ATTENTION! NOTICE of Ms. Hughes's Blog Address Change!

ATTENTION!! I have a NEW blog now.

As of the NEW YEAR (2011), this blog you are currently on will serve as an archive of OLD things, NOT any NEW things!

To go to my NEW BLOG, go to: http://lordbyng.net/hughes

English 12 for the balance of year

May 25 -- "Ode on a Grecian Urn"
May 27 -- 30 Minutes of Guidance + a further look at Provincial Exam with strategies etc.
June 2 -- Poetry Unit Final Exam. This will take the entire class. It includes objective questions and a written response and is worth 30% of Term 3. See salmon colored sheet for details.
June 4 -- Siddhartha novel completion test. This test will tell me that you have finished the book and have understanding of plot, character, conflicts, themes, etc.
The balance of this class will be further analysis of the text and its themes.
June 8 -- Siddhartha work and focused close reading continues.
June 10-- LAST DAY OF EN12 :o( There will be an in-class essay on Siddhartha today. Value = approximately 15% of Term 3. This will take the entire period.

Remember to attend the English 12 Tutorial; check exam and tutorial schedules for further information.

English 12 Poetry Unit Final Exam -- JUNE 2, 2010 !! NOTE: NEW DATE!!

Poem Poet Form # of times reviewed
The World is Too Much With Us William Wordsworth Italian Sonnet/lyric
Let Me Not to the Marriage of True minds William Shakespeare Elizabethan Sonnet/lyric
Nuns Fret Not William Wordsworth Italian Sonnet/lyric
What Lips my lips have kissed Edna St. Vincent Millay Italian Sonnet/lyric
Love is not all, it is not meat nor drink Edna St. Vincent Millay Elizabethan Sonnet/lyric
The Dumka B.H. Fairchild Free Verse/lyric
Mending Wall Robert Frost Blank Verse/lyric
Woodtick Joy Kogawa Free Verse/lyric
The Lake Isle of Innisfree William Butler Yeats Lyric
As I Walked Out One Evening W.H. Auden Ballad
Funeral Blues (Stop All The Clocks) W.H. Auden Elegy
Ulysses Alfred Lord Tennyson Dramatic Monologue
Ode on a Grecian Urn John Keats Ode
Hughes
English 12
May 2010
Name: _________________
English 12 Poetry Unit (2009-2010) and Poetry Exam Info

The above are the poems for which you are responsible for this poetry unit (note: each of these poems can be found on line if you have lost your copy).

The Poetry Unit Exam will be on June 2nd. This is a MAJOR exam. It will be valued at approximately 30% of Term 3; you must be there unless you have a doctor’s note.

It will consist of the following types of questions:

 Multiple choice questions
 A written response analysis question

You must be prepare yourself to

 Apply all the literary devices and poetic terminology as studied and provided on English 12 terminology sheet.
 Know the information in the chart provided above.
 Be able to apply devices, terminology and analysis to the poems studied in the unit and also to sight poems found on the poetry unit exam.
 Understand and be able to apply TP-CASTT
 Compare and contrast themes among the poems.
 Demonstrate that you can write about poetry using the conventions taught and expected.

English 8 BA notes at start of poetry unit May 10th, 2010 (review sonnet form)

Here's the latest from Ms. Hughes
10 Day 1s remaining.

You have a FINAL Exam in English 8 ... ALL multiple choice may contain a paragraph response.

Sight passages for poetry and short story. You will be tested on Romeo and Juliet.

Final Exam is valued at 10% of the year.

Term 1 = 30%, Term 2 = 30%, [T2 contains midyear], Term 3 =30%

Poetry:


Sonnet

Iambic pentameter is the meter

Elizabethan sonnet (Shakespearean or English)

abab cdcd efef gg

quatrain +quatrain + quatrain + rhyming couplet (heroic)

iambic pentameter


Petrarchan (Italian)

abba abba cdcdcd (or cde cde OR cc dd ee OR any combination of paired Cs Ds or Es)

VOLTA

abba abba *** cde cde

octave *** (= VOLTA)+ sestet

volta = point of shift in a sonnet. It occurs between the

octave and the sestet at the beginning of the 9th line.


Iambic pentameter


Each line of meter can be counted in FEET.


BUT there are many types of feet.

In Iambic Pentameter the feet are called iambs or iambic feet.


u/ u/ u/ u/ u/ = the symbols for a line of iambic pentameter


u = short syllable or unstressed

/ = long syllable or stressed


u/ = an iamb or iambic foot


u / x 5 per line

iambic pentameter







All sonnets have 14 lines

Set Rhyme Scheme

(see above)

Excellent Poetry Glossary from U of T

See link listed below in link list.

Excellent Poetry Resource for Understanding Poetic Forms (for all Grades)

Here's the latest from Ms. Hughes

See the link below for Connections: A Hypertext Resource for Poetry

Seriously ... check it out and incorporate into your study and review.

English 12 students ... ALL students!

Here's the latest from Ms. Hughes

Check out the link below on TP-CASTT ... it is a method that works when analyzing poetry!