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Wednesday, September 21 & Thursday September 22

Go ahead and get your SAT textbooks, handouts from back table, and start on DGP . Wednesday, September 21 & Thursday September 22. TO The CCC for Wednesday: -Katie -Emily -Stephanie -Tomas -Logan -Jenny -Anna -Mallory -Skylar -Justin . TO The CCC for Thursday: Josie Neside Brooks

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Wednesday, September 21 & Thursday September 22

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  1. Go ahead and get your SAT textbooks, handouts from back table, and start on DGP Wednesday, September 21 & Thursday September 22 TO The CCC for Wednesday: -Katie -Emily -Stephanie -Tomas -Logan -Jenny -Anna -Mallory -Skylar -Justin TO The CCC for Thursday: Josie Neside Brooks Matthew Jack Patrick Usama Lauren Kelsey

  2. Bugaboo Review • Clauses and phrases:

  3. Bugaboo Review • Clauses and phrases: • -We hear these all the time in our DGP as well as in our SAT writing portion examples. • -What do each of these words mean?

  4. Bugaboo Review • Clauses and phrases: • -We hear these all the time in our DGP as well as in our SAT writing portion examples. • -What do each of these words mean? • -Clause: has a subject and a verb. These can be complete thoughts (independent clauses) or incomplete thoughts (dependent clauses)

  5. Bugaboo Review • Clauses and phrases: • -We hear these all the time in our DGP as well as in our SAT writing portion examples. • -What do each of these words mean? • -Clause: has a subject and a verb. These can be complete thoughts (independent clauses) or incomplete thoughts (dependent clauses) • Example: The elephants stampeded through the ravine in order to get to the other side. (Independent clause) • Example: While the elephants stampeded through the ravine (dependent clause)

  6. Bugaboo Review • Clauses and phrases • -Phrases: lack either a subject or a verb

  7. Bugaboo Review • Clauses and phrases • -Phrases: lacks either a subject or a verb • -Example: During the stampede (prepositional phrase)

  8. Bugaboo Review • Clauses and phrases • -Phrases: lacks either a subject or a verb • -Example: During the stampede (prepositional phrase) • -Example: To stampede (infinitive phrase)

  9. Bugaboo Review • Clauses and phrases • -Phrases: lacks either a subject or a verb • -Example: During the stampede (prepositional phrase) • -Example: To stampede (infinitive phrase) • -Questions? • -Why is this relevant? This can help to improve your essay score as well as help you to identify parts of speech or parts of a sentence on the writing portion of the SAT. Also, it provides some information you will need for today’s discussion on “The Humble Comma.”

  10. Agenda for the day • -Review answers from pages 549-555 • Corrections: 6 corrections (2 corrections from each section: sentence completion, passage-based reading, and improving sentences) If you got all answers correct in a section, then select 2 and your reasoning of how you selected the correct answer. • Again, this will help you to see WHY answers are incorrect, and for you to see which question types you should focus on. -”Humble Comma” Essay -Vocabulary: due Friday

  11. “The Humble Comma” • -When should we use commas? When do we tend to abuse them? • -Many writers use commas in places for emphasis on a specific object, or the writer wants us to pause and think about what he/shejust wrote.

  12. “The Humble Comma” • -When should we use commas? When do we tend to abuse them? • -Many writers use commas in places for emphasis on a specific object, or the writer wants us to pause and think about what he/shejust wrote. • -Here is a perfect example from Chris Crutcher’s novel Staying Fat for Sarah Byrnes: • “ One of the worst things schools do is give you the idea that they can take responsibility for other people. We want the best athletes, students, debaters to be role models– to set examples for the other kids. We ask for perfection---no, for a show of perfection. Then we’re disappointed when you let us down, and even if we’re not, you are. Well, I want to go on record as saying the sooner you learn you’re your life’s accountant, the sooner you’ll have tools to hammer out a decent life. Mark Brittain is in the hospital because he tried to poison his body. He felt because of his responses to the world, not yours. Other people may try to tell you differently, but don’t let them. You won’t be helping yourself, and you won’t be helping Mark Brittain” (217).

  13. “The Humble Comma” • -When should we use commas? When do we tend to abuse them? • -Many writers use commas in places for emphasis on a specific object, or the writer wants us to pause and think about what they just wrote. • -Here is a perfect example from Chris Crutcher’s novel Staying Fat for Sarah Byrnes: • “ One of the worst things schools do is give you the idea that they can take responsibility for other people. We want the best athletes, students, debaters to be role models– to set examples for the other kids. We ask for perfection---no, for a show of perfection. Then we’re disappointed when you let us down, and even if we’re not, you are. Well, I want to go on record as saying the sooner you learn you’re your life’s accountant, the sooner you’ll have tools to hammer out a decent life. Mark Brittain is in the hospital because he tried to poison his body. He felt because of his responses to the world, not yours. Other people may try to tell you differently, but don’t let them. You won’t be helping yourself, and you won’t be helping Mark Brittain” (217). • -9 commas in this one passage! Uses? Impact on writing?

  14. “The Humble Comma” • -Read the essay to yourself (annotate it, ask questions, underline important passages, focus on what you think the author’s main purpose is” • Share with a partner: What did you get out this essay? Main ideas? Author’s purpose? • Discuss with the class your findings: share what you had to say about the essay. • With a partner: identify what you believe to believe the author’s main purpose (with one quote of support), answer questions 3 &4 from the back of the essay, and complete a response to this essay from the point of view of another punctuation mark. • Your response should be 10 sentences and you may only have 5 simple sentences. Use two vocabulary words (underlined), and use one ; correctly. • Finish early? Work on your vocabulary or your Blink scenario, which is due on Sept 29th (written portion) and Sept 30th (performance portion).

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