The Sky Tree

The Sky Tree
"I must be given the fruit which grows at the very top of Sky Tree."

Sunday, May 24, 2015

One Small Step...

A small step I’ve taken recently is to think about what’s important to me, and what I really need to do to get things done well. Some of our seniors will soon be taking a small step in their lives, and I do think it is a time of reflection for them also, but let us celebrate for a bit the great work that has been done this year by this senior class and many other high school students at GCA. The summer is coming fast, and I hope you have made your plans interesting for the summer, as I have – my brother will be coming to Taiwan from the USA, and we will visit Peng Hu together.

Here is some of the work of students, recently, who have done well – I encourage underclassmen at GCA to go to the individual student blogs on the lower left to see the advice they have written for you. Some have written how to apply to college better or how to have a smooth senior year, or even just how to be a good student. They have written about their experiences both inside school and out, and things they enjoyed learning.

Both Arielle and Coleen have agreed to let their graduation speeches be posted here. Coleen was the salutatorian so she SPOKE FIRST.

and Arielle was the valedictorian, or finished first in the graduating class, and SPOKE LAST at the graduation ceremony on June 2nd.

Congratulations to all graduating seniors! We will be thinking about you and praying for you.


Jill – Langston Hughes
Karen – e.e. cummings
Coleen – John Steinbeck
Yumi – F. Scott Fitzgerald
Claire – Sandra Cisneros
Arielle – Tennessee Williams
Michelle – Sylvia Plath
Sharah – Ray Bradbury
Joanna – Virginia Woolf
Molly – George Orwell
Book – George Bernard Shaw          
Oscar – Li Bai
Gordon – Leo Tolstoy
Allen – Robert Frost
Josh  – Ernest Hemingway
Kevin – Edgar Allan Poe
Kate – Washington Irving
Ken – Nathaniel Hawthorne
Calvin – Maxine Hong Kingston
Paul –  Elizabeth Bishop
George – William Carlos Williams
Alvyn - Douglas Adams

And here are a few good honors book reports, in case you would like to see what they look like:
Book - Things Fall Apart
Claire - The Lord of the Flies 
Arielle - The Bell Jar



For more writing topics or good reading material that is often related to posts the students have made on their individual blogs, see below. 



1. If you had some time off without worry about finances, from 6 months to one year, what would you do with the time? Would you prefer to focus on developing the mind through reading and learning, the body through physical exercise and exploring, the spirit by helping others and getting involved in a worthy cause, or the heart by improving social skills and working with people or meeting more than the usual number? Is there a place you would like to spend the time, an activity you would like to do, or someone you would like to hang out with?

Some examples for me in this arena include hiking the Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine, which takes most healthy folks about 6 months, helping an orphanage ministry, or reading some books on my shelves.


2. If you had three to six months to develop one skill well, and you could work on it all day without worrying about finances or tuition, what would you learn? Would you learn independently, or seek assistance of a teacher or go to a traditional school? Imagine whatever teacher or school you want has no choice but to accept you and you can go anywhere in the world for up to six months to either hone a skill you already have or develop a new one. What would you choose and why?


Choose one of the following articles, summarize it, and then offer your own opinions.

















Friday, April 10, 2015

Q4 Endgame

With Easter just behind us, we have a bit of solid time in front before our Spring semester is concluded. Many of us are looking forward to summer, and thanks to those students who posted excellent pics and ideas for my brother and me to use this summer in Taiwan!

Now, we've been into this Quarter for a bit, but from this list of readings, students need to submit five homework assignments within three days of the due date. If you are later than three days, pass on the late penalty and just do the next one! I'd strongly prefer not to accept them late and for us to keep moving at a good pace. I've said if you get an abysmally low score, I can offer you an additional homework assignment by arrangement to raise your average. But most of you don't need the help.


Q4 Collection 6: Contemporary Literature: 1939-Present     
HW43 Game p. 980: 2,3,8,9                                                              
HW46 Rules of the Game p. 1025: 5,8,9,11                  
HW45 Daughter of Invention p. 1005: 2,4,5,8                                           
HW54 Poems E. Bishop p. 1144: Fish: 7,8; Art: 2,3      
HW56 Poems A. Sexton p. 1155: Bells: 6,7; Young: 3,5
HW55 Poems S. Plath p. 1150: Mirror: 1,4; Mushrooms: 1,4            
HW50 The Way to Rainy Mountain p. 1100: 10,11,12,13
HW51 Straw into Gold p. 1126: 5,7,8                                            
HW59 Man Listening to Disk p. 1196: 1,3,4,5                                          
HW58 Medusa p. 1191: 1,2,4,6                              
HW57 Visions and Interpretations p. 1187: 3,4,5
HW52 Night Journey p. 1133: 1,2,3,4

The final exam is not "cumulative," or based on these stories. The Q4 final is a self-contained test with its own readings and questions based on those readings. 


Besides the literature assignments and tests, there will be Informative Speaking & Writing, Narrative Speaking & Writing, and an author Prezi - see list of topics below.

Writing 1 - Informative - Final draft by 4/20.
Writing 2 - Narrative - 1st draft by 5/1, final draft for 5/6.
Speaking 1 - Informative - also related to the other post - here you talk about the article & share pic
Speaking 2 - Narrative speaking - give a speech related to the topic you wrote about in writing 2
Prezi  - individual presentation - student speaks for 5 mins./20+ slides on favorite author from this year. Include author bio, writing sample & style comments, and inspiring clues to genius. PowerPoint is accepted; bonus given for Prezi; slides must include works cited area. Prezis start 5/15.

Q4 blog reflection:  (due by Thursday, 5/21)
A) write about something interesting you learned this year during a club or class activity or while volunteering or working at a job 
B) advice to other students - if you are a senior tell students how to choose & apply for college and have a smooth senior year; non-seniors advise underclassmen on how to be better student or language learners
C) write something about your home country or culture that others from outside your country don't know, or write about plans for the future, such as college or summer.

Q4 classroom notebook - due by Friday 5/15.

Later, we may watch a movie in class & after school, such as The Crucible. We also have The Great Debaters as another movie possibility, but after school. The Great Gatsby has also been mentioned.

List of Author Prezis - Students will be individually scheduled, with Honors students going first:
Arielle     Tennessee Williams            Claire       Sandra Cisneros
Michelle   Sylvia Plath                         Yumi      F. Scott Fitzgerald
Sharah      Ray Bradbury                      Joanna    Virginia Woolf
Karen       E.E. Cummings                   Alvyn      Douglas Adams
Coleen     John Steinbeck                     Allen      Robert Frost

Paul        Elizabeth Bishop                   Ken         Nathaniel Hawthorne
Kevin      Edgar Allan Poe                   Kate        Washington Irving
Josh        Ernest Hemingway               Jill           Langston Hughes
Calvin     Maxine Hong Kingston       Molly        George Orwell
George    William Carlos Williams    Gordon      Leo Tolstoy
Oscar       Li Bo 李白                          Book        George Bernard Shaw

Here are some of the Presentations we have seen:
Jill  Langston Hughes
Karen  E.E. Cummings
Coleen John Steinbeck
Yumi F.Scott Fitzgerald
Claire Sandra Cisneros
Arielle Tennessee Williams
Michelle Sylvia Plath
Sharah Ray Bradbury
Joanna Virginia Woolf
Book George Bernard Shaw
Oscar Li Bai
Allen  Robert Frost


I will update this area with more details as they become needed. Enjoy your rest, you have earned it.


Extra Credit: Ars Poetica – Claribel Alegria – p. 1172: 1,2,3,4,5 (Nicaraguan writer)
HW49 The Girl Who Wouldn’t Talk – M. Kingston – p. 1090: 4-8
HW53 The Beautiful Changes – R. Wilbur – p. 1137: 5-8
HW60 The Crucible Act One– A. Miller – p. 1235: 4,7,8,10
HW61The Crucible Act Two – A. Miller – p. 1248: 7-11
HW62The Crucible Act Three – A. Miller – p. 1263: 3,4,6,7
HW63The Crucible Act Four – A. Miller – p. 1274: 5, 9-11

Arthur Miller has been described as the "Shakespeare" among American dramatists, and is best known for Death of a Salesman. The Crucible is set in the Salem witch trials in early America, and takes on the feeling of a psychological courtroom drama, as the beautiful young "witch" wraps everyone around her little finger, so to speak. 
And as long as you got time left to enjoy a bit of break, keep smiling and get rest before school starts!

Monday, March 30, 2015

Knowledge is Power - and Information May Be Powerfully Presented

Have you ever heard of the phrase "Knowledge is Power"? Most people have, and it is usually attributed to Sir Francis Bacon. Actually, he said "Knowledge itself is Power" in one of his Latin writing in 1597. A young secretary who worked for him, named Thomas Hobbes, later wrote a book called Leviathan in 1668, and used the exact phrase in Latin "scientia potentia est," which is translated "knowledge is power" for the first time. If you think about it, taking out the word "itself" is a bit better, perhaps, because it means that not just the knowledge itself, but the fact that people know you have it, or think you have it, that creates the power.

When it comes to informative speaking and writing, keep in mind that you may have an opinion, even a strong one that is expressed powerfully. Information need not be totally neutral or non-persuasive, however you should avoid loaded, or emotional words. You are not "selling" something, but you can give opinions or let the facts speak for themselves. For speaking, the Common Core standard we are primarily addressing (11SL.4) says that you should not only present your clear perspective but talk about alternative or opposing perspectives as well. Don't forget to use a picture or digital image, like a chart or graph, to help your speech, as this helps the informative speech along and means I can score you on the "strategic use of digital media" standard (11SL.5). We will be doing these for a grade (with rubric) on Thursday, but people can practice Tuesday this week.

Here is a list of articles that everyone is using for both informative speaking and writing. For the writing part, the two body paragraphs go like this - the first body paragraph you simply inform me of the contents of the article, and the second you inform me of your opinion about the contents. For more in the second body paragraph, you can tell me about the availability of the product or service, or how widespread a problem is that is discussed in the article. Please see me if you need help - intros and conclusions should be short, sweet, and general in nature. No "works cited" area is needed.

Note that although I gathered these publicly-available articles/links, these were almost all chosen by the students themselves:

Ken            Airplane Crew May Face Increased Melanoma Risk
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQaGxnMjdiX0V0YjQ/view?usp=sharing


Michelle     Hawthorne Berry Tea: A Heart Tonic and More
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQeVhpb2gxZE9vNTQ/view?usp=sharing


Coleen                 Nine Health Benefits of Licorice Root 
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQSGtSclhCV25kY0U/view?usp=sharing


Karen                    Hard Lesson in Sleep for Teenagers 
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQUTBNbFg2ZDZLVVE/view?usp=sharing


Yumi           What Are the Benefits of Milk Thistle Seed?
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQN3pxNnRzbWlYWXM/view?usp=sharing


Allen                    5 Teas That Melt Fat
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQTEszN1YydTRwWFE/view?usp=sharing


Arielle                 Benefits of Spirulina/How Does Spirulina Work?
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQcFVZYkI2N0g5Rzg/view?usp=sharing
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQRWR5UkJIYUlhRzQ/view?usp=sharing


Calvin                   Why You Should Never Microwave Your Food
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQS2pPWjE1a0xUWDA/view?usp=sharing


Joanna                 Do You Know These Five Skin Facts?
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQdi1nRXJaenR3WDg/view?usp=sharing


Josh            Eat Your Way to a Better Workout
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQSXZLOHVJU0duZVk/view?usp=sharing


George                 12 Natural Ways to Fight a Cold
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQTTlqUjFCVzN6c0E/view?usp=sharing


Kevin                    Is Sugar Toxic?
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQVGVLZnZNSTZRbmM/view?usp=sharing


Paul                     Why Outdoor Workouts Work Better
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQT2tubG5pZzB6LUE/view?usp=sharing


Sharah                  17 Health Benefits of Cayenne Pepper
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQWk5sWUVDMFB6UnM/view?usp=sharing


Claire                  The Importance of a Kidney Cleansing Diet
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQXzdUNm9NcW1CejA/view?usp=sharing


Oscar                    Natural Ways to Treat Arthritis
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQcU5CZ2t1MzlQWFE/view?usp=sharing


Alvyn                    Workout: Tip Up the Intensity
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQSjVuZVB3Ti0zOXc/view?usp=sharing


Jill                5 More Popular Weight Loss Diets Explained
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQWHhmR3BJOVh4V2c/view?usp=sharing


Kate            Green Tea for Weight Loss
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQN1pVV2I1dnpxLVk/view?usp=sharing





For Good Measure - let's include some British Lit students;

Molly                    Superfoods for Superbugs
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQcHFkUHdESUxRTzQ/view?usp=sharing


Gordon                Can Autism Be Prevented
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQSFZqb2o3SnJpblU/view?usp=sharing


Book                     Tai Chi Eases Depression in Elderly
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9Q_tPLHIkuQNm5XUVI3cWRUZzA/view?usp=sharing












Monday, February 9, 2015

Q3 Debates & Assignments

This post will be updated as we progress into the middle of Q3, but we have a few unusual assignments this quarter. We will revisit debates and have informational speaking. This quarter students have been challenged to write creatively as well, by submitting a poem. Students may write a persuasive essay instead for the New York Times contest - either the poem or essay is due on March 9th. Everyone's been working hard, so please enjoy any breaks you get, especially lunar New Year with your family!

Q3 Final News Source
The first test will have 30 graded questions on comprehension & literary focus: 
HW27 Soldier’s Home by Ernest Hemingway TEST 1 (4 questions) Essay
HW28 Winter Dreams by F. Scott Fitzgerald TEST 2 (4 questions) Vocab Essay
HW30 Leader of the People by John Steinbeck TEST 3 (5 questions) Vocab Essay
HW33 Mending Wall by Robert Frost TEST 4 (3 questions)
HW36 Poems by William Carlos Williams: The Red Wheelbarrow, The Great Figure, This is Just to Say TEST 5 (6 questions)
HW39 Poems by Langston Hughes: The Weary Blues & Harlem TEST 6 (4 questions)
HW42 In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens by Alice Walker (4 questions) Vocab Essay
The second test will include vocabulary and essays related to the stories above. There are 10 vocab questions (5 multiple choice, 5 synonym/antonym) and two essays, for 50 total points. 

There are no grammar questions this time, nor are there Wordly Wise questions on the final.



An earlier post on the final said:
There are questions on the Q3 Final from these stories or poems – including vocab for short stories:
HW27 Soldier’s Home – E. Hemmingway – p. 693: 7,8,9,10 TEST 1 (due Thurs. 1/8)
HW28 Winter Dreams – F. Scott Fitzgerald – p. 715: 3,7,8,9 TEST 2 (due Thurs. 1/22)
HW30 Leader of the People – J. Steinbeck – p. 756: 6,8,10 TEST 3 (due Thurs. 1/29)
HW33 Mending Wall – R. Frost – p. 804: 8,9,10 TEST 4 (due Tues. 2/3)
HW36 Poems by W. C. Williams: The Red Wheelbarrow, The Great Figure, This is Just to Say – p. 670: 4,6,7 TEST 5 (due Thurs. 2/7)
HW39 Poems by L. Hughes: The Weary Blues & Harlem – p. 832: 4,5 for Weary Blues and 1,5 for Harlem (due Thurs. 2/12)  TEST 6
HW42 In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens – A. Walker – p. 1109: 5,7,9 (due Wed. 3/11)

Poem or Essay?
Students are required to either write their own poem in an acceptable format or join the persuasive essay contest hosted by the New York Times by March 9th. In both cases, revisions should be expected. Don't think about which is easier or how you grades may be affected right now, but think about expanding your horizons and getting good writing experience. One little point for honors students is that if they choose to do the essay, their needed book count will be reduced by one book.

Guidelines for Poems
Please do not attempt to do a free verse poem. For this one I'd like students to stick to a format - any set format is probably OK but I have mentioned Sonnet form as a good one to try. This is because I'd like you to get into some of the usual things poets go through - counting syllables, playing with formats, rhyme schemes, and imagery. Another way to see it: before you can break the rules, you should follow the rules!

So, try writing between 8 and 14 lines of poetry, and have an an even number of syllables on each line, keeping it the same throughout the poem, perhaps 10 syllables. There should be end rhymes, meaning that the last word of each line of the poem will rhyme with another last word on a different line. These should make a recognizable pattern, like ababcdcdefefgg (Shakespearean Sonnet form) or another one you choose, such as ababcdcd. Next, make sure to link your images so that they send a message related to your theme - a poem lacking images becomes too brainy or just not memorable. Use sensory words that make your images real and bring home sights, smells, and tastes. And if you can, work in some figurative language like alliteration or onomatopoeia. You are well familiar with these terms by now from the reader's point of view - now see what it is like from the writer's viewpoint!

Guidelines for Persuasive Essays
Please open the link at the right of the blog to see contest rules and a list of topics. Your topic must be from that list, and you should email me the topic so I can at least be informed, or possibly help with ideas. Here are some of the rules I remember - the essay must be 450 words or less, you must cite (i.e., have a "works cited" area, also known as a bibliography) at least two sources, one from the New York Times and one from somewhere else, and you can choose to write individually or in a group, but not both. If you submit an essay as a group, you must list the names of all participants in that group. Recently we have realized how challenging it could be to fit your ideas into only 450 words, which may be around 3 big paragraphs or 4 small ones. Anyway, follow their rules, show it to me before submitting it to The New York Times, and really send it to them before 6 PM Taiwan time on March 9th.

Sometimes you may need to define something in the beginning of the essay to restrict the topic or make sure "everyone is on the same sheet of music." For example, topic 144 says "How Should Parents Handle a Bad Report Card?" Before discussing this, you would need to define what a bad report card means briefly, because for some people "bad" only means having a Failing grade, for others it is anything less than top marks, or "A's." Other topics need explanation or cultural sensitivity, like topic 115 "Should the United States Stop Using the Death Penalty?" Here you would need to realize that a person in Taiwan would be more likely to support the death penalty, probably, than many Americans would. Other topics ought to be avoided simply because they are hard to prove or persuade, no matter how fun they may be to write about, like topic 33 "What Were the Best Movies You Saw in the Past Year?" If you found "Boyhood" and "Still Alice" fascinating and touching, but the reader found those insipid and was a fan of "Birdman" and "Whiplash" do you think having great citations or writing persuasively will easily change their minds?

Keep in mind you need a good opening to grab their attention - the "usual suspects" for opening hooks include dialogue, action, onomatopoeia, or a question. These may be used even in persuasive writing, but understand that you will be combining both logical and emotional approaches, with some emphasis on logical, since there will be citations. I'd keep your intro and conclusion short, and remember what I taught you about structure where you clearly state your case, or thesis, in the beginning and remind them with different words at the end. I'll go ahead and recommend two body paragraphs which would correspond with your citations, but I hope they will be rich enough to develop your case within the not-so-long body paragraphs. Flow and structure will be important because of the short length, so there must be no fluff, or extra words. A revision will sound smart, so please don't send it to me at midnight Sunday as I might not be able to get to everybody!



Fast and Furious Debates
First "day" of debates, before break, includes two topics. One change is that the time for arguments will be increased to 2.5 minutes per speaker. There will be 30 seconds in between each speaker, and three minutes for each group to research using the classroom computer before the debate begins.

Topic 1: Should individuals be forced to receive vaccinations (e.g., against the measles), even if unwilling?

Topic 2: Homeschooling & non-traditional education should be encouraged.

Topic 3: Just governments ought to ensure food security for their citizens.

Topic 4: Just governments ought to require that employers pay a (reasonable) minimum wage.

Topic 5: The U.S. federal government should substantially increase its non-military exploration and/or development of the Earth's oceans.

Topic 6: The U.S. federal government should substantially curtail its domestic surveillance.


Go to the National Speech and Debate Association Web Site for more info on the above topics.


Five Beautiful Sentences assignment
Please find five sentences within your Book Group book, and email the following information:
1) The entire sentence and its page number
2) Underline the word for phrase that is "interesting" (see below)
3) Include a brief explanation about why you underlined it. Also helpful is explaining the context of the sentence within the story, or the importance of the sentence.

Underline words that are effectively, or well-written, but look for use of slang, idioms, vernacular (local language), difficult, or fresh.

This assignment it for the vocabulary part of your individual test on the book you read for your group. It will be available this week, most likely after Talent Show. You will have short answer or essay-type questions, with some vocabulary questions based on the beautiful sentences documents submitted by students from that group. If that information is lacking from the group, the teacher will decide which words to test from the book and the students will receive a "lesser" study guide.

Informational Speaking
Speak for at least two minutes about An Good Place to Visit in Taiwan. You may use your blog post as a source of ideas, but you may not read the speech from the blog or paper. It is recommended that a photo from online be prepared for the speech, perhaps attached to your blog post.
Keep in mind this is informational speaking, so include some facts and figures - things like describing the geography or location, population, economics, or some details. Avoid "selling," or persuading, and also avoid too many personal stories, or narratives.


remaining Literature Homework
HW37 Poems by E.E. Cummings p. 678: 5 for both & 6 for second one
HW38 Poems by C. Cullen p. 822: 3 & 4 for both
HW39 Poems by Langston Hughes p. 832: 4,5 for Weary Blues and 1,5 for Harlem TEST 6
HW41 Black Boy – R. Wright – p. 1076: 5,7,9,11
HW42 In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens – A. Walker – p. 1109: 5,7,9

One thing to note that after TEST 6, we will need no more. Some students may choose to take the test for In Search of Our Mother's Gardens, to substitute for a low grade. At this point, no drops are planned in any category. If the whole class avoids plagiarism on written homework, a drop of the lowest homework score may be proposed. We endeavor to help everyone feel ready to answer homework questions on time with their own good ideas!

Grammar Quiz
Now this quiz has been put off to March 10th because we will review the information below using pages from "The Only Grammar Book You'll Ever Need."

Information includes the following three major points:
A) Verb Tenses - know form and use:
     1) Simple Present: "Alvyn is a man." "If you heat ice it melts." "The sun rises in the East and sets in the West." "I brush my teeth every morning." "I usually/sometimes/always play piano at night.
     2) Present Continuous: "I am writing now."
     3) Future: a) "will" for willingness: "I will go with you to Paris." or determination: "Yes I will go see a movie with Arielle." b) "am going to V" for plans: "We are going to visit Italy next summer." c) using present tense to show future with schedules: "I fly tomorrow at 9 AM." d) using present continuous tense for future (probably for plans too): "I am visiting Italy next summer."
     4) Present Perfect: a) for recently completed actions that still affect the present: "I have eaten lunch." b) for experience: "I have visited England before." c) for repeated actions happening from a point in the past, to now, and going into the future, using "for" or "since": "Book has studied Chinese for three years." or "Book has studied Chinese since 2012."
B) Verbals - words that look like verbs but are used as other parts of speech
     1) gerunds - words that look like verbs but are used as nouns: "Wakeboarding is really my favorite sport. Swimming is boring."
     2) participles - they look like verbs (ending in "-ing" or "-ed") but are used as adjectives: The girl sitting over there is my friend.
     3) infinitives - the basic form of the verb with "to" in front of it, usually used as a noun, but may be used as adjective or adverb. We will come back to this later, but for more immediate info, try this link on infinitive use. For now you need to know that we use infinitives to explain why we do something: "Stephen attends university to learn about physical therapy." "Brandon came to Taiwan to study Chinese."
C) An understanding that English is changing and that a lot of what is "right" is that way because a lot of people have decided to speak that way: "I don't recommend having 2 beers with lunch." or "Hey, you are looking good today." Instead, a more formal or traditional way to say these would be: "I'd recommend drinking two bottles of beer on the first Saturday night after graduation." or "You look good today."

For more review, use this link to see the web site we used in class for those verb tenses.



Sunday, January 4, 2015

Realism & Modern Life

In Q3 for American Lit this year we'll be looking at some classic American authors from the last 40 years of the 1800's and the first 40 years of the 1900's. You've probably heard of Hemingway & Steinbeck,  Fitzgerald & Frost, and we'll read them. But you'll also get a taste of some odd poets like William Carlos Williams and e.e. cummings, who liked to refuse using capital letters even for his name. And there are surprisingly fresh African-American voices like Langston Hughes and Alice Walker that you will experience.


Q3 Required Literature Homework
HW27 Soldier’s Home – E. Hemingway – p. 693: 7,8,9,10 TEST
HW28 Winter Dreams – F. Scott Fitzgerald – p. 715: 3,7,8,9 TEST
HW30 Leader of the People – J. Steinbeck – p. 756: 6,8,10 TEST
HW33 Mending Wall – R. Frost – p. 804: 8,9,10 TEST
HW36 Poems by W. Carlos Williams: The Red Wheelbarrow, The Great Figure, This is Just to Say – p. 670: 4,6,7 TEST
HW37 Poems by E.E. Cummings: what if a much… & somewhere i have never travelled… – p. 678: 5 for both & 6 for second one
HW38 Poems by C. Cullen: Tableau, Incident – p. 822: 3 & 4 for both
HW39 Poems by Langston Hughes: The Weary Blues & Harlem – p. 832: 4,5 for Weary Blues and 1,5 for Harlem  TEST
HW41 Black Boy – R. Wright – p. 1076: 5,7,9,11
HW42 In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens – A. Walker – p. 1109: 5,7,9 TEST (Optional)
10 homework assignments; 6 required tests



To make things more reasonable for our busy students, we have reduced the number of required homework assignments to 10, and there will be six tests. For homework assignments, the number of questions has been reduced to 3 or 4. All required homework assignments will be tested on the final.

We will have a variety of speaking and writing tasks that will be listed here later. For now, focus on your speech for speech meet, which you have received a scan of, and get exercises C & E done by Wednesday this week. By Friday everyone will be tested for the first 200 words of their speech.