blue)
feminine rhyme - words that sound alike on more than one syllable (beginning and winning; fluttering, stuttering, and buttering)
eye rhyme - words that are spelled similarly but have different sounds (have and gave)
slant rhyme - the use of assonance or consonance--when words "kind of rhyme" (begin and sing; tenth and bell; trance and prince)
assonance - repeated vowel sounds (begin and sing; tenth and bell)
consonance - repeated consonant sounds (trance and prince; delicate and dark; clinking and thankful)
alliteration - repetition of initial consonant sounds, usually for a playful or humorous effect (dark, dank, and dreary) NOTE: This is a type of consonance.
Read and analyze "A Fire-Truck" by Richard Wilbur using TPS-FAST. Pay particular attention to sound devices.
HW: For Wednesday, write a poem about friendship, love, heartache, death, or something you see every day that uses sound and some kind of rhyme for effect.
onomatopoeia - words that sound like what they do--"Batman" words or "Rice Krispies" words (snap, crackle, and pop; buzz, clang, howl, flutter, etc.)
end rhyme - words that sound alike on the final syllable (contains assonance AND consonance) (begin and win)
masculine rhyme - words that sound alike on only one syllable (begin and win; undo and blue)
feminine rhyme - words that sound alike on more than one syllable (beginning and winning; fluttering, stuttering, and buttering)
eye rhyme - words that are spelled similarly but have different sounds (have and gave)
slant rhyme - the use of assonance or consonance--when words "kind of rhyme" (begin and sing; tenth and bell; trance and prince)
assonance - repeated vowel sounds (begin and sing; tenth and bell)
consonance - repeated consonant sounds (trance and prince; delicate and dark; clinking and thankful)
alliteration - repetition of initial consonant sounds, usually for a playful or humorous effect (dark, dank, and dreary) NOTE: This is a type of consonance.
Read and analyze "A Fire-Truck" by Richard Wilbur using TPS-FAST. Pay particular attention to sound devices.
HW: For Wednesday, write a poem about friendship, love, heartache, death, or something you see every day that uses sound and some kind of rhyme for effect.
Friday, March 20, 2009
AGENDA 3/20
TPS-FAST analysis for two poems:
"A Clear Midnight" by Walt Whitman
"The Fly" by William Blake
"The Parakeets" by Alberto Blanco, trans. by W.S. Merwin
"Spring is like a perhaps hand" by e.e. cummings
HW: For Monday, write a poem relating to an aspect of nature in which you use one or more of the following techniques: unusual punctuation, repetition of verb endings (-ing or -ed), rhetorical questions, or apostrophe.
"A Clear Midnight" by Walt Whitman
"The Fly" by William Blake
"The Parakeets" by Alberto Blanco, trans. by W.S. Merwin
"Spring is like a perhaps hand" by e.e. cummings
HW: For Monday, write a poem relating to an aspect of nature in which you use one or more of the following techniques: unusual punctuation, repetition of verb endings (-ing or -ed), rhetorical questions, or apostrophe.
Thursday, March 19, 2009
AGENDA 3/19
TPS-FAST Analysis as a class: "Grass" by Carl Sandburg
HW: For tomorrow, write a poem in which you EITHER
1) compare two people
OR
2) reflect on an event from the perspective of an inanimate object
AND
use personification, metaphor, color symbolism, and/or repetition
HW: For tomorrow, write a poem in which you EITHER
1) compare two people
OR
2) reflect on an event from the perspective of an inanimate object
AND
use personification, metaphor, color symbolism, and/or repetition
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
AGENDA 3/17
GOOD LUCK ON THE CAHSEE!!!
No class today- periods 2, 4, and 6 meet on the special schedule.
No class today- periods 2, 4, and 6 meet on the special schedule.
Monday, March 16, 2009
AGENDA 3/16
SATIRE TEA PARTY!!!
Enjoy tea, muffins, scones, and cucumber sandwiches while we celebrate the end of our satire unit: turn in satire projects with reflections and three satire terms entries (with all earlier terms entries drafts).
Thanks for a terrific unit and good luck on the English portion of the CAHSEE tomorrow!
Enjoy tea, muffins, scones, and cucumber sandwiches while we celebrate the end of our satire unit: turn in satire projects with reflections and three satire terms entries (with all earlier terms entries drafts).
Thanks for a terrific unit and good luck on the English portion of the CAHSEE tomorrow!
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