Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Advertising Unit Final Essay: Op-Ed


Here is the link to the Op-Ed assignment with two Op-Ed examples:

Click Here

Click here for an outline template

These are all the things you need to have done:

______ Group Powerpoint Outlining Your Commercial Script (past due)

______ 3 Print Advertisements for you campaign (Due 5/25)

______ The Outline of your Op-Ed (5/25)

______ A rough draft written in your notebooks (6/1)

______Filming Commercial (6/3)

______Editing Commercial (6/6)

______ Type 2nd Draft (6/8)

______ Peer Edit (6/10)

______Final Draft (6/13)


This will be done ENTIRELY in class. You need to READ outside of class. Your books need to be finished by 6/17.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Creating Print Ads for Your PSA Campaigns


9th Graders: Part of your Public Service Announcement Campaign will involve creating 3 Print Advertisements.

Click Here for the Directions.

These will be due, through email, by the end of class on Wednesday.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Group Dynamic Activity Due Tuesday


Here is the link to the Group Assignment due Tuesday.

Click Here

10th Grade Conformity and Peer Pressure Survey Due Next Thursday

The results of your survey are due next Thursday. You should have already turned in your survey to me.

In case you were absent, here are the directions:

Your job is to create a survey that you will distribute to 50 different people at Edmonds Woodway High School.

You will need to find people that represent the makeup of Edmonds Woowday High School. Think about the different races, genders, ages and sexual orientations, IB or regular, etc.

You will need to pick a topic to focus on. These will all be related to peer pressure, but you are going to focus your subject a little bit more. Examples might be bullying, academic achievement, relationships, risky behavior, skipping school, etc.

5 questions of your survey should be related to their demographics and family history (age? Sex? single parent household? Siblings? Parents behavior? Parents strictness? Etc.)

15 other questions need to be focused on your topic. An example might be, “Do you consider yourself a leader amongst your friends?”

Once you have your twenty questions, share them with me or a friend. Edit them to make them more effective.

Lord of the Flies Chapters 2-5 Reading Guides


Click the links below to access these Reading Logs.

Chapters 2 and 3 Click Here

Chapters 4 and 5 Click Here

9th Grade: Here is your Independent Reading Log 1


Reading Logs are due next Monday. We will have a quiz on Monday.

Click Here

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Lord of the Flies Group Survivor


As a group, your job is to make a poster and answer questions based on the prompts provided. Your drawing must be detailed and colored. You will be graded on how thoughtful and thorough your responses are.

Group Survivor Assignment

Also, here is a list of the vocabulary words for the first portion of the book. I would like you to look up these words on your own. We will be reviewing them on Thursday.

LOTF vocabulary list #1
Use a dictionary to look up the following words. If you're still unclear ask me.

surmount
pendulum
domination
aromatic
contemptuous
contradict
hinder
spontaneous
ebullience
quota
officious
leeward
diminished
assent
recriminate
tirade
indignant
festoon
vicissitude
gesticulate
solemn
antagonism
opaque
tacit
clamorous
flaunt

Monday, May 2, 2011

Advertising Unit - Creating a New Toy


Working alone or with a partner, please follow the directions on the form below and create an advertisement campaign for a new toy.

How will you persuade your consumer?

Click here for directions

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Romeo & Juliet - The End


9th Graders, we are now finished with Romeo and Juliet, so all missing work from the unit needs to be turned in to me.

This includes:

*Filming your modernized scene (puppet show)
*Your sonnet (Click here for the assignment)
*Your Comic Book scene
*All quizzes and reading guides

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Macbeth Reading Guides

Here is the 2nd Reading Guide for Macbeth:

Reading Guide Act 2

Here is the reading guide for Act 3:

Macbeth Reading Guide Act III

Here is the 4th Reading Guide for Macbeth:

Act 4 Reading Guide


Here is the 5th Reading Guide for Macbeth:

Act V Reading Guide


We are now finished with Macbeth. If you have any late or missing work, or still need to make up the final exam, please come see me.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Where You Should Be Over the Break (9th and 10th Graders)

9th Graders: You should have read through ACT III, scene ii in Romeo and Juliet. You should have your puppet show filmed, you should have a script turned in, and you should have your comic book complete. These will all be due the day we return from break.


10th Graders: You should have read through Act III, scene iii in Macbeth. You should have turned in your comic book, you should have completed you reading guide, you should have recorded your modernized scene and turned in your final script.

Monday, March 28, 2011

10th Grade Finished Macbeth Scene Projects are due.


If you haven't given me your final draft, you need to today. It's already late!

9th Graders! Your Puppet Show needs to be recorded today!


We will be editing them in class on Wednesday! I also need a copy of your final draft with MLA formatting and stage direction.

Monday, March 21, 2011

10th Graders: Final Drafts of Scripts Due Tuesday


Be prepared to film (costumes, props, etc.)

9th Graders! Typed scripts (with stage direction) are due at the end of class.


Once you have completed your script, put it in MLA format.

MLA Heading:(Names, Mr. Kearl, English 9, 21 March 2011)
Times New Roman
Double Space
12 point font

Also, italicize all stage direction and bold all names.

Email a copy to my email address: kearla@edmonds.wednet.edu

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

10th Graders, Final Drafts of Scripts Due Tuesday 3/22


In order to receive credit for your final draft of your script, you must:

1. Make sure it's typed
2. Make sure it's revised
3. Make sure every group member has their names on it.
4. Make sure each group member has their own copy with their parts highlighted
5. Make sure you have costumes, props, and are ready to film on Tuesday.

Have a great weekend.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

10th Graders. Macbeth Update.



You should have read through Act I, scene v by the end of this week. You should have also finished a draft of your script, revised it in your group, and should be ready to bring props and costumes to start filming on Thursday.

9th Graders! Romeo Scripts and Reading Update


You should have read through Act II, scene iii by the end of this week. You should also have your modernized film script in your notebook. Talk to your group members if you don't know which pages you should revise.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Romeoand Juliet Puppet Show Project


Here is the directions, rubric, and outline for your first major project of the semester:

R & J Puppet Assignment Link


If you have been absent, you need to catch up with the reading. We are through ACT I of the play.

10th Grade Shakespeare Presentation Guidelines


Click on the following link to access the guidlines for your first major project of the semester. The rubric is attached as well.

Macbeth Presentation Assignment and Rubric

Below, you'll find a sample of a modernized and "blocked" script:

Modernized Script

Monday, February 28, 2011

10th Graders - Dramatic Arc skit!


Based on one of the themes from Macbeth, write a short script where a major conflict occurs. use the following topics:

1. A girlfriend or boyfriend pushes you to do something illegal.

2. You and a friend here from a "reliable" source that ONE of you will get the thing you want the most. The other person, will get nothing.

3. Friends stay the night at someones house. In the middle of the night, you hear screaming. What happened? Why?

4. After years of friendship, you find out that your best friends know your deepest, darkest secret. When people start to find out, your secret could destroy you.



However, you are NOT allowed to use a narrator. All of the character traits and setting must be presented through dialogue.

For example: "Get off of the couch and chance your clothes. You're starting to smell like stale pizza." By reading this statement, you know that the character is a slob and that it takes places in a messy living room.

Your skit should be about 3-4 scenes long.

Shakespearean Insults Skits (9th Grade)


Use the list of Shakespearean insults below:

Insults!


Then, write a short script where a major conflict occurs. However, you are NOT allowed to use a narrator. All of the character traits and setting must be presented through dialogue.

For example: "Get off of the couch and chance your clothes. You're starting to smell like stale pizza." By reading this statement, you know that the character is a slob and that it takes places in a messy living room.

Your skit should be about 2-3 scenes long.

ALSO, you need to read through the prologue and Act I, scene i of Romeo and Juliet. If you have trouble, feel free to read No Fear Shakespeare as a resource (not as a replacement!)

Thursday, February 17, 2011

English Notebooks are due at the end of the day today!

Shakespeare's Background PowerPoint


Click on the following link to access the Shakespeare Notes PowerPoint:

Shakespeare Background

If absent, you will need to view and take notes on this PowerPoint under the Shakespeare Notes entry.

Double Check To Make Sure Your Poems Have Posted!


I will be reading all of your poems over the weekend. If they are not there, they will be late!

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

10th Graders! Post Poems Here!


Click on the link that says "comments" below. Write your poems into the box and include your name. Select "name/url" for the user. Type your first and last name.

Poetry Comparison Essay Directions:

• Using the poem you found and wrote down in the library along with another poem we’ve read, your job is to write a 4 paragraph essay describing how the writers in each poem use similar literary elements (repetition, metaphors, etc.) and how those elements effect the meaning of the poem.
• Include a thesis statement and evidence from the poems to demonstrate your point. Example: In “Nothing Gold Can Stay,” by Robert Frost and “Christopher Lomax 60,” by Walter Dean Myers, each poet uses natural imagery, repetition, and extended metaphor to show how painful and short-lived the world can be.
• Each body paragraph should quote lines from the poem that shows this literary element.
You will turn in your notebook at the end of class on Thursday. I will be looking for your poetry log, your organization, and your written final. This work must be done in class. Not using class time will result in a decreased grade

Monday, February 14, 2011

9th Graders! Post Poems Here!


Poetry Final

Part I: Type and post poems to Kearl’s Website.• Make sure you have finished writing at least 4 of your poems. (Where I’m From…How to…Extended Metaphor…Poem in Two Voices…)
• Type and post at least 4 poems into your comment. Be sure to include your name.
• You can include an extra poem of your choice for 5% extra credit

Part II: Writing about poetry. To be completed in your English Notebook.
• Using the poem you found and wrote down in the library, write a 2 page essay describing how the writer uses literary elements (repetition, metaphors, etc.) and how those elements effect the meaning of the poem.
• Include a thesis statement and evidence from the poems to demonstrate your point. Example: In “Nothing Gold Can Stay,” Robert Frost uses the extended metaphor of seasons in order to demonstrate the brevity of life.
• Each body paragraph should quote lines from the poem that shows this literary element.
• You will turn in your notebook at the end of class on Wednesday. I will be looking for your poetry log, your organization, and your written final. This work must be done in class. Not using class time will result in a decreased grade.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Poetry Vocabulary


Extended Metaphor: A comparison between two unlike things that continues throughout a series of sentences in a paragraph or lines in a poem.

Assonance: If alliteration occurs at the beginning of a word and rhyme at the end, assonance takes the middle territory. “Food” and “tune” are assonance because of the “oo” sound in the middle of the word.

Meter: Meter is the rhythm established by a poem, and it is usually dependent not only on the number of syllables in a line but also on the way those syllables are accented.

Blank verse = Poetry that is written in unrhymed iambic pentameter. Blank verse is often unobtrusive and the iambic pentameter form often resembles the rhythms of ordinary speech. Shakespeare wrote most of his plays in blank verse.

Verse = A single metrical line of poetry, or poetry in general (as opposed to prose).

Alliteration = the repetition of initial sounds in neighboring words.

Image = language that evokes one or all of the five senses: seeing, hearing, tasting, smelling, touching.

Mood = the emotional attitude the author takes towards their subject. 

Internal Rhyme = a rhyme that takes place within a line, instead of at the end of the line. Used in most hip-hop lyrics. Example: I fought, the shot grazed my shin

Simile = the comparison of two unlike things using like or as. Example: He eats like a pig. Vines like golden prisons.

Metaphor= comparison of two unlike things using the verb "to be" and not using like or as as in a simile. EXAMPLE: He is a pig. Her love is a broken firework.

Oxymoron = putting two contradictory words together. EXAMPLE: Jumbo Shrimp

Onomatopoeia
= a word that imitates the sound it represents. Example: splash, wow, gush, kerplunk

Enjambment: the continuation of a sentence or clause over a line-break.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Poetry Powerpoints


If you click the links below, you will be taken to the PowerPoints for the Poetry Unit. This will include the Poetry Log, directions for the Where I'm From Poem, as well as the Extended Metaphor instructions.

Poetry Powerpoint 1

and

Poetry Powerpoint 2

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Poems You Need Typed By Next Wedensday (9th Grade) or Thursday (10th Grade)


1. Where I'm From...
2. How To...
3. Extended Metaphor
4. Personal Narrative Poem
5. Poem in Two Voices