Step 2: Read Selections from How to Read Literature Like a Professor

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Honors English 10: Literature, Language, and Composition Summer Assignment Welcome Honors English 10! You may not know what expect for this course. You ve probably been ld (a) it s a lot of work, (b) it s really a lot of work, and (c) well, you get the idea. While it s true that the reading and overall workload is heavier than English 10, and work is graded with higher expectations, Honors English is a lot of fun as well. It s a class that encourages creative thinkers and literature lovers. On a more practical level, Honors English will better prepare you for higher-level English classes and courses that involve reading and writing (which is ALL of them). It s a class that s challenging because without the challenge, it wouldn t also be enriching and rewarding. If it was easy, everyone would do it. Now it s time get down business the summer assignment. The summer assignment involves reading and annotating texts, and writing one essay. Due on the first day of class (September 4, 2018) Annotations for Poisonwood Bible (in class) o These annotations will prepare you for the in-class writing prompt in the first weeks of class Poisonwood Bible Essay (Moodle by 11:59pm) o This essay will be used gauge your literary analysis skills and will be a formative grade Step 1: Prepare 1. Acquire the Texts You will need acquire your own fresh, unmarked copy of the following texts: How Read Literature Like a Professor: A Lively and Entertaining Guide Reading Between the Lines by Thomas C. Foster; ISBN-10: 006000942X, ISBN-13: 978-0060009427 The Poisonwood Bible: A Novel by Barbara Kingsolver; ISBN-10: 0061577073, ISBN-13: 978-0061577079 2. Get Your Technology in Order: All assignments are due the first day of class (September 4). If you are absent the first day of class, the assignments are still due on Moodle. Be sure you have access everything before the 2017-2018 school year is out. I will have limited ability help you over the summer. 3. Prepare Annotate Go http://www.tnellen.com/cybereng/adler.html and read Dr. Adler s essay, How Mark a Book. This informative essay not only discusses the importance of marking (or annotating) while you read, but highlights some helpful techniques use in the process. That being said, marking a book is certainly an activity that is personal and unique you, the reader. It is important that you create a system that works well for you. Consider the possibilities of highlighters, colored pens or pencils, and post-it notes as some of your options. Your summer annotations should be helping you. Don t annotate everything! Annotate what is important for the tasks you have been given. I am looking see that you have engaged with the texts in a way that will be beneficial the tasks assigned. * If you are going be using an e-reader, you should still be able show me your annotations if required. Step 2: Read Selections from How Read Literature Like a Professor

(adapted from Sherry Scoggins, Clyde High School) Thomas Foster knows how read literature like a professor because he is a professor of English at the University of Michigan. In a very informal style (this is not a textbook), Foster focuses on literary basics: major themes and motifs, literary models, and narrative devices. This introduction literary analysis will be the foundation for your summer assignment essay. It s important that you engage with this book before you start read The Poisonwood Bible so you know what you are looking for as you read. You don t need read this entire book! Look over the essay prompts on the following page and choose two or three pics you would be interested in writing about. Then read the corresponding chapters of How Read Literature Like a Professor give your Poisonwood Bible annotations direction. See Step #5 for the corresponding prompts. Note: If you are reading the revised edition of HRLLP, some of the chapter numbers are different. It doesn t matter which version of the book you use as long as the chapter subjects you read are from the list below. Step 3: Read and Annotate The Poisonwood Bible The Poisonwood Bible is a powerful novel that blends elements from hisry, literature, politics, religion, poetry, and culture weave a tale that at its core is a coming-of-age sry. Read carefully and thoughtfully, and remember that no book of merit can be appreciated when the reader is distracted by TV, cell phones, Facebook, etc. Give yourself the time and space fully engage with the material. Look over the essay prompts before you start reading. Make sure you choose two or three pics you may want write about. Your pic selection will help give you annotations purpose. Word of warning about homework help websites (Sparknotes, etc.): Although online study guides are helpful, I m not interested in what they have say; I m interested in what you have say. So, if you don t want your thinking tainted, don t visit these websites. Step 4: Write the Essay Directions: Look over the following essay prompts and choose one that you feel can be developed in a multiparagraph essay. The essay should be 1500 words in length. Pick your words and evidence wisely, and diligently revise your first draft. Any essay I receive that looks like a rough draft or like it was partially or wholly plagiarized will be rejected. You ll notice that each prompt on the following pages asks you apply information and strategies from Thomas C. Foster s How Read Literature Like a Professor Barbara Kingsolver s The Poisonwood Bible. Think of the prompts as potential claim statements. You will want make specific references Kingsolver, but not Foster. See rubric for further details. Bring hard copies of your essays class and submit Moodle by September 4. Keep in mind that a well-developed essay states a clear and focused claim in the introduction consists of focused body paragraphs with clear pic sentences uses specific support from the novel includes analysis beyond basic summary clearly connects your support your claim uses transitions both within paragraphs and between paragraphs connect ideas ends with a satisfying conclusion is carefully proof-read and free of errors in capitalization, usage, punctuation, and spelling follows MLA manuscript formation and documentation rules (i.e. parenthetical citations, heading, 12-pt font, Times New Roman etc.)

Essay Prompts Each prompt is introduced with the Chapter # from Thomas C. Foster s guide, followed by the assignment. Note: If you are reading the revised edition of HRLLP, some of the chapter numbers are different. It doesn t matter which version of the book you use as long as the chapter subjects you choose are from the list below. Chapter 2: Nice Eat with You: Acts of Communion [I]n the real world, breaking bread gether is an act of sharing and peace, since if you re breaking bread you re not breaking heads (Foster 8). Pick a character from the novel and consider the following questions: How does his/her relationship food create or diffuse conflicts in the novel? Does he or she adapt the new culture or reject it? After considering these questions, write an essay where you analyze how your chosen character s relationship, ideas, and understanding of food controls the outcome of that character in the book. Chapter 5: Now, Where Have I Seen Her Before Sries grow out of other sries, poems out of other poems. And they don t have stick genre. Poems can learn from plays, songs from novels (Foster 33). In the novel, Adah mentions numerous poems in her narration (see list below). Choose one of these poems and consider how the poems may contribute the characterization of Adah or another character, the themes of the novel, or some other element of literature Kingsolver uses convey her meaning. Some questions help you think about them: Why does Kingsolver have the character of Adah mention them? What is their effect? After you read the full poem, instead of just the lines Adah recites, do you have any new insights about Adah, other characters, the circumstances of the sry, something else? The Red Wheelbarrow by William Carlos Williams (170) Hope is the thing with feathers by Emily Dickinson (185) Presentiment is that long Shadow on the Lawn by Emily Dickinson (295) Because I could not sp for Death by Emily Dickinson (365) Tell all the Truth but tell is Slant by Emily Dickinson (407) This is my letter the World by Emily Dickinson (443) A Toad, can die of Light by Emily Dickinson (527, 530) Chapter 7: Or the Bible Book Two: Revelation 13:1, 9 The first six books of the novel are introduced with a passage from The Bible. Choose one of the following quotes and explain its significance that section or the novel as a whole. Book One: Genesis 1:28 Book Three: Judges 2:2-3 Book Four: Bel and the Serpent, 1:6 Book Five: 13:19-22 Book Six: Song the Three Children, 7-19, The Apocrypha Chapter 10: It s More Than Just Rain and Snow The Congo s harsh weather is one of many challenges for the Price family. Torrential rain, for example, keeps the Price family indoors and destroys their garden. But in addition being a plot device, rain can also clean things off, resre or transform the world it falls on, or make a setting more mysterious, murkier, and more isolating. Explain how rain is significant and/or symbolic in the novel. Chapter 12: Is That a Symbol? If you want figure out what a symbol might mean, we have use a variety of ols on it: questions, experience, preexisting knowledge (Foster 99). A symbol is a person, place, or thing that represents an abstract idea or concept. There are countless symbols in The Poisonwood Bible. Choose one symbol and

elaborate on its meaning. Remember use preexisting textual evidence support your interpretation. Chapter 13: It s All Political I love political writing. Writing that engages the realities of its world that thinks about human problems, including those in the social and political realm, that addresses the rights of persons and the wrongs of those in power can be not only interesting but hugely compelling (Foster 110). On one level, The Poisonwood Bible is a political allegory where the Price family and the Congolese represent the United States and its relations foreign countries. Illustrate how Nathan Price s beliefs parallel US Foreign Policy. Cite specific examples when necessary. Chapter 19: Geography Matters Geography [is] a metaphor for the psyche when characters go south, they are really digging deep in their subconscious, delving in the region of darkest fears and desires (Foster 170). How do the river, the jungle, and the African landscape that the Price family (or one specific character) experiences reflect their own internal journey? Rubric - You will be assessed on the following standards for your essay on The Poisonwood Bible. Please note that I will be assessing your essay on three separate CCSS standards: Reading Literature, and Writing; all for formative grades. W1a. Introduce precise claim(s), distinguish the claim(s) from alternate or opposing claims, and create an organization that establishes clear relationships among claim(s), reasons, and evidence. I introduced a precise, arguable claim that contained specific details and I can clearly distinguish the claim from alternate or opposing claims with clear justification. I developed writing that shows organization which highlights the intertwined the claim, reasons, and evidence. I introduced a precise, arguable claim and I can distinguish the claim from alternate or opposing claims. I developed writing that shows organization that establishes the the claim, reasons, and evidence I introduced an arguable claim that needed more specifics, and I acknowledge alternate or opposing claims needed clarify differences. I developed organized writing that contains a claim, reasons, and evidence. I introduced a statement that needed be more specific be arguable and I acknowledged one alternate or opposing claim. My organization may be lacking reasons and/or evidence support the claim and/or W1a. Introduce precise claim(s), distinguish the claim(s) from alternate or opposing claims, and create an organization that establishes clear relationships among claim(s), reasons, and evidence.

I have introduced a precise claim. I have constructed my claim with clarity so that it separates it and strengthens it from alternate or opposing claims. My op-ed is constructed so that ideas build on one another. My op-ed reads as one coherent piece. W1b. Develop claim(s) and counterclaims fairly, supplying evidence for each while pointing out the strengths and limitations of both in a manner that anticipates the audience s knowledge level and concerns. and counterclaims fairly with reputable and appropriate evidence for each. strengths and limitations of both claims and counterclaims in a way that anticipates the audience s concerns and then addresses them appropriately. and counterclaims fairly with evidence for each. strengths and limitations of both claims and counterclaims in a way that anticipates the audience s concerns. and counterclaims with evidence. strengths claims and limitations of counterclaims and attempted address the audience s concerns. and counterclaims but I need provide evidence for strengths claims or the limitations of counterclaims but I need pay more attention the concerns of the audience. W1b. Develop claim(s) and counterclaims fairly, supplying evidence for each while pointing out the strengths and limitations of both in a manner that anticipates the audience s knowledge level and concerns. I have ideas, examples, anecdotes, facts, etc. support my central claim. I have consider counterclaims my argument and recognized them in my writing. I have refuted counterclaims in a considerate and thoughtful way. I can write responsively address my audience s needs and understandings.

W1c. Use words, link the major sections of the text, create cohesion, and clarify the relationships between claim(s) and reasons, between reasons and evidence, and between claim(s) and I have used words, link both the major sections of the text and smaller pieces within these sections. I created cohesion and clarified the the claim, reasons, evidence and counterclaims that demonstrates understanding of the pic. I have used words, link the major sections of the text. I created cohesion and clarified the the claim, reasons, evidence and I have used words, link sections of the text but missed some important sections. I created cohesion between the claim, reasons, evidence and and counterclaims but I need provide evidence for strengths claims or the limitations of counterclaims but I need pay more attention the concerns of the audience. W1c. Use words, link the major sections of the text, create cohesion, and clarify the relationships between claim(s) and reasons, between reasons and evidence, and between claim(s) and I can use appropriate and accurate transitions connect various phrases, sections, and ideas within my piece. I can determine which type of transition (e.g. transition words/phrases, sentences, paragraphs, etc.) is needed for the task at hand. I can use these transitions in order show a shift in thinking, development, evidence, and point of view. I can create a cohesive pic that juggles various pieces of information, evidence, and ideas. W1d. Establish and maintain a formal ne while attending the norms and discipline in which they are writing. I established and maintained a formal ne that matched the norms and genre. I have represented my argument clearly and fluidly, utilizing both logic and wellinformed and qualified opinions. I established and maintained a formal ne that matched the norms and genre. With some exceptions, I established formal ne that matched the norms and genre. I tried establish a formal style but bias impacted the objective ne of the genre.

W1d. Establish and maintain a formal ne while attending the norms and conventions of the discipline in which they are writing. I can identify an appropriate ne use for the context of the writing piece. I can maintain this ne consistently throughout the piece. W1e. Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from and supports the argument presented. I provided a concluding statement or section that follows from and supports the argument presented and make possible connections further implications of my analysis. I provided a concluding statement or section that follows from and supports the argument presented. I provided a concluding statement or section that follows on from the argument presented but needs be clearer in supporting the overall argument. I attempted provide a concluding statement or section follows on from the argument but does not clearly sum up the argument presented. W1e. Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from and supports the argument presented. I have provided a paragraph (or two) that brings my essay an end. I can return the original issue in a way that comments on the impact or significance of the pic.