Per DR's request! We'll practice these next semester.
Sunday, January 20, 2013
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Halftime Survey
Please take this survey by Monday, January 21. I will use your responses to tailor next semester's curriculum.
Halftime Survey
Halftime Survey
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Claim Hall of Fame
A claim and a thesis are synonyms. Whichever word you use, this is the main argument of your essay.
A successful claim:
1. CLEARLY answers the prompt.
2. Provides a SPECIFIC answer to the prompt. (Example: "Hamlet is characterized as a character" is vague. Instead, try: "Hamlet is characterized as a sensitive and melancholy man.")
3. When possible, make your claim COMPLEX. This does not necessarily mean brilliant. It means that it explains more than one aspect of your subject. (Example: "Hamlet is a depressive character" is not a complex claim. "Hamlet is more caring than others in Denmark, but because he cares he is also often driven to hate others for their cruelty" is better.)
I will use the space below to post our best claims.
The setting at the beach was languorous and seductive and it illuminated Edna's true loneliness and longing for love.
Edna's naivete and the romantic setting leaves her vulnerable to Robert's situation.
A successful claim:
1. CLEARLY answers the prompt.
2. Provides a SPECIFIC answer to the prompt. (Example: "Hamlet is characterized as a character" is vague. Instead, try: "Hamlet is characterized as a sensitive and melancholy man.")
3. When possible, make your claim COMPLEX. This does not necessarily mean brilliant. It means that it explains more than one aspect of your subject. (Example: "Hamlet is a depressive character" is not a complex claim. "Hamlet is more caring than others in Denmark, but because he cares he is also often driven to hate others for their cruelty" is better.)
I will use the space below to post our best claims.
The setting at the beach was languorous and seductive and it illuminated Edna's true loneliness and longing for love.
Edna's naivete and the romantic setting leaves her vulnerable to Robert's situation.
Ibsen uses literary elements such as dialogue, diction, stage direction, and imagery to display Nora’s dramatic and manipulative actions as well as Torvald’s fight for dominance in their relationship.
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