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11/1 Tasks: Submit at end of period 1. Re-Read essay FCAs: indicate which you are most unsure of, explain why, and submit. 2. Please go back to the beginning.

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Presentation on theme: "11/1 Tasks: Submit at end of period 1. Re-Read essay FCAs: indicate which you are most unsure of, explain why, and submit. 2. Please go back to the beginning."— Presentation transcript:

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2 11/1 Tasks: Submit at end of period 1. Re-Read essay FCAs: indicate which you are most unsure of, explain why, and submit. 2. Please go back to the beginning of the novel. Re-read Nick’s opening statement (through page 7) and write a reaction on your understanding of his comments now that you’ve finished the book. Consider the message of these opening pages of the novel as it connects to the ending. Individually: 1. Read/consider real world writing samples and advice; 2. If time: essay prepping while confer about TSs and vocab

3 FCAs Content:  Introduction and Thesis (includes TAG and arguable thesis) (10pts)  PSQs effectively support thesis and are embedded smoothly (at least 5 times) with point of embed underlined. (35pts)  SSQs effectively support thesis and are embedded smoothly (at least 2 times) with point of embed underlined. (10 pts)  Points based on selection, placement, and embedding (CQA). Content/Commentary: Your analysis of text (aka following the DQs!) adds to thesis development (35 points) Conventions: Proper DQ internal and end punctuation, including MLA formatting (includes Works Cited) (10 pts)

4 …writing is disjointed… Each of you will start and develop a paper differently. Nevertheless, know that the overall general process is  Create a thesis  Work out organization overall  Begin outlining and finding quotations  Draft  Revise  Draft  Revise

5 Drafting Day #1 – 11/3: Stuff to use today Essay explanation “Getting to Know the Literary Analysis Essay” “Analysis Dos and Don’ts” “Constructing Effective Paragraphs” “Real-world writing feedback” (Packet of survey responses from Miss C’s friends) Wire bins with writing help (on the back counter here) Outline Template (download) Class/Writing website Your book (obviously!)

6 Drafting Day #2 – 11/4: Reminders BEFORE drafting, work out the overall vision/development of your paper  What are your major TOPICS (not paragraphs)  What is the major message you want readers to come away with when they put down your paper?

7 Things to consider in organizing ideas Does one topic lead to another?  For example, can you really talk about Myrtle’s death before you talk about Daisy and Tom? Is one topic stronger than another?  Those can either go at the beginning or end of your paper, but if the first question is true, then you don’t have a choice where to put that topic. What can you “save” for your conclusion?  Though you’re not being evaluated on it, know that the conclusion should be the space where you bring everything together, so perhaps there’s an idea you want to put there!

8 Final Reminders: Rough draft due in class on Monday – IN PRINT.  Please utilize MLA format. If unsure, visit OWL at Purdue website OR my screencast OWL at Purduescreencast  Intro/conclusion can be in outline form; peer review will really be looking at body paragraphs and CQA Secondary sources not required: we will do a workshop on that on Monday with your rough draft. You can try them if you want… As yourself the WHY question  For each of your points, make sure you ask yourself this so you don’t just summarize. Use the “Transition/Analysis Words” sheet to help you do this.“Transition/Analysis Words”


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