Winter's Night Blog

What story down there awaits its end?

Hornby Reading and Quiz

As a reminder: We will be having a quiz over the first four chapters of About a Boy at the beginning of class tomorrow. The reading journals will be checked at this time, as well. Read More......

Paper, Poems

Guidelines for final poetry project:

Paper
  • Two full pages
  • Compare/contrast the tone of Rudyard Kipling's "If" with the tone of T.S. Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock."
  • Standard essay format (typed, Times New Roman, 12 pt font, double-spaced, 1" margins, header, title). After the amount of formatting "fudges" on the last paper, I will not accept anything that does not follow these guidelines. Better to have a shorter paper than have to turn it in late.
Poetry

Choose three of the following options (you may pick an option twice, but you cannot do one option three times):
  • Four haiku (three lines with 5,7,5 syllabic pattern)
  • One Cinquain (five lines with 2,4,6,8,2 syllabic pattern; no rhyme scheme)
  • One (other Cinquain) (five lines of any length with ababb)
  • One free-verse poem

If you wish to write and perform a song, you may substitute original music and lyrics for the other poems. If you wish to write a song for existing music, you must write one other type of poem.

Please email me with any questions.
Read More......

Basic Poetic Devices, Poetry Unit

Tomorrow (Tuesday, August 21), we will begin a discussion on the poetry analysis paper. The final project for this unit will consist of a short (2 page) paper comparing and contrasting two poems, and a creative piece (a complete song, a set of haiku, a sonnet, two songs without music, three free-verse poems). We will discuss the assignment more thoroughly in class, but the entire project will be five pages long. A rough draft will be due Friday (essay outline and solid ideas for each poem), and the final product will be due on Monday. We will begin About a Boy at that time.


Here is the list of basic poetic devices from the board today. We will begin writing on our poetry soon, so please look over the list for any terms you do not already know.


Simile- comparing two things using "like" or "as"

Metaphor- comparing two things without using "like" or "as"

Personification- a type of metaphor, in which a non-human thing is given human characteristics

Analogy- an extended comparison

Assonance- rhyming or repetition amongst vowel sounds

Alliteration- rhyming or repetition amongst consonant sounds

Onomatopoeia- words that sound like the sound being described

Poetic Meter

Iambic- unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable

Trochaic- stressed followed by unstressed

Anapestic- two unstressed followed by one stressed

Dactylic- stressed followed by two unstressed

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Mr. E and Extra Credit in One Post!!

Mr. E sent me this link to a NY Times article about schools around the country that require students to choose a major their freshman year of high school. The individual student's course of study is then tailored to his or her chosen major.

Would you guys do this? If you were able to take classes that would be directly applicable to your future job, would school be more interesting, or would it make you feel like you couldn't branch out?

This is an extra credit thread. Five points to those who critically comment on this article (push the little "Comment" button at the bottom of the post). Also, if you can find more articles about this online, post them. Share the wealth, my friends.

Edit: Great posts so far, guys. Keep 'em coming. Also, be sure you put your name on the post so I can give credit where it is due. Read More......

A Brief History of the 5-Second Rule

This hilarious article from the Washington Post gives a possible explanation of our compulsion to exclaim "five second rule!" before eating any dropped food. Don't look at me like that. You know you do it too. Read More......