MORGAN PARK HIGH SCHOOL 1744 WEST PRYOR AVENUE CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60643 Instructor: Nicole Ortman, NBCT Course: AP English Literature & Composition B.A. Secondary Education w/ English Major, Knox College; M.Ed. Interdisciplinary Studies, National-Louis University Main Office Phone: 773-535-2550 Email: nmortman@cps.edu Website: www.morganparkcps.org Link to Parent Portal: https://parent.cps.k12.il.us/pc/default.aspx Link to Student Portal: https://student.cps.k12.il.us/pc/studentlogin.aspx Course Overview The AP English Literature and Composition Course is designed to teach students to be come critical readers, interpreters, evaluators, and writers of text. Students will read, experience, discuss, and respond in writing to a variety of works from various genres. Students will take the AP exam on May 6th. Reading Assignments Students will be required to actively read every assignment and utilize a reading/note-taking strategy such as Cornell Notes, reader response journals, or annotating the text. Students will closely read texts and will be able to interpret multiple meanings, recognize and evaluate historical and cultural context of the text, and analyze rhetorical devices. Students will read texts from various time periods and will be able to assess the author’s style and compare and contrast the style of numerous authors. Students will be required to participate in thoughtful discussion about text through a Socratic Seminar and will use reading strategies to improve writing skills. The majority of the reading that is required will be done outside of class. Writing Assignments Students will clearly, concisely, and consistently write expository, analytical, and argumentative essays. Students will write creative assignments such as poems and narratives. Students will complete in-class timed writing activities. Students will keep writing logs as a reference for the proper use of sentence structure, voice, vocabulary, and supporting details. Students will proofread, edit, and revise all written work and will be required to participate in writing groups and teacher conferences. All major writing assignments will involve a peer edit and teacher conference before the final paper is submitted. Students will utilize the SOAPSTone strategy as they compose their own written work and will use the strategy to better interpret text. I have listed all of the writing assignments with the appropriate units of study. The essays that are from previous AP exams will be timed and written in class. The others will be completed for homework. Expectations for students: Come to class prepared, read the assigned texts, and be ready to learn. Adhere to the school electronic and tardy policies. Turn in assignments when they are due and do not make excuses for late work. Have fun, keep an open mind, and always try your best. 1 Expectations for the teacher: I will provide you with examples of the different types of writing that are required in this course and model strategies that we will use in this class. I will provide you with a rubric before you begin writing so you know how you will be assessed. I will schedule a conference with you before your major papers are due. I will have high expectations for you and have confidence in your success in this college level course. I will update grades every Monday or sooner so you are aware of your average. Grading Scale Practice exams Research assignments Reading journals, activities, and notes Unit writing assignments Tests/quizzes/assessments 10% 10% 30% 30% 20% 90-100 80-89 70-79 60-69 Under 60% A B C D F Attendance is mandatory. No late work will be accepted except in the case of an emergency. If you have any questions or are concerned with your progress in this class, you can email me at nmortman@cps.edu. I am available after school on Mondays in room 250 if you require extra assistance. I will be available some Saturday mornings (dates TBD) for novel close reads and homework help. I am here to make sure that you are successful in this class, so please do not hesitate to ask for help. Required Materials Pens, highlighters, post-it notes, notebook, binder, pocket dividers, paper Textbooks Most of the poems, short stories and the plays are in the text, The Brief Bedford Reader, ninth edition. Handouts of the poems that are not in the course textbook will be given to you. Some of the novels will be provided for you. The titles are listed in the units. Although the school provides novels, you might want to purchase your own novels so you can make notations and write in the margins. You will have to purchase two books, Light in August by September 30th and The Scarlet Letter by December 1st. Common Core and CRS Standards CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.11-12.3: Analyze the impact of the author’s choices regarding how to develop and relate elements of a story or drama (e.g., where a story is set, how the action is ordered, how the characters are introduced and developed). CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.11-12.5: Analyze how an author’s choices concerning how to structure specific parts of a text (e.g., the choice of where to begin or end a story, the choice to provide a comedic or tragic resolution) contribute to its overall structure and meaning as well as its aesthetic impact. COU (20-23): Ensure that a verb agrees with its subject when there is some text between the two 2 ·WCH (24-27): Use the word or phrase most appropriate in terms of the content of the sentence and tone of the essay. Unit One 1st quarter Essential Questions: What is advanced placement? What are the requirements for this course? Teacher will introduce the course requirements, syllabus, AP exam format, and will review writing techniques and organization of papers. Teacher will review strategies that are to be utilized as pre-writing strategies during reading in this course such as SOAPStone, rhetorical devices, and annotating a text. Students will complete a timed assessment on the summer reading assignment and will peer edit these papers. Students will re-write these papers after a review of writing styles and a teacher conference. Teacher will model how to organize an AP binder with the prompts, rubrics, written assignments, and other pertinent material. Unit Two 1st quarter Theme – Identity Essential Questions: How do we define ourselves? What internal and external factors contribute to our identities? Novels: Analyze characters, theme, style, and the importance of setting. The final essay will be to explain how the speaker uses language to provoke questions about identity and perception. William Faulkner Drama: Light in August Introduction to drama and the elements of drama. The final assessment will be an AP style timed writing prompt from 1996. William Shakespeare King Lear Poems: Introduction to poetry and poetry analysis with a stress on reading for meaning. We will review poetic devices. The final assessment will be an AP style multiple choice exam and a creative writing essay using a photograph of your own. Sylvia Plath Margaret Atwood Anne Sexton Joy Harjo Gwendolyn Brooks William Shakespeare William Shakespeare “Mirror” “This is a Photograph of Me” “Self in 1958” “Fire” “the birth in a narrow room” “Sonnet 55” “Sonnet 118” 3 Unit Three 2nd quarter Theme - Love and Loss Essential Questions: What is true love? Has society’s views about love changed over time? Short Stories: Introduction to short fiction. We will focus on using language effectively and writing a clear thesis statement. Write a critical essay on what love and/or loss means to the speaker in one of the stories with an emphasis on the religious, social and political culture of the location and time period in which it was written. Independent research will be required for this assignment and students will use the MLA format. Papers should be a minimum of five pages typed. James Joyce Raymond Carver Ernest Hemmingway Tim O’Brien Chinua Achebe Louise Erdrich D.H. Lawrence William Faulkner Poems: Figurative language, tone, diction, imagery, and symbolism. Students will complete three essays as we read and interpret poetry. Evaluate how diction, imagery, tone, and figurative language develop the theme of a poem. After reading the poems by Marlowe and Raleigh, write the mistress’s reply to Marvell’s poem. Compare and contrast the poems by Browning and Spera. AP timed writing prompt from 1995. John Donne Christopher Marlowe Sir Walter Raleigh Andrew Marvell Robert Browning Gabriel Spera Drama: Araby What We Talk About When We Talk About Love Hills Like White Elephants The Things They Carried Dead Men’s Path The Red Convertible The Rocking-Horse Winner A Rose for Emily “A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning” “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” “The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd” “To His Coy Mistress” “My Last Duchess” “My Ex-Husband” Writing about drama with a focus on character. The assessment will entail students to choose one character from Fences and argue that he or she is the hero. Students will also write a first person narrative in which an older character looks back at his/her life and reflects on a specific incident. AP timed writing prompt from 1997. August Wilson Fences Novel The written assessment will be a prompt from the 1995 AP Exam. Nathaniel Hawthorne The Scarlet Letter 4 Unit Four 3rd quarter Theme – Nature and Technology Essential Questions: What role does technology play in our lives? How has technology changed over time? How is nature viewed? Novel: The written assessment will be a prompt from a previous AP Exam. Students may choose from the prompt used in 1977 or the prompt from 1980. Mary Shelley Frankenstein Poems: What emotions do the actual or imagined death of the creatures in these poems stir in the viewer? Consider specific details and poetic forms. AP timed writing prompt from 1997. Maxine Kumin D.H. Lawrence Richard Wilbur William Stafford Theodore Roethke Sylvia Plath “Woodchucks” “Snake” (double check this one) “The Death of a Toad” “Traveling through the Dark” “The Meadow Mouse” “Medallion” Considering poetic devices and elements, compare and contrast how technology/progress is presented in two of the following poems. Write an original poem about modern technology using imagery and symbolism. Multiple-choice questions following the AP exam format will be used as a final assessment. William Blake William Blake Robert Frost Walt Whitman Langston Hughes Carl Sandburg e.e. cummings Lord Byron Ezra Pound “The Tyger” “The Lamb” “Mending Wall” “A Noiseless Patient Spider” “The Negro Speaks of Rivers” “Chicago” “pity this monster,manukind” “She Walks in Beauty” “In a Station at the Metro” 5 Unit Five 4th quarter Essential Questions: What is a personal statement? What devices do authors use to make personal statements? After the AP Exam, we will work on personal statements and college entrance essays. We will focus on voice, style, sentence structure, and tone. We will read a variety of essays, such as “Shooting an Elephant” and students will write about the personal statements being made in literature. Students will also participate in literature circles and will be able to choose one book from the following: William Faulkner Emily Bronte Charles Dickens F. Scott Fitzgerald Kate Chopin Jane Austen Toni Morrison William Shakespeare As I Lay Dying Wuthering Heights A Christmas Carol The Great Gatsby The Awakening Pride and Prejudice The Bluest Eye Hamlet The AP English Literature exam will be given at 8:00 am on May 6, 2015. Only by taking the exam, can students earn advanced placement credit towards their GPAs. Only by doing well on the exam, can students earn college credit. The cost of an Advanced Placement exam is $91.00. In past years, students who qualified for free or reduced lunch qualified for a fee waiver from the State of Illinois. The state has not published its policy this year, but make sure to turn in a "lunch form" to make sure you qualify for the waiver if the policy doesn't change. Test fees for those students who don't qualify for a waiver will be collected at the beginning of the second semester. Any questions regarding the AP exam or fees should be directed to Mr. Moore, Morgan Park's Advanced Placement Coordinator, at GTMOORE@CPS.EDU . 6