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10 th Grade English Tuesday 29 Oct. 2013

10 th Grade English Tuesday 29 Oct. 2013. Agenda: Assess Student Writing with Scale Checklist Mini-Lesson on Introductions Select Essay Prompt Craft Intro and Body Paragraphs Homework: Periods 1-2: Meet in 206 Lab to Type Julius Caesar 1 st Draft of Essay TOMORROW and Thursday.

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10 th Grade English Tuesday 29 Oct. 2013

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  1. 10th Grade EnglishTuesday 29 Oct. 2013 Agenda: Assess Student Writing with Scale Checklist Mini-Lesson on Introductions Select Essay Prompt Craft Intro and Body Paragraphs Homework: Periods 1-2: Meet in 206 Lab to Type Julius Caesar 1st Draft of Essay TOMORROW and Thursday. Period 3: Meet in 503 Lab to Type Julius Caesar 1st Draft of Essay TOMORROW and Thursday. Complete 1st Draft Due by End of Class on Thursday, 10/31

  2. Learning Targets: • I can craft an introduction with a clever hook, a summary of the play, and a thesis statement. • I can craft a thesis statement with the title of the play, the author, my arguable point, and the 3 ways I’ll prove that arguable point. • I can craft a topic sentence that includes an advanced transition word, my arguable point, and one point that proves what I’m arguing. • I can craft context that sets up the reader to understand the quote. • I can craft analysis that explains why and how the quote proves my arguable point.

  3. Introduction Hooks Open with an attention grabber. Sometimes, especially if the topic of your paper is somewhat dry or technical, opening with something catchy can help. Consider these options: • an intriguing example (Out of eight conspirators who contrived to murder their leader, only one had good and noble intentions for doing so.) • a provocative quotation (“Cry ‘Havoc,’ and let slip the dogs of war” (Shakespeare III.i.273). • a puzzling scenario (While mother is making dinner, ten year old Timmy walks into the kitchen and flatters his mother with compliments. Then he asks permission to play with his Daddy’s gun. Being buttered up and amenable to anything Timmy might ask for, mother agrees to let Timmy play with his gun. Hoping to use Daddy’s toy in a game of cops and robbers, Timmy heads for the family room in a fit of excitement. Twenty minutes later, his brother and sister are dead.)

  4. Introduction Hooks Open with an attention grabber. Sometimes, especially if the topic of your paper is somewhat dry or technical, opening with something catchy can help. Consider these options: • a vivid and perhaps unexpected anecdote (Learning about manipulation in the sophomore English course at Camas High School, students studied the history of manipulation, the various methods people employ to manipulate others, and what can happen when people are unaware of others’ manipulative tactics. Students did not discuss the efficacy of manipulation, however, until one student, Mary, raised her hand and asked, 'But why would a smart man like Brutus overlook the fact that Cassius might manipulate him?' That modern high school students could not conceive of how smart people can be manipulated speaks volumes about the necessity of mastering classical persuasion tactics.) • a thought-provoking question (For every time a persuasive strategy is used for good intentions, twenty-two persuasive strategies are used for selfish reasons in the play Julius Caesar. Why, then, are people not more aware of when they are being manipulated?)

  5. Thesis Statement Examples: Prompt #1 (Theme #3): In Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare, language is a powerful weapon, and in the hands of a skilled person, it is used to manipulate others as evidenced by the speeches of Cassius, Decius, and Antony. Prompt #2: In Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare, logos proves to be the single most effective rhetorical strategy as evidenced by the logical appeals of Cassius, Portia, and Antony. Prompt #3: In Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare, Antony’s funeral speech proves to be the most effective speech in the entire play thanks to his persuasive strategies appealing to logos and pathos. Prompt #4: In Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare, ethos is Portia’s most effective rhetorical appeal as she persuades Brutus to tell her what is wrong by establishing her relationship to Brutus, by referencing her ancestry, and by proving she is trustworthy.

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