Thursday, June 26, 2014

Summer Reading AP English Language 2014-2015

Summer Reading 2014

Advanced Placement

English Language and Composition

Summer Reading Program 2013-2014

School of the Arts




OVERVIEW:

This summer, you will read at least one novel or nonfiction book from the RCSD Reading List. For AP LANG and AP English Lit.  We will hold book circle discussions about your summer reading.




In addition, you will need to read the following reading selections in preparation for
Advanced Placement English Language and Composition this fall semester. Your first
compositions in class will be based on one or more of these readings, and we will study
them further during the first unit; therefore, you should make sure that you have a
thorough understanding of these works.



1. Eats, Shoots and Leaves Lynn Truss (for grammar review, available in library)

2. The Elements of Style Strunk and White (for style review, some available in library?)

3. In addition to the books above, read at least five essays from among the following
essayists (many of these writers have essays online):

Joseph Addison, Margaret Atwood, Francis Bacon, James Baldwin, Wayne C. Booth,

Joan Didion, Annie Dillard, W.E.B. Dubois, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Ellen Goodman,

Nadine Gordimer, William Hazlitt, bell hooks, Thomas Jefferson, Martin Luther King,

Charles Lamb, Barry Lopez, Norman Mailer, Nancy Mairs, Toni Morrison, George

Orwell, Carl Sagan, Richard Steele, Henry David Thoreau, James Thurber, Alice Walker,

Eudora Welty, E.B. White, or Virginia Woolf.



Here is a website to find more essays:

http://grammar.about.com/od/60essays/a/classicessays.htm


In your essay, try to answer the following questions for EACH essay: in a well-developed 5 paragraph essay
of 1-2 pages, double-spaced, 12 pt. font (Times New Roman).  Your 5 essays should be handed in on the first day of school and you will receive an A for 20% of your first marking period grade for this summer work.  So, do a good job on these essays of literary analysis.

Use these questions as a guideline, but be sure to QUOTE from the texts you have read in order to make your CLAIMS about the author's PURPOSE and STRATEGY, noting the way the author achieves this PURPOSE using RHETORICAL DEVICES!


· What is the author’s SUBJECT?

· What is the OCCASION?

· Who is the AUDIENCE?

· What is the PURPOSE of the essay?

· Who is the SPEAKER (what kind of person is the author based on and how he/she
writes the essay)?

· What is the TONE of the essay?

• How does the essay begin? (i.e. with an anecdote, or question or description, etc.)

· How does the essay end? You will need to turn in your essays on the first day of
class.


The SOAPSTone Analysis Strategy

SOAPSTone (Speaker, Occasion, Audience, Purpose, Subject, Tone) is an acronym for a
series of questions that we must first ask themselves, and then answer, as we begin to plan
our compositions, or if we’re analyzing others’ essays and writings.



Who is the Speaker?
The voice that tells the story. Before we begin to write, they must decide whose voice is going
to be heard. Whether this voice belongs to a fictional character or to the writers themselves,
students should determine how to insert and develop those attributes of the speaker that will
influence the perceived meaning of the piece.

When analyzing others’ writing, we ask ourselves who is speaking? Is it the writer? A persona?
How can we tell? What does the writing say about the speaker?
What is the Occasion?
The time and the place of the piece; the context that prompted the writing. Writing does not
occur in a vacuum. All writers are influenced by the larger occasion: an environment of ideas,
attitudes, and emotions that swirl around a broad issue. Then there is the immediate occasion: an
event or situation that catches the writer's attention and triggers a response.

Why are we writing? What am I concerned with? Or, when analyzing others’ writing, what are
they writing in response to? What’s happening in the larger world? What is the specific reason
the person is writing (or speaking)?


Who is the Audience?
The group of readers to whom this piece is directed. As we begin to write, we must determine
who the audience is that we intend to address. It may be one person or a specific group. This
choice of audience will affect how and why we write a particular text.

When analyzing others’ writing, we have to determine who the writer had in mind, as well, and
why.

Questions to keep in mind: Is the writing intended to challenge a predicted point of view? To
build on a predicted shared point of view? Is the audience a peer group? Superiors? Other? Are
there both intended and unintended audiences?


What is the Purpose?
The reason behind the text. We need to consider the purpose of the text in order to develop the
thesis or the argument and its logic. We should ask ourselves, "What do I want my audience to
think or do as a result of reading my text?"

When analyzing others’ writing, we need to determine this same answer in regard to the purpose.
What am we, as readers, supposed to think or do as a result of this person’s writing?



What is the Subject?
We should be able to state the subject in a few words or phrases. This step helps us to focus
on the intended task throughout the writing process.

As well, when reading others’ writings, we should be able to state the subject in a few words or
phrases, as well, especially if the writing is done well.
What is the Tone?
The attitude of the author, often toward his or her writing and/or topic. The spoken word
can convey the speaker's attitude and thus help to impart meaning through tone of voice. With the
written word, it is tone that extends meaning beyond the literal, and we must learn to convey this
tone in our diction (choice of words), syntax (sentence construction), and imagery (metaphors,
similes, and other types of figurative language). The ability to manage tone is one of the best
indicators of a sophisticated writer.

Additionally, we should read others’ writings carefully to understand tone, because this meaning
is central to understanding. We look for clues that help us “hear” the writer, and thus make
judgments about his or her tone.

Source: This handout adapted from AP Central for Teachers



Tuesday, June 10, 2014

POET PRESENTATION

POET PRESENTATION


Poet Presentation Handout for Class Presentation


*Information needed in your poet presentation:
Due Date: Mon, 3/15 Begin presentations in class
* Birth Date and Birthplace
* Death Date/Place of Death
* Early Influences:
* You must include at least three events or people that influenced your poet.
* Education:
You must include the role or significance that this education had in later life for your poet.


* Major Accomplishments your poet has made:
Awards, etc. This must include the dates.







*Significance to the field of Poetry:
You must explain why this poet is worthy of note in his field of expertise.







*Contemporaries:
You must include the names of at least three other poets who wrote at the same time as your poet. Please include their roles.





*Famous Poems:Analyze two