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    Mr. Kendrick Harmon
Class of 2009 - We ALL March June 5th!    
English IV
First Semester:
Students will study British Literature with an emphasis on satire including but not limited to excerpts of Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift, Canterbury Tales by Chaucer, and The Inferno by Dante. Students will study grammar with an emphasis on correct use and punctuation of phrases and clauses in sentences with elevated complexity. Students will continue to build vocabulary and develop vocabulary skills in preparation for the SAT and ACT. Writing will be for the purpose of remediation for the TAKS and preparation for college.

Second Semester: Continued study of British Literature with an emphasis on protagonists: MacBeth as a Tragic Hero, Beowulf as an Epic Hero, Heathcliff and Maxim de Winter as Byronic Heroes, and King Arthur as Archetypal Hero. Continued vocabulary building exercises and quizzes, grammar, research writing, essay writing and creative writing in preparation for college

End of Six Weeks Curriculum Based Assessment is administered on the last Tuesday of the
six weeks.
Grammar exam is administered on the Tuesday before the CBA.
Vocabulary quizzes are administered every Thursday.
Advanced Placement English IV
English Literature and Composition

An AP English Literature and Composition course engages students in the careful reading and critical analysis of imaginative literature. Through the close reading of selected texts, students deepen their understanding of the ways writers use language to provide both meaning and pleasure for their readers. As they read, students consider a work’s structure, style, and themes as well as such smaller-scale elements as the use of figurative language, imagery, symbolism, and tone.

Goals
The course includes intensive study of representative works from various genres and periods, concentrating on works of recognized literary merit. The pieces chosen invite and reward rereading and do not, like ephemeral works in such popular genres as detective or romance fiction, yield all (or nearly all) of their pleasures of thought and feeling the first time through.

The AP English Literature Development Committee agrees with Henry David Thoreau that it is wisest to read the best books first; the committee also believes that such reading should be accompanied by thoughtful discussion and writing about those books in the company of one’s fellow students. Reading in an AP course is both wide and deep. This reading necessarily builds upon the reading done in previous English courses.

• In their AP course, students read works from several genres and periods—from the sixteenth to the twenty-first century—but, more importantly, they get to know a few works well.
• They read deliberately and thoroughly, taking time to understand a work’s complexity, to absorb its richness of meaning, and to analyze how that meaning is embodied in literary form.
• In addition to considering a work’s literary artistry, students reflect on the social and historical values it reflects and embodies. Careful attention to both textual detail and historical context provides a foundation for interpretation, whatever critical perspectives are brought to bear on the literary works studied.

A generic method for the approach to such close reading involves the following elements: the experience of literature, the interpretation of literature, and the evaluation of literature.
• By experience, we mean the subjective dimension of reading and responding to literary works, including precritical impressions and emotional responses.
• By interpretation, we mean the analysis of literary works through close reading to arrive at an understanding of their multiple meanings.
• By evaluation, we mean both an assessment of the quality and artistic achievement of literary works and a consideration of their social and cultural values.
All three of these aspects of reading are important for an AP English Literature and Composition course. Moreover, each corresponds to an approach to writing about literary works.
• Writing to understand a literary work may involve writing response and reaction papers, along with annotation, freewriting, and keeping some form of a reading journal.
• Writing to explain a literary work involves analysis and interpretation and may include writing brief focused analyses on aspects of language and structure.
• Writing to evaluate a literary work involves making and explaining judgments about its artistry and exploring its underlying social and cultural values through analysis, interpretation, and argument.
In short, students in an AP English Literature and Composition course read actively. The works taught in the course require careful, deliberative reading. And the approach to analyzing and interpreting the material involves students in learning how to make careful observations of textual detail, establish connections among their observations, and draw from those connections a series of inferences leading to an interpretive conclusion about a piece of writing’s meaning and value.

Most of the works studied in the course were written originally in English, including pieces by African, Australian, Canadian, Indian, and West Indian authors. Some works in translation may also be included (e.g., Greek tragedies, Russian or Latin American fiction. By the end of the course, students will have studied literature from both British and American writers as well as works written from the sixteenth century to contemporary times.

Although neither linguistic nor literary history is the principal focus in the AP course, students gain awareness that the English language that writers use has changed dramatically through history, and that today it exists in many national and local varieties. They also become aware of literary tradition and the complex ways in which imaginative literature builds upon the ideas, works, and authors of earlier times.

Writing is an integral part of the AP English Literature and Composition course and exam. Writing assignments focus on the critical analysis of literature and include expository, analytical, and argumentative essays. Although critical analysis makes up the bulk of student writing for the course, well-constructed creative writing assignments may help students see from the inside how literature is written. Such experiences sharpen their understanding of what writers have accomplished and deepen their appreciation of literary artistry. The goal of both types of writing assignments is to increase students’ ability to explain clearly, cogently, even elegantly, what they understand about literary works and why they interpret them as they do.

To that end, writing instruction includes attention to developing and organizing ideas in clear, coherent, and persuasive language. It includes study of the elements of style. And it attends to matters of precision and correctness as necessary. Throughout the course, emphasis is placed on helping students develop stylistic maturity, which, for AP English, is characterized by the following:
• a wide-ranging vocabulary used with denotative accuracy and connotative resourcefulness;
• a variety of sentence structures, including appropriate use of subordinate and coordinate constructions;
• a logical organization, enhanced by specific techniques of coherence such as repetition, transitions, and emphasis;
• a balance of generalization with specific illustrative detail; and
• an effective use of rhetoric, including controlling tone, maintaining a consistent voice, and achieving emphasis through parallelism and antithesis.

The writing required in an AP English Literature and Composition course is thus more than a mere adjunct to the study of literature. The writing that students produce in the course reinforces their reading. Since reading and writing stimulate and support one another, they are taught together in order to underscore both their common and their distinctive elements.
It is important to distinguish among the different kinds of writing produced in an AP English Literature and Composition course. Any college-level course in which serious literature is read and studied includes numerous opportunities for students to write and rewrite. Some of this writing is informal and exploratory, allowing students to discover what they think in the process of writing about their reading. Some of the writing involves research, perhaps negotiating differing critical perspectives. Much writing involves extended discourse in which students develop an argument or present an analysis at length. In addition, some writing assignments should encourage students to write effectively under the time constraints they encounter on essay exams in college courses in many disciplines, including English.

The various AP English Literature Released Exams and AP Central provide sample student essay responses written under exam conditions—with an average time of 40 minutes for students to write an essay response. The sample student essays in these publications were written in response to two different types of questions: (1) an analysis of a passage or poem in which students are required to discuss how particular literary elements or features contribute to meaning; and (2) an “open’’ question in which students are asked to select a literary work and discuss its relevant features in relation to the question provided. Students can be prepared for these essay questions through exercises analyzing short prose passages and poems and through practicing with “open’’ analytical questions. Such exercises need not always be timed; instead, they can form the basis for extended writing projects.

Because the AP course depends on the development of interpretive skills as students learn to write and read with increasing complexity and sophistication, the AP English Literature and Composition course is intended to be a full-year course. Teachers at schools that offer only a single semester block for AP are encouraged to advise their AP English Literature and Composition students to take an additional semester of advanced English in which they continue to practice the kind of writing and reading emphasized in their AP class

The above information was taken (with few minor changes in format and omission of information directed solely at the teacher) from the College Board course description page found at <apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/members/repository/
52272_apenglocked5_30_4309.pdf.


Required Texts
Students should consider obtaining a personal copy of the various novels, plays, epics, poems, and short fiction used in the course. Students may check out books from the English Department; however, a personal copy allows the student to annotate directly on the page.
Preliminary list of major works to be studied (may be checked out or purchased):
• The Awakening by Kate Chopin
• Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
• The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer
• Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift
• The Inferno from The Divine Comedy by Dante
• Selected excerpts from Purgatorio and Paradisio from The Divine Comedy
• The Tragedy of Hamlet Prince of Denmark by William Shakespeare
• Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead by Tom Stoppard
• Poetics by Aristotle
• “The Giaour” by George Gordon, Lord Byron
• Bronte, Emily. Wuthering Heights with Connections. Austin: Holt, no copy right date.
• Excerpts of L’ Morte d’ Arthur by Sir Thomas Mallory
• The Tale of Kieu by Nguyen Du
• Our Town by Thornton Wilder
• Perrine’s Literature: Structure, Sense, and Sound

The Following text books will be checked out to the students and need not be purchased
• African American Literature. Austin: Holt, 1998.
• Daniel, Kathleen, et al. eds. Elements of Literature Sixth Course Literature of Britain with
World Classics. Austin: Holt, 2000.
• Tatum, Charles, ed. Mexican American Literature. Orlando: Harcourt, 1990.
• BK English IV


Performance Tasks
Students will be evaluated on all of the following:
• Vocabulary with a focus on etymology, denotative accuracy and connotative resourcefulness;
• Grammar lessons as necessary;
• Multiple choice questions drawn from and imitation of past AP Exam questions
• Timed essays based on past AP Test prompts;
• Essay questions as required by college level writers;
• Reading/responding/analyzing novels, drama, short stories, expository non-fiction, persuasive non-fiction, narrative non-fiction, and poetry;
• Creative writing including but not limited to short story and poetry;
• Artistic visual representation of ideas including but not limited to theme, conflict, compare-contrast, and foil;
• Literary analysis papers including a multi-source research paper in which the students incorporate professional literary criticism with their own; and
• Journaling, personal narrative, and reflective writing for a variety of purposes.
Writing expectations
Assignments will include: statements, paragraphs, short story, free writing, reading journals, timed in-class formal essays, and out-of-class formal essays- narrative, expository, and argumentative. Students should use every assignment that involves writing to practice their best composition skills. College-level writing is characterized by the following:
• Legible handwriting or MLA appropriate font;
• A mastery of the conventions of grammar including spelling, capitalization, and punctuation;
• a wide-ranging vocabulary used with denotative accuracy and connotative resourcefulness;
• a variety of sentence structures, including appropriate use of subordinate and coordinate constructions, and loose, periodic, and inverted sentences;
• a logical organization, enhanced by specific techniques of coherence such as repetition (including parallel structure, anaphora, epistrophe, and anadiplosis), transitions (explicit and implied), and emphasis;
• a balance of generalization with specific illustrative detail; and
• an effective use of rhetoric, including controlling tone, maintaining a consistent voice, and achieving emphasis through parallelism, antithesis, and climax.

Evaluation of formal essays will conform to the nine point rubric used by the graders for the AP English Literature and Composition Exam. The class will review and discuss this rubric at the beginning of the year; students will use this rubric in composing and editing their essays. After receiving feedback from their peers and the teacher, students will revise and edit their essays to the college level standards mentioned above.

Evaluation of creative writings will follow a rubric provided to students before the assignment due date. After receiving feedback from their peers and the teacher, students will revise and edit these works as appropriate.

Individual students who demonstrate the need may be instructed to complete grammar remediation exercises when such exercises would be unnecessary for the entire class.
Advanced Placement English III
Introduction
An AP course in English Language and Composition engages students in becoming skilled readers of prose written in a variety of rhetorical contexts, and in becoming skilled writers who compose for a variety of purposes. Both their writing and their reading should make students aware of the interactions among a writer’s purposes, audience expectations, and subjects as well as the way generic conventions and the
resources of language contribute to effectiveness in writing.

Goals
The goals of an AP English Language and Composition course are diverse because the college composition course is one of the most varied in the curriculum. The college course provides students with opportunities to write about a variety of subjects from a variety of disciplines and to demonstrate an awareness of audience and purpose. But the overarching objective in most first-year writing courses is to enable students to write effectively and confidently in their college courses across the curriculum
and in their professional and personal lives. Therefore, most composition courses emphasize the expository, analytical, and argumentative writing that forms the basis of academic and professional communication, as well as the personal and reflective writing that fosters the development of writing facility in any context. In addition, most composition courses teach students that the expository, analytical, and argumentative writing they must do in college is based on reading as well as on personal experience and observation. Composition courses, therefore, teach students to read primary and secondary sources carefully, to synthesize material from these
texts in their own compositions, and to cite sources using conventions recommended
by professional organizations such as the Modern Language Association (MLA).

As in the college course, the purpose of the AP English Language and Composition course is to enable students to read complex texts with understanding
and to write prose of sufficient richness and complexity to communicate effectively with mature readers. An AP English Language and Composition course should help students move beyond such programmatic responses as the five-paragraph essay that
provides an introduction with a thesis and three reasons, body paragraphs on each reason,
and a conclusion that restates the thesis. Although such formulaic approaches may provide minimal organization, they often encourage unnecessary repetition and fail to engage the reader. Students should be encouraged to place their emphasis on content, purpose, and audience and to allow this focus to guide the organization of their writing.
While the AP English Language and Composition course assumes that students already understand and use standard English grammar, it also reflects the practice of reinforcing writing conventions at every level. Therefore, occasionally the exam may contain multiple-choice questions on usage to reflect the link between grammar and
style. The intense concentration on language use in the course enhances students’ ability to use grammatical conventions appropriately and to develop stylistic maturity in their prose. Stylistic development is nurtured by emphasizing the following:
• a wide-ranging vocabulary used appropriately and effectively;
• a variety of sentence structures, including appropriate use of subordination
and coordination;
• logical organization, enhanced by specific techniques to increase coherence, such
as repetition, transitions, and emphasis;
• a balance of generalization and specific illustrative detail; and
• an effective use of rhetoric, including controlling tone, establishing and maintaining voice, and achieving appropriate emphasis through diction and
sentence structure.
When students read, they should become aware of how stylistic effects are achieved by writers’ linguistic choices. Since imaginative literature often highlights such stylistic decisions, fiction and poetry clearly can have a place in the AP English Language and Composition course. The main purpose of including such literature is to aid students in understanding rhetorical and linguistic choices, rather than
to study literary conventions.

Upon completing the AP English Language and Composition course, then,
students should be able to:
• analyze and interpret samples of good writing, identifying and explaining an
author’s use of rhetorical strategies and techniques;
• apply effective strategies and techniques in their own writing;
• create and sustain arguments based on readings, research, and/or personal
experience;
• write for a variety of purposes;
• produce expository, analytical, and argumentative compositions that introduce a complex central idea and develop it with appropriate evidence drawn from primary and/or secondary sources, cogent explanations,and clear transitions;
• demonstrate understanding and mastery of standard written English as well as stylistic maturity in their own writings;
• demonstrate understanding of the conventions of citing primary and secondary sources;
• move effectively through the stages of the writing process, with careful attention to inquiry and research, drafting, revising, editing, and review;
• write thoughtfully about their own process of composition;
• revise a work to make it suitable for a different audience;
• analyze image as text; and
• evaluate and incorporate reference documents into researched papers.
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