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    • List: Advanced English 11
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Note to fellow writers
  Be sure to revise your essays carefully!

There’s an old saying among writers: “There’s no such thing as good writing. Only good-rewriting.”

Ernest Hemingway once confided to George Plimpton during an interview that he rewrote the ending to A Farewell to Arms 39 times before he was satisfied. Why so many rewrites? Plimpton asked.

Because, Hemingway responded, he wanted to get the words right.

Please work on revising your essays before I grade them. Start with your ideas. Can you state your main point in a single, clear sentence? If not, you haven’t brought your thoughts into focus yet, and if you’re thoughts aren’t focused it’s inevitably that your essay will wander around with no clear sense of what it’s trying to accomplish.

Is each paragraph really a paragraph, organized around one idea which is stated in a clear topic sentence?

Have you cut out unnecessary padding, so each sentence is sharp and lean and clear?

Have you proofread, to make sure that every sentence really is a sentence, and that your paragraphs are smooth with a rhythm that’s easy to follow?

Have you spell checked?

Here’s the checklist I will use to grade your essay:

Proofreading Checklist

Ideas and organization

  • Somewhere in the first paragraph, I state my thesis in a simple, direct sentence.
  • My thesis expresses an opinion rather than summarizes the story or states something that is simply factually true.
  • The body of my essay consists of three or four reasons that “prove” my thesis or examples that support it.
  • Every paragraph has a topic sentence which states the main idea of that paragraph.
  • Everything in the paragraph relates to that topic sentence.
  • The points are organized in a way that a reader can easily follow the argument.

Style
  • Every sentence is clear and graceful.
  • Most sentences have active verbs rather than “being” verbs, such as “is,” “was,” “were,” “are,” etc.
  • My nouns are specific rather than vague or abstract. (“tree” is vague; “willow” is specific֓trouble” is abstract; the death of her daughter is specific)

Conventions and Usage
  • Every word is spelled correctly.
  • Every sentence is complete (no fragments).
  • I have no fused sentences or comma splices. I’ve changed run-on sentences with too many jumbled together ideas into simpler sentences.
  • Possessive nouns have apostrophes. Conjunctions have apostrophes.
  • Proper nouns are capitalized, and every sentence begins with a capital.

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 10/27 at 11:59 PM
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Class Logistics •
Photography Club Membership
  2008-09

*Sierra Pete (883-0576) Brower (676-3365)
*Jordan Gochis (883-4224 or 261-6283)
*Mary Wiedrich (883-5398)
*Jake Walsh (270-3308)
*Melissa Cisneros (871-1566)
*Amanda Berens (270-3562)
*Chastity Biggers (212-7512)
*Sierra Kohler (887-2869)
*Sydney Plant (887-2874)
*Jazmin Auld (849-5734)
*Katie O’Brien (471-6537)

Ceylon Brown
Kate Finley (883-3286)
Josie Benedetti (880-0721)
Amanda Umphress (883-0010)
Danielle Kinyon (471-2125)
Mycal Bailey (471-1799)
Aspen Many Hides (207-9701)
Alexa Cline (229-0211)
Rebecca Costilla (253-9745)
Veda Mathias (849-5699)
Mariah Hamel (250-2596)
Josie Benedetti
Jenni Reilley (253-9630)
Laura Brandeis (887-2733)

Later:
Caitlin Mahoney

Officers
President
Vice President
Secretary
Treasurer
Exhibitions Director

Interests

Classes 16
Guest Speakers 9
Studio work 20
Shows/Exhibits 20
Field Trips 20
Community Service 14
Sharing 18
Photoshop 13
Fund Raising 18
Staged 1

Nature 16
Journalism 11
People/Portraits 17
Art 18
High School 11
Family 7
Black&White 1

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 10/06 at 09:48 AM
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Class Logistics •
Registering for Moodle
  Getting started on PHS Online

1. Go to my homepage: http://www.flatheadreservation.org/index.php/phs
2. In the navigation bar at the top of the page, hover over “PHS Website” then on the drop down menu, follow “Moodle”.  It will take you here: http://www.umphrey.net/classes/
3. You should be on “PHS Online”. Click “log on”
4. On the “log on” page, click “New Account”
5. For a user name, use your first name (capitalized) and the first letter of your last name (capitalized): John S
Pick a password that’s easy for you to remember. Write both these down and turn them in to me.\
For your email address, do not use your school email address, since the school blocks outside emails.
Fill in the rest of the form and click “Create Account”
6. You will receive an email with directions to complete your registration. If you don’t receive the email, be sure to check your “junk” folder.

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 09/09 at 09:30 AM
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Class Logistics •
AP English Language and Composition
  Advanced English 11

Focus: Fostering inquiry and helping students develop strong questioning skills and annotating skills when reading and responding to texts

Course Description

“AP English Language is a rigorous course, emphasizing expository writing and critical reading, with the majority of the curriculum drawn from American literature. Writing assignments include in-class timed writings and out-of-class essays. The analysis of many forms of literature (i.e., nonfiction essays, reflective essays, letters, etc.) focuses on how authors use language and literary devices to inform or persuade. The literature at this grade level focuses on the belief in the significance of the individual and the struggle to maintain individuality reflected in American writing and culture. Students also continue to work on grammar and vocabulary development. Since this is an Advanced Placement course, university credit may be available to students who pass the AP Language examination.” –AP Language Guide

Objectives:

All students taking this course are expected to take the AP Language and Composition exam in May. Upon completing the AP English Language and Composition course, 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”

--AP Language Guide

Course Topics:

Language and Identity

Summer Reading Texts:
The Road from Coorain, Jill Ker Conway
Hunger of Memory: The Education of Richard Rodriguez, Richard Rodriguez
A Hope in the Unseen, Ron Suskind
Additional essays, including:
“Mother Tongue,” Amy Tan
Excerpt from Under the Eye of the Clock, Christopher Nolan

Focus:

* What is meant by the term “rhetoric”?
* How does knowing the rhetorical situation contribute to our understanding of texts?
* How does language contribute to our sense of identity?
* How do authors use the appeals of logos, ethos, and pathos to present an argument.

Description and Narration: Perception and Epiphany

Excerpt from The Road From Coorain, Jill Ker Conway
“The Way to Rainy Mountain,” N. Scott Momaday
“Once More to the Lake,” E.B. White
“A Hanging,” George Orwell (model)
“A Swimming Lesson,” Jewelle Gomez
“The Chase,” Annie Dillard
“Gun Crazy,” Dorothy Allison
“Salvation,” Langston Hughes
“The Pie,” Gary Soto
“Nor Poor, Just Broke,” Dick Gregory
Selected visuals

Focus:

* How does a writer use imagery, figurative language, and descriptive diction to create an effect?
* How does knowing the rhetorical situation contribute to our understanding of the texts?
* What epiphany is conveyed through the text’s purpose?

Advertising and Our Culture

Essays, Excerpts, Etc.

* “What is the Good Life?” David G. Myers
* Excerpt from Born to Buy, Juliet B. Schor
* “Why I Hate Britney,” Nisey Williams
* “Devastating Beauty,” Teal Pfeifer
* “The Fat Tax: A Modest Proposal,” Jonathan Rauch
* Selected advertisements and images

Focus:

* What is visual rhetoric and how are images used as arguments?
* How do advertisers use logos, pathos, and ethos effectively?
* What is “culture” and how may we “read” cultural artifacts?
* How is satire and humor used to effectively present a claim?
* What are claims, warrants, and data (the Toulmin approach) and how do we use this to evaluate and write arguments?

The Great Gatsby: Selling the American Dream

The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald

Additional texts on the American Dream and patriotism, including:
“A Model of Christian Charity” (City on a Hill), John Winthrop
“I Have a Dream,” Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
“The Declaration of Independence,” Thomas Jefferson
“A Patriotic Left,” Michael Kazin
“A Nation Worth Defending,” William J. Bennett
Selected visuals for rhetorical analysis

Focus:

* How does Fitzgerald use language, including the methods of description and narration, to present a critical commentary on American life?
* How has rhetoric shaped our views of what it is to be an American?
* What can we learn from analyzing different sides of an issue?

Main Text

Cohen, Samuel. 50 Essays: A Portable Anthology. New York: Bedford/St. Martin, 2004

Reteaching/Reassessing Policy:

Students will be reassessed on assignments as determined by the AP Language team. Students will be informed ahead of time when an assignment may be reassessed. Finally, students must show evidence as determined by the teacher and team that they have made an attempt to relearn the material before taking the reassessment. Examples of that evidence include, but are not limited to

* Coming to the teacher for extra help
* Attending TAP
* Completing practice assignments
* Making corrections on the original assessment/assignment.

Reassessment must be done in a timely fashion according to a schedule determined by the teacher and team. The reassessed grade will replace the original grade.

Course Grading Criteria

Your grade will be based on an assessment of the work that you complete inside and outside of class. Please refer to the MCPS Grading and Reporting Policy featured on the B-CC web page for more specifics. Your grade for each quarter will be determined based upon the total number of points earned for all assignments divided by the total number of available points. Homework completion will count as 10% of your grade. All other assignments will count as 90% of your grade. Other assignments include:
• Papers
• AP-Style Timed Writings and Tests
• Position Papers, Proposals, and Quizzes
• Presentations and Graded Homework

Grading Policy

Final marking period grades in this course will be determined on a percentage basis.

A=90-100%
B=80-89%
C=70-79%
D=60-69%
E=50-59%

Absences:

Attendance is mandatory and necessary for success in this class. Please e-mail me if there is an issue. If a student is absent the day an assignment is due and the student had knowledge of the assignment, the assignment is due the day the student returns.

I allow students to make up missed assignments equal to the number of days of the legitimate absence. Failure to complete work in the allotted time will result in a failing grade for all missing assignments.

Late penalty:

One letter grade will be deducted for an essay that is passed in after the due date and by the deadline. An assignment passed in after the deadline must be approved by the teacher and may receive only 50% credit.

Academic Dishonesty
This applies to both written work and oral presentations. Examples of academic dishonesty include, but are not limited to, the following: the willful giving or receiving of an unauthorized text, unfair, dishonest, or unscrupulous advantage in academic work over other students using fraud, duress, deception, theft, trickery, talking, signs, gestures, copying, or any other methodology.

Plagiarism:

* Submitting or presenting another person’s work as your own without proper documentation, including downloaded information from the Internet and lab data.
* Using another student’s material without prior approval.

Cheating:

* Giving or receiving information during a test, quiz, and/or class work assignment without teacher authorization.
* Using hand signals, gestures, and the like during tests or quizzes to obtain/give information.
* Using unauthorized materials during a test or quiz.

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 09/01 at 10:27 AM
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Class Logistics •
Procrastination
  Why do today what you can. . .whatever

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 11/23 at 04:07 PM
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Class Logistics •
Schedule for English 11 first quarter
  From Midterm till Quarter End, Nov 9

Monday, October 15, 2007 Test over Winthrop
Test over “A Model of Christian Charity” by John Winthrop
For Tomorrow: 1. Read p. 84 - 97 Benjamin Franklin. 2. Do “Words to Own” Worksheet.
3. Be ready to answer questions 2, 4, 9 on Page 97

Tuesday, October 16, 2007 Test over Franklin (pages 84-97)
Answer orally “Words to Own” Worksheet (Franklin), Answer orally questions 2, 4, 9 on Page 97
Test: Benjamin Franklin (including “words to own")

Wednesday, October 17, 2007 Watch “American Dream” video
Hand in worksheet at end of period for 10 extra credit points.
The video may be watched on Tuesday, October 23, at 3:20 for those who missed it in class.

Monday, October 22, 2007 Read and Take Notes: “Speech to the Virginia Convention” p. 100-104. Take 2-column notes (see Recognizing Modes of Persuasion, p. 101): in the left column, appeals to logic. In the right, appeals to emotion.
For tomorrow: 1. Be ready to answer questions 3, 4, 5 on page 105 2. “Words to Own” Worksheet

Extra credit-Memorize these words from the Declaration of Independence for Friday’s test:

When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. . .

Tuesday, October 23, 2007 Test over Patrick Henry
Answer words to own worksheet orally. Answer orally questions 3, 4, 5 on page 105
Test over Patrick Henry
For Tomorrow: Read 105-112 (Thomas Paine) Be ready to discuss: analogy, anecdote, diction, figurative language, style
Be ready to answer questions 2, 3, 4 page 112. Complete “words to own” worksheet

Wednesday, October 24, 2007: Test over Thomas Paine
Answer orally questions 2, 3, 4 page 112. Answer orally words to own from worksheet
Test over Thomas Paine
For tomorrow: 1. Read the background on Thomas Jefferson, P. 114-115 2. Do the Words to Own Worksheet.
3. In addition, use each of the 10 words to own in an original sentence:

Thursday, October 25, 2007 Read and take notes on Declaration of Independence
Orally, give answers from words to own worksheet and give an original sentence using each word.
For tomorrow: Reading and Notetaking: p. 116-123
(Read the Declaration of Independence, taking notes in the form shown on page 115)
Use these strategies while reading: 1. paraphrase each paragraph as you finish it. If you have trouble, re-read the paragraph. Use resources: look unfamiliar words up in a dictionary, noting the words origins as well as its definition
3. Questioning: If you get confused, ask these questions: What exactly don’t I understand? Is it a word, sentence, paragraph, idea, or purpose? Be ready to answer the Reading Check questions, and questions 2, 3, 4 on page 125.

This extra credit question will be part of the test over the Declaration of Independence: Explain what the colonists understood “natural rights” to be, and what the role of government should be in relation to such rights. Use link on assignments page to read an essay on this topic.

Friday, October 26, 2007 Test over Declaration of Independence
Extra credit: Memorize these words from the Declaration of Independence:
When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. . .

Monday, October 29, 2007 Begin American Romanticism (1800-1860)
Slide show on romanticism. Video: The American Journey Running Time: 4:42
Hand in worksheet at end of video.
For tomorrow, read p. 137-150. There will be an open-note test over this reading.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007 Open Note Test: American Romanticism
In class: Read aloud “Analyzing a literary work” p. 198-200. The final assessment at the end of the Romanticism unit will be an essay analyzing one of the works you have read.
Open note test over pages 138-150
For tomorrow: read Washington Irving (Rip Van Winkle) p. 152-166

Wednesday, October 31, 2007 Writing: Explaining an analogy
Write an essay supporting the idea that Rip Van Winkle’s emancipation from his wife is like Americas emancipation from Great Britain. (#2, Parallel Awakenings, p. 167).
For tomorrow: read p. 168-172. Bryant uses some “inverted” sentences. It helps to put the sentence back into subject/predicate order in your mind as you read. Be sure to read carefully the “learning words with context clues” on page 168 and the background on William Cullen Bryant, as well as “Thanatopsis”. Be ready to answer questions 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 on page 174.

Thursday, November 01, 2007 Test over “Thanatopsis”
Orally answer questions 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 on page 174. Discuss onomatopoeia and personification.
Test over “Thanatopsis”
For tomorrow: read Henry Wadsworth Longfellow p. 175-179. Be ready to answer all the “Shaping Interpretations” questions on p. 179, for both poems.

Friday, November 02, 2007 Poetry meters
Orally answer “Shaping Interpretations” questions on p. 179, for both Longfellow poems.
Lecture: Poetry Meters. You should know: iamb, trochee, dactyl, anapest, monometer, dimeter, trimeter, tetrameter,
pentameter, sonnet, quatrain, couplet, ԓturn, rhyme scheme

Monday, November 05, 2007 Reading Longfellow
We will use Longfellow as representative of the literary period from the American Revolution to the transcendentalists (circa 1840).
Read “A Psalm of Life” and discuss it in terms of (a) traditional form (b) religious orthodoxy and (c) patriotic mythmaking.
For tomorrow: read the 15 Longfellow poems on line, select one you will teach to the rest of the class. Copy and print that one poem and bring it with you to class tomorrow.

Tuesday, November 06, 2007 Prepare presentation on one Longfellow poem.
1. Read the poem aloud. 2. Analyze the poem. You may focus on the poem’s religious meaning, its patriotic (nation-building) meaning, how meter and sound relates to meaning, or how the poem either fits or does not fit the “romantic” ideal. 3. Re-read the poem aloud.

Wednesday, November 07, 2007 Student presentation of Longfellow poems

Thursday, November 08, 2007 Student presentation of Longfellow poems

Friday, November 09, 2007 Test: American Romanticism
You will be asked to read a poem we have not studied in class, and then to apply what you know about using context clues, drawing inferences, and analyzing setting.

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 10/13 at 01:13 PM
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Class Logistics • Announcements •
wikispaces passwords
  Class website

Send to with a list of usernames, email addresses (if you have them - if you don’t just leave them out), and passwords in the following format and we’ll create the accounts for you.

user1,email1@address.com,password1
user2,email2@address.com,password2
user3,email3@address.com,password3

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 09/18 at 08:51 AM
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Class Logistics •
Posting on your blog
  Things to keep in mind

1. The two most recent posts on your blog are displayed on the student wiki where everyone (including parents) can see it. Be sure what you write is appropriate and intelligent.

2. Remember that online conduct can have offline consequences. The internet is the real world. What you do there matters.

3. Be sure to use conventional punctuation including capitals in your writing. Don’t use abbreviations or “text messaging” syntax. Be sure to spell check before hitting “publish.”

4. Remember that what you write online can last forever. I’ve set up your blogs so that you aren’t indentified. Before you provide personally identifying information, consider the fact that your site may be visible to some people who aren’t nice and that the words you write might pop up on a google search years from now by future employers not to mention your own children or grandchildren. Use decorum and restraint.

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 11/15 at 11:16 AM
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Class Logistics • Announcements • Announcements • Announcements •
Registering to use MOSAIC
  Joining the English class blog

Before you can enter the site you will need to register:
http://www.flatheadreservation.org/index.php/member/register/

You will need a username, a password, and an email address.

  1. For your username, use your real name: Your first name and your last name, properly capitalized. Scholarly discussions are not conducted anonymously. Everything you post on this site will have your real name attached. If you use a false name or don’t capitalize your names, I will delete your registration and you will need to start over.
  2. Your password must be at least 5 characters long. Use something you will be able to remember. I cannot see your password, so if you forget it, I will not be able to retrieve it for you.
  3. Use your private email if you have one. Otherwise, use your school email. You will not receive an email notifying you your registration is complete if you use a school email address, but I will be able to manually approve your registration.

After you are registered, you should be to log in here:
http://www.flatheadreservation.org/index.php/member/login/

Once you are logged in, you can enter Mosaic:
http://www.flatheadreservation.org/index.php/student/index/

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 10/14 at 05:28 PM
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Class Logistics • American Literature • Composition • Speech and Media Arts •
To take an online test
  QuizStar Website

Tests and quizzes for Mr. Umphrey’s classes may be taken at the QuizStar site (http://quizstar.4teachers.org/indexs.jsp)

Mr. Umphrey will register you for this site, and you need to get your user name and password from him to log in to this site.

(Instructor’s Log-In)

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 10/05 at 12:11 AM
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Class Logistics •
To Register on PHS Site
  For students in Mr. Umphrey's Classes
  1. Click the “register” link in the upper left corner of http://www.flatheadreservation.org/index.php/phs This will take you to the site’s “new member registration” form
  2. For both “user name” and “screen name” type your first and last name, properly capitalized. No anonymous postings will be allowed.
  3. Use a home email rather than a school email, if you have one.
  4. Pick a password that will be easy to remember--at least 5 characters long.
Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 10/04 at 09:51 AM
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Class Logistics •

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