Good morning. The first part of a novel should do at least three things: o Setting of the novel. Establish the setting of the action using details from.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Poetry Analysis TPCASST.
Advertisements

Poetry Analysis Using TPCASTT
A tool for analyzing poetry
Poetry Analysis English I
Poetry Analysis Using TPCASTT
Poetry Analysis Using TPDASTT
Elements of Poetry Ms. Barrow.
Poetry Analysis TPCASTT
Response Essays. Prose Passage Generally one page excerpt from a work to read and analyze. Determine your ability to read and interpret a sustained piece.
ENGLISH II MS. CLZIANOSKI
Poetry Analysis Using TPCASTT Mrs. Willoughby-Hull English 12 ERWC/AP English Lit August 22-23, 2013.
Poetry Analysis Using the TP-CASTT Method. What is TP CASTT? An acronym of steps used to analyze poetry. The results of TPCASTT can be used to write an.
Welcome Back Entry Task: Fill out the scantron per example
Poetry Analysis Using TPCASTT. 2/3/11 I will justify a speaker's perspective and analyze the prevalence of discrimination within a poem using TPCAST.
This is a process to help you organize your analysis of poetry. We have already learned the vocabulary, now it’s time to put it into practice! Together,
Poetry Analysis Using TPCASTT
Please take out your novels, journals, Note- taking handout and the article you printed out. Sophomore World Literature and Language Arts.
Literary Terms The elements within a story or novel the author uses to reveal the message of the story.
British Literature Entry Task: Last week you were assigned a take home narrative essay. You were given 4 possible prompts taken from the common application.
British Literature Entry Task: Today you will be checking out the novel Into Thin Air by John Krakauer. What do you know about the 1996 disaster on Mt.
Poetry Analysis Using TPCASTT English 11 Coach Guzman.
British Literature Entry Task: Today we will be participating in a Socratic Seminar on the novel Once and Future King. Your focus should be on the transformations.
TPCASTT Poetry Analysis Title Paraphrase Connotation Attitude Shift
Take out your novels and journals. We will start Antigone so make sure you have your Springboards Sophomore World Literature and Language Arts.
British Literature Entry Task: Today we are reading the Pardoner’s Tale; without using the textbook (notes are acceptable) describe the Pardoner. What.
British Literature Entry Task: Reading journals/character charts on desk Into Thin Air – In chapters 13 – 15 Jon Krakauer describes many causes that lead.
Poetry Analysis Oct. 28, This is a process to help you organize your analysis of poetry. We have already learned the vocabulary, now it’s time to.
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis. TP-CASTT Title Paraphrase Connotation Attitude/Tone Shifts Title Theme.
TPCASTT.
Good morning. Activities 8 & 9: Doublethink and Thoughtcrime Big Brother, the government of Oceania, attempts to control the ideas of the population by.
Good morning. Entry Task: Pick up a green interactive workbook from the top shelf of the bookcase in front of my desk On a piece of notebook paper write.
Good morning. You will need your workbook, Literature book and timeframe chart for today’s class. Swift and Pope revision essays on the corner of your.
Take out your novels and journals. We will start Antigone so make sure you have your Springboards Sophomore World Literature and Language Arts.
Honors Senior British Literature and Language Arts
Poetry Analysis Using TPCASTT. Getting Started… This is a process to help you organize your analysis of poetry. It will take you step by step to make.
Please take out your novels and your journals. You will have 10 minutes to work on your reading or quote search. Sophomore World Literature and Language.
Honors Senior British Literature and Language Arts
British Literature Entry Task: Today we are starting a new literary era; the Renaissance. What do you know about this time period? What kind of literature.
Good morning. Entry Task: Reflect on your reading What difficulties/questions do you have about your reading? What theme are you primarily focusing on.
 Entry Task: Take your novels and character charts out on your desk. Pull out your Literary Vocabulary and Julius Caesar study guide Hiroshima novel test.
A College Board Strategy brought to you by Mrs. H TP-CASTT Method for Poetry Analysis.
Analyze the title first. What do you predict this poem will be about? Write down your predictions. We will reflect on the title again after we have read.
British Literature Entry Task: Reading journals/character charts on desk to be checked Next class you will be taking the novel test/essay for the novel.
Pick up your Springboard books, yellow folders and your I.D. card Sophomore World Literature and Language Arts.
Bridge to College 3 rd Block. What do you know about the novel 1984 and the author George Orwell? Have you heard the word “Orwellian”? What do you think.
TPCASTT A guide on how to analyze poetry. Title Analyze the title (this will be done again later) Ask yourself – “What do I think this poem will be about.
Senior British Literature Ms. McDermott GreaneyMarch 25, 2016 Block 5 th and 6 th (B)
Good morning. Today we are starting Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest Satire is a genre of literature that features constructive social criticism.
Take out your novels/reading journals and pick up your Springboard book from the front of the classroom Sophomore World Literature and Language Arts.
TP-CASTT Analysis I read it, but I don’t get it..
Senior British Literature Ms. McDermott GreaneyMarch 23, 2016 Block 5 th and 6 th (B)
Poetry Analysis. T IS FOR TITLE Analyze the title first. What do you predict this poem will be about? Write down your predictions. We will reflect on.
Good morning. You will need your workbook, Literature book and timeframe chart for today’s class. Entry Task: Today we are checking out our next novel;
Good morning. Students will understand the shift from early Victorian era to later Victorian era in regards to Views of gender roles Decorum Materialism.
(Poem Title) (author) (presenter). Title Make a prediction about what the poem means.
Using TPCASTT for Analysis of Poetry
Poetry Analysis Using the TP-CASTT Method
Introduction to Poetry Analysis
TPCASTT Method Analyzing Poetry.
Poetry Analysis Using the TP-CASTT Method
TPFASTTS Poetry Analysis
Poetry Analysis AP Literature.
Poetry Analysis Using the TP-CASTT Method
Poetry Analysis Using TPCASTT
A guide on how to analyze poetry
Using TPCASTT for Poetry Analysis
Poetry Analysis Using TPCASTT
Introduction to Poetry Analysis
Reading and Analyzing Poetry
A method of analyzing poetry
Presentation transcript:

Good morning

The first part of a novel should do at least three things: o Setting of the novel. Establish the setting of the action using details from your reading o Characters of the novel. Viewpoint of the characters, personality, role or job, strength and weaknesses o Plot. Set the action o Theme. Some of the themes/big ideas of the novel are developing In a well-developed paragraph summarize Section One reading. Incorporate as many of the above elements that lead to the overall theme of the novel.

Students will recognize social and economic changes and their effects: Industrial Revolution American/French Revolutions Students will recognize that the term “Romantic” signifies: Fascination with youth, imagination, innocence Questioning of authority and tradition for idealistic purposes Adaptation to change Belief in the transformative power of nature Emotional and personal experiences of ordinary people

Students will read for comprehension and create notes for study purposes. Students will engage in sustained reading inside and outside of the classroom to foster meaningful conversation and thought. Students will recognize what the term Romantic means. Students will recognize the forms of government and what the term “Orwellian” means

Read author background on page 860 List 3 significant events (time period chart) We are analyzing “Sonnet: England in 1819” which can be found in the green workbook starting on page 286. Read the poem and focus on word choice/fig lang/structure – TPSSFASTT

Read author background on page 878 List 3 significant events (time period chart) We are analyzing “Ode to a Grecian Urn” which can be found in the green workbook starting on page 301. Read the poem and focus on word choice/fig lang/structure – TPSSFASTT

Title – Prediction on the title/clue of the content? Paraphrase – Summarize in your words Speaker – who is the speaker? Speaker and poet same? Structure - What is the form? Does it affect the meaning? Figurative Language – poetic language (simile,metaphor,etc) Attitude/Tone – speakers attitude toward the subject of poem Shifts – Make note of a change in speaker, attitude, rhythm … Title – Examine the title again Theme – What is the poems subject + what the poet is saying about the subject = Theme Theme is always in a complete sentence; never one word.

H/W Reading 1984 read the Principles of Newspeak (299 - )

Reflect on the learning targets for today. Do you feel you met the targets?  Students will be exposed to other cultures and time periods, quality literature and effective/varied writing styles  Students will begin to understand key facts that influenced and developed literature  Students will write effectively in expository mode to examine/analysis a complex idea 1. What is one thing that you completed or learned today that you found interesting? 2. What is one thing that you feel you can improve in future classes?