Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Week 11




Good evening, class.  Hope you are all in good spirits!


Today I will return any graded essays and homework.  We can review posted exercises and then get right to the final exam.  All work from the midterm onward is due today, no exceptions, and there will be no more rewrites accepted.

Please do complete the following evaluation if you have not already.
Course Evaluation Link:  URL: https://theideaonline.org/cs/survey?S=2636405/X/F/F/1797611145

Good luck on the final!

And lest I forget, have a very happy holiday season and break from school.  Thank you all for your hard work and presence week to week.



Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Week 10


                                                         Milton Avery (1885-1965)
Good evening!   Homework and essay reviews of The Butler and others with class readings scheduled for today.  The final in-class essay is next week, week 11.

Rewrites and any late work must be submitted by the time of the last class meeting, and no paper work from before midterm.  So get busy, if you still have work to complete!

Please do complete the following evaluation by next week ( I will repost the link next week):
Course Evaluation Link:  URL: https://theideaonline.org/cs/survey?S=2636405/X/F/F/1797611145

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Week 9






  

Welcome back.   Today we will address the film work or alternate (posted below) and the essay involving  speculation (6). I will be looking for that from you all as well as the paragraph using the various conjugations of a verb of your choice.

I have brought for viewing The Help (2011), directed by Tate Taylor, and The Butler (2013), directed by Lee Danielsonly one of which we can watch of course. You are to write a 350-500 word response/review of the film, recounting the story it tells in summary fashion and the imagery (scenes) used to convey its central concerns (or which you found particularly interesting for reasons you will detail).  Introduce the film by title and director and year of release, as shown here above.


There will be little time to work in class, to finish any remaining assignments and review grammar.  We will have all next week for catching up and review. Those who have yet to present a paper should step up and do so then.  Not including the final, you should have completed seven essays by end of quarter.  The following piece, if you need to make up an assignment or want extra credit, will serve (also posted last week):

Essay 7 (alternate): In 350-500 words address an idea that you hold as an article of faith or philosophical belief, using narrative or descriptive examples to support and flesh out the basis of that belief.  Examples can be found (some 125,000) at thisibelieve.org.  There you can explore topics and examples going all the way back to the 1950s, when the project itself first began.The site supports an international forum of sorts on core values, and offers opportunity to upload your essay for publication.

The guidelines for writing the essay are much like those we have been following in class, keeping to 350-500 words in a voice that is personal and original. The following URL within the site describes in detail what the editors want in terms of style and development: http://thisibelieve.org/guidelines/. You may summarize and quote from any one of the published essays as a lead-in to your piece, though neither summary nor response is a required element of the essay. The topic you address should reflect your particular experience and corresponding beliefs or concerns–whether of religion, money, virtue, vice, growing up, growing old, love, death, sickness, health, the meaning of life, the nature of existence, the human condition, pleasure, pain, the fate of life on this planet, etcetera. Your statement of belief should be articulated in a sentence or two.


We will take the final week 11.  Any rewrites must be submitted by week 11.

I will post grades at ecompanion this week. Please check the grades posted at ecompanion to see what you may be missing and that my record is consistent with yours.

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I have posted below material from an earlier post to allow for review of English syntax and basic punctuation principles. I also include the following link to an article featuring discussion and review of the use of commas: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/05/21/the-most-comma-mistakes/
and an exercise on verbs, reposted: https://owl.english.purdue.edu/engagement/index.php?category_id=2&sub_category_id=1&article_id=39 , and to clarify, voice and mood:  https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/539/07/




Sentence Type 1: The simple sentence has one subject and one predicate, the base of which is always a verb or verb phrase. And in English, the subject usually comes up front, followed by the verb and other predicate elements such as direct and indirect objects. This subject-verb combo is called a clause, an independent clause, because it expresses a grammatically complete, stand-alone thought. Examples follow here:

Jesus wept.

Style has meaning.

Choices resonate.

What is the subject in each of the three preceding sentences? JesusStyleChoices. And the verbs?Wept and has and resonate, and some form of the "be" verb": is, was, are, were . . .

And in the following?

The house is surrounded by razor wire.

He and I fight too often. We cannot be good for one another.

After spring sunset, mist rises from the river, spreading like a flood.

From a bough, floating down river, insect song. (Sentence fragment here . . . no verb).

They slept on the floor.

The girl raised the flag.


Note: inverted syntax order: Subject follows the verb instead of preceding it. Lovable he isn't. Tall grow the pines on the hills.

Normal order: A fly is in my soup. With an expletive (which delays the subject) it looks like this: There is a fly in my soup.


Sentence type 2: The compound sentence has at least two independent subject and verb combinations or clauses, and no dependent clauses. Each independent clause is joined by means of some conjunction or coordinating punctuation:

Autumn is a sad season, but I love it anyway. (coordinating conjunction but preceded by a comma)
Name the baby Huey, or I'll cut you out of my will.
The class was young, eager, and intelligent, and the teacher delighted in their presence.
The sky grew black, and the wind died; an ominous quiet hung over the whole city. (semi-colon used, no coordinating conjunction required)
My mind is made up; however, I do want to discuss the decision with you. 
(semi-colon required with adverbial conjunction however)


Any of the seven short coordinating conjunctions can be used before the comma to join independent clauses: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so: they can be remembered as FANBOYS.

*A semi-colon (;) must be used before adverbial conjunctions joining independent clauses: however, indeed, therefore, thus, in fact, moreover, in addition, consequently, still, etcetera.


Sentence Type 3: The 
complex sentence is composed of one independent clause and at least one dependent clause.

My man left me, though it was I who begged him to go.

Those who live in glass houses should not cast stones.

Many people believe that God does not exist.


Sentence Type 4: The compound-complex sentence has at least two independent clauses and one dependent clause.


As I waited for the bus, the sun beat down all around me, and I shivered in my thoughts.

Because she said nothing, we assumed that she wanted nothing, but her mother knew better.

She and her sister Amina are dancers, and they work at parties around town when they can.

While John shopped for groceries, two armed men forced their way into his home; fortunately, his wife and children were away.


Examples of subordinating conjunctions––those used in from of dependent clauses–– include the following: because, that, which, who, when, while, where, wherever, though, as though, although, since, as, if, as if, unless, et al .

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Exercises: Place commas where needed in the following sentences.

1. Today is September 11, 2014 and a Thursday.

2. Students and teachers will be busy this week and next for many are taking or administering final exams and projects.

3. The lab teachers including Mr. Fish and Mrs. Bird have seen an influx of students in recent weeks.

4. Many of the students particularly those concerned about performance on upcoming finals have been eager to review fundamentals of course material.

5. Mr. Fish a math teacher is working as hard as he can to keep up with requests for tutoring which tend to rise during the weeks leading up to finals.

6. Introduction to Math and Introduction to Composition are two courses many students must take each course is designed to build basic skills needed in general college courses.

7. Schools across the nation have seen an increasing demand for courses that prepare students for upper level work, school administrators have responded by increasing the number and range of preparatory courses.

8. To facilitate student success they have also increased the number of hours tutors are available to help students with work.

9. Students today are often time-pressed as a matter of fact, many hold full-time jobs in addition to their course loads and get overwhelmed by the various pressures and demands they face.

10. Fortunately, the Internet is being used as a platform for teaching sharing and showcasing the work and ideas of people around the world it offers students means of connecting with and learning from their peers wherever they may be living at whatever hour of the day or night.



Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Week 8


   Doorknob: Read the directions and directly you will be directed in the right direction.”  –from     Alice in Wonderland

Good day, Class.

Tonight, as we have several works in progress I'll be reviewing your drafts and finished work.  Essay 4 should be completed and the first draft of essay 5 nearly so.  I will return the verb quiz and sentence punctuation exercises done over the last several weeks, as well, and review the use of verbs by means of the paragraph assigned (covering the various conjugations of regular and irregular forms).

Between now and the final there will be just one more essay assigned.  Typically, I show a film or assign a piece inspired by on ongoing essay project that can be viewed at the website thisibelieve.org. We can talk tonight and decide then which topic is to be settled on.