English
IV & AP
Syllabus:
Major British Authors I
Mr.
Coon; Fall 2012
I. Goals
The
goal of this course is to develop students’ ability to read, write, and create
meanings from a series of related pieces of literature drawn from over 1000
years of British literary history. Our work will center around the following
series of questions; all texts, assignments, projects, and discussions will
help develop our answers to these questions.
1.
What are the essential qualities of
a good story? Are they different from the requirements for a great story? Why
do some stories have a shelf life of 6 months while others last 1000 years?
2.
What value do historical texts have
for our lives today? Are “old” stories less meaningful or more boring just
because they’re old? Or do they still contain relevant meanings for the 21st
centuruy?
3.
What are the ethical challenges and
conflicts faced by characters both human and monstrous? How do authors use
these ethical dilemmas to illustrate their views of human values and morality?
4.
What qualities other than super-powers make a character
heroic? For instance, what is honor? What is integrity? What is courage? What
is personal responsibility? How do characters hold onto or lose their honor,
courage, or integrity?
II. Materials and Course Requirements
This
fall-semester course examines the origins of literature in English and traces
the development of the English language from its Germanic roots to the
eighteenth century. Readings include the Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf, the
medieval romance Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Shakespeare’s tragedy Hamlet,
Mary Shelley’s novel Frankenstein, John
Gardner’s novel Grendel, and shorter
pieces of poetry. A supplemental text develops a historical understanding of
the growth and development of the English language.
Some students in the course
have the AP designation attached to their enrollment. These students, chosen on
the basis of their interest, prior achievements, and motivation level,
supported by the department’s recommendation, are expected to meet slightly
higher academic standards. AP students write slightly longer papers, and take
occasional quizzes based on practice materials drawn from previous AP English
Literature examinations. Also, students enrolled with AP designation are
required to take the second half of the Major British Authors sequence in the
spring semester and sit for the AP exam in English Literature and Composition
in May.
III. Texts
1. Frankenstein,
Mary Shelley
2. Beowulf, Seamus Heaney (trans)
3. Grendel,
John Gardner
4. Sir
Gawain and the Green Knight, Simon
Armitage (trans)
5. Hamlet,
William Shakespeare
IV. Additional texts
1.
Vocabulary for Achievement, 6th
course
2.
Oure Faire Englische Tung: A Brief
History of the English Language
3.
Selected
novels for summer reading
V. The Daily Book
An essential part of the class is the regular use of your
daily book. The daily book is a 7½ by 9 ¾ notebook in which you record all the
writing you do during class sessions. The daily book, which never leaves the
room except with my personal permission, will contain examples of the following
kinds of written work:
·
Daily check-ins (inside the front cover of your
daily book), giving yourself credit for arriving in class on time, bringing
your textbook and writing utensil, and doing the reading or other daily
assignment.
·
Take Fives (short 3-5 minute writings) done as
you come in the door while I am taking attendance and organizing that day’s
materials. A Take Five is a mental check-in, often beginning with a sentence
like “Lately I’ve been thinking a lot about . . .” or “I’ve been wondering why.
. .” and containing content which may or may not be directly related to the
content of English class.
·
Passages of the day—brief answers to questions
about short passages of poetry or prose, first written in your daily books,
then shared with the members of your team in round-robin style.
·
Response journals—see instructions below—the
alternative to pop quizzes as a means for you to show your level of engagement
with the assigned reading and help yourself interact with that reading on a
deeper level. RJ entries will be shared with teammates, used as discussion
items, and form the basis for short critical essays posted to your blogs.
·
Closers—2-3 minutes at the end of class, time
for you to process and reflect upon what happened in that day’s class: what was
the most interesting or important thing you learned today? What do you need to
remember from today’s class? What left you feeling confused or with a sense of
incompleteness? What should we be sure to do next time we meet?
Since your daily book never leaves the room, any notes you
wish to take about our discussions or new material should be kept in a notebook
of your own or on your laptop.
Daily books will receive a “process” grade; this grade
complements your work in your discussion teams as the “participation” component
of your performance in the class. I will check your daily books approximately
every seven days.
Daily book grades are based on both quantity and quality:
• Quantity: all entries are present (if you are absent from
class it’s your responsibility to come in during a free and make up the
Response Journal entry), and entries show the effort to answer the questions
thoroughly (rather than writing a single sentence, saying “I’m done” and
sitting there while others write).
•Quality: Content shows a sincere effort to take the
questions seriously and write thoughtful answers which are responsive to the
assigned readings.
Take Five starters:
Lately I’ve been thinking
about . . .
I’ve been wondering why . . .
(Monday) The best/worst thing
about this weekend was . . .
(Friday) I’m looking forward
to/worried about this weekend because . . .
(Morning class) Today should
be a really good/bad day because . . .
(Afternoon class) Today has
been a really good/bad day because . . .
I’m looking forward
to/dreading because . . .
The best movie I’ve seen
lately was . . . .
Lately I’ve been really
enjoying the time I spend . . .
So far I think the new longer
periods are good/bad because . . .
My favorite thing to do
outside of school is because . . .
I will read whatever you write, so don’t describe the fight
you had with your mother/boyfriend/best friend last night unless that’s
something you want me to know about. And of course my confidentiality is
limited by law not to include anything you say that sounds dangerous, harmful
to yourself or others, or illegal.
Response Journals
We often use
reader response journals as in-class activities to accompany our study of
literature. There are a number of different topics you can use in a reading
response journal:
- Copy down a quote from a character and tell why
you think it’s meaningful.
- Ask questions about things that confuse you or
that you wonder about.
- Describe your feelings about the events.
- Describe your feelings about characters.
- Copy down a brief passage and tell why you think
it’s important.
- Describe your favorite part.
- Make a prediction about what will happen next.
- Tell how you would react if you were one of the
characters in the story.
- Describe a part that surprised you.
- Does the author use any strong imagery in the
story (similes, metaphors, etc.)? Give examples.
- Write down interesting vocabulary words, look
them up, say how they add to the passage.
- Talk to the author or a character (or one write
of them a letter).
- Draw pictures or create graphic organizers.
Below is a list
of prompt starters:
General Observations
- I noticed…
- I was really surprised…
- What I found interesting…
- The author is saying…
Preference
- I like the way…
- I didn’t/don’t like…
- My favorite part…
Element of the Text is Unclear
- I didn’t understand…
- A question I have…
- I’m guessing that…
- Something new I learned…
- I felt _______ when…
Discuss Surprising Element
- I couldn’t believe…
- I never thought…
Hypothetical Thinking and Predictions
- If I were [character]…
- What I think will happen is…
- What I thought would happen was…
- I think _____ will become
important because…
- I began to think…
- I predict…
Personal Connection to Past Experience
- This reminds me of…
- I began to think of…
- I know the feeling…
Imagining
- I can picture…
- I can imagine…
Purposes and Rules
Response journals serve two important and related purposes.
They allow you to experience the readings for yourself, ask your own questions,
and search for your own meanings rather than attend classes where I tell you
what the text means to me while you write it down. They also allow me to see
the evidence that you are reading the assigned texts and thinking about what
you read. Therefore, there are two very specific, non-negotiable rules for a
response journal entry. 1. Entries must include specific references to
pages, lines, numbers, and passages covering the whole text assigned. 2.
Entries that contain only general comments or plot summary without specific
questions, quotes, and references will be assumed to be the product of
Spark-note thinking and are therefore not acceptable and will not receive
passing grades. Finally, for
safe-keeping, your response journals are part of your daily books and therefore
never leave the classroom.
Uses
Reader response journals will be written for at least 5
minutes each day a reading assignment is due. They will be shared, round-robin
fashion, with the other members of your class team. They may also be used to
respond to passages I have chosen for the class to discuss. From there, RJ (response
journal) entries can be used to generate Discussion Items (DI’s) for either
your team or the class as a whole. Finally, RJ entries can become the basis of
short individual critical essays on aspects of the literature. These essays
(approximately 300-500 words depending on your level of ambition) are posted on
your blogs and will receive specific written comments from your teammates and
from me. Thus reading and writing become entwined as basic learning activities.
You read, you write, you discuss, you choose a piece to refine, and you write
further.
We will also use daily books to record our responses to the
passage of the day or the question of the day, to record our thoughts about the
meaning of a short poem, an example of a literary technique, or to think about
poetic or prose style analysis. These brief responses will be shared in your
teams.
(Thanks to Mr. Scott at Hughes Academy for his list of journal starters and to
Dan Kirby and Tom Liner, authors of Inside
Out and my mentors on the use of class journals.)
VI. Blogs
Aside from your daily book, the primary forum for sharing
short critical essays and content for oral presentations is your blog.
Instructions for starting your blog may be found on mrcoonsenglish.blogspot.com
and will be reviewed in class. I will occasionally ask you to select an entry
from your Response Journal to be revised and expanded into a short critical
essay (the equivalent of 1 to 2 typed pages). These revised journal entries
will be read for content by members of your discussion teams and by me. We will
look for ways to make your writing clearer, more specific, and more
informative. Some of these blog posts will be further revised to be turned in
as papers. Your ability to keep your blog current and thorough is another
important component of your “process” grade.
In addition, you will each be asked to post the results of
short research assignments on topics related to our literature study and the
history of English. This information will be shared orally in class. Whether
individually or with a partner, you will present two of these assignments each
semester.
VII. Turnitin.com
In
addition to submitting hard copies of your papers this year, you are required
to submit electronic copies of all papers to turnitin.com. These instructions
will help you submit your papers. Use
your PCDS e-mail address and the same password for turnitin.com that you use
for your account at blogger.com.
• On
your web browser, go to turnitin.com. Register as a new user or login to the
personal home page you created last year. You must give your PCDS e-mail
address and a personal password which contains both letters and numbers to
register. Click “student” as your user type. Give whatever other information
may be necessary as you move through the required fields.
• When
you reach your personal home page, click “join new class.” Then enter a class
ID and a class enrollment password. For AP students, the class ID is 4223549
and the password “APeng”; for World Literature students (non-AP) the class ID
is 1875359 and the password is “engIV”. Click “submit” when you finish. N.B:
You only need to complete this step once.
• Then
submit your paper. When you click on the class title, you will go to the class
history page. Click on the word “submit” in the middle navigation bar. Enter
the title of your paper and select the assignment with the correct date from
the pull down menu. Assignments are listed by the title of the work and the
date an assignment is due.
• After
entering your title and selecting the correct assignment, paste your essay into
the box marked “main text.” (In my experience, the copy and paste method works
better than the upload method. You may, of course, find otherwise). You may
ignore the boxes marked abstract and bibliography unless otherwise instructed.
When your paper has been pasted into the “main text” box, click “submit.”
• Remember
to put your digital receipt number on the assignment before you give it to me.
Otherwise your assignment will be marked late and penalized accordingly.
VIII. Participation
and attendance
• Class
participation is a crucial part of the course. Therefore, it is imperative that
we all treat one another with respect and behave in such a way as to contribute
to, not disrupt, an atmosphere conducive to maximum learning.
• Participation
in class is mandatory. I understand that the introverts have difficulty
speaking in front of your peers and me; nevertheless, I expect you to
contribute meaningfully to class activities and discussions. Often, these
contributions take forms other than speaking in front of the entire class. For
example, the entries in your daily book are one important way for you to show
your engagement with the material and willingness to exert yourself. Another
important factor is the quality of your contributions to your team activities.
In these ways and through your oral presentations, you show that you have come
to class having done the reading assigned and are prepared to discuss the
material, answer questions, venture informed opinions, and articulate personal
responses.
• Participation
grades are assigned as follows and account for 20% of your grade in the class:
"A" students are fully engaged, on time for class with the necessary
books and supplies. They display obvious enthusiasm for the tasks of the class:
reading, talking, listening, working in a group, thinking about a problem. Their
daily books are thorough, thoughtful, and always kept up to date. They
participate in all team activities and remain on task throughout class. "B"
students' engagement varies slightly, sometimes at "A" level,
sometimes not. "C" students are generally involved but with
noticeable lapses. They may arrive late to class or frequently forget
materials. They spend time on things other than the work at hand: chatting with
friends, doing homework for another class, catching up on sleep, or staring off
in space. "D" students exhibit these behaviors to an even greater
degree, becoming a distraction to the work of the class, having a negative
impact on the group's ability to get its work done, regularly coming to class
unprepared.
• Absences
and lateness will have detrimental effects on performance and grades. With
longer breaks between classes, I expect you to tend to personal business—going
to the bathroom, finding your backpack, picking up a paper from the printer in
the lab, and so on—on your own time. Be in class at the beginning of the block
and don’t leave. Lateness will also be reported to the Dean of Students for
detention.
IX. Vocabulary
• Two
new lessons in the vocabulary book are assigned for quizzing every fifth class
(5, 10, 15, etc). We will look briefly at the new words two classes prior to
the quiz (#s 3, 8, 13, and so on), so please bring your books to that session.
Quizzes will take place the first 10 minutes of class after “check-in” on
sessions which are multiples of 5 unless otherwise notified.
• For
first semester, we will cover lessons 1-14; for the second, lessons 15-30.
Quizzes will contain all 20 words from the two lessons. There may be occasional
cumulative quizzes as well containing selected words from a larger number of
lessons.
• Missed
vocabulary quizzes must be made up at your earliest possible convenience. After
three class days, barring extraordinary circumstances, missing scores will be
entered as zeroes.
X. Grading policy
• Grades
are determined on a point system in which each assignment is weighted by the
number of points it contains. Points will be totaled at the end of each quarter
and semester and grades determined in accordance with the percentages contained
in your student handbook.
• Grades
from individual assignments fall into categories weighted approximately as
follows: daily books and blogs (30%), papers and projects (40%), vocabulary and
quizzes (20%), participation and attendance (10%).
• Assignments
are due at the beginning of class. Written work turned in during or after class
is considered late and will be penalized. Late work is eligible for a score no
higher than 75%, depending on the quality of the assignment and the degree of
lateness. If you are absent the day an assignment is due, either have a
classmate turn it in or fax the assignment to the Upper School office
(602-224-6177).
• Students
who miss quizzes or tests because of excused absence must make arrangements for
make-up immediately upon returning to school. Missing work (quizzes or
assignments never turned in or made up) will result in an incomplete grade for
the quarter or semester.
• Any
student who establishes a clear pattern of failing to complete the assigned
reading according to the prescribed schedule will receive a semester grade of D
or F, regardless of that student’s scores on other assignments. Repeated
missing or poor written work, response journal entries which cannot be
distinguished from SparkNotes summaries, or the inability to respond to basic factual information in class will
be taken as signs of not reading.
• All
assignments must be completed in accordance with the school’s honesty policy.
See your handbook for details and be certain you know the difference between
plagiarism and acceptable use of source material.
XI. Contact information
• In person—room
311. Stop by to talk or ask a question anytime I’m free. My schedule is posted on the door of my
classroom. To make up a quiz, go over an assignment, a speech draft, or a
college essay, please make an appointment first.
• By
voice-mail—602-956-0253 x4296
• By
fax—602-224-6177