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Warm-Up:. What 3 time periods have we focused on? What 2 types of writing have we focused on?. SWBAT: Get an A on the mid term exam by completing an exam review. HW: 1. Vocab. quiz tomorrow. Activity:. With a partner, complete the mid term exam review.
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Warm-Up: • What 3 time periods have we focused on? • What 2 types of writing have we focused on? SWBAT: Get an A on the mid term exam by completing an exam review. HW: 1. Vocab. quiz tomorrow.
Activity: • With a partner, complete the mid term exam review. • You will have all of class to work on this • You will receive extra credit on the mid term based on your effort and completion of this review. • I will collect this at the end of class.
AGENDA: 1. Review answers on mid term review sheet HW: Study for mid terms and have a great weekend!
Why did the Puritans come to America? They wanted to separate/purify from the Church of England because they thought it was corrupt.
Why was The Crucible written? In response to McCarthyism.
How does Edwards present God in “Sinners in the Hands…”? As a being that is angry and vengeful.
Plain Style? And why do the Puritans use it? It mirrored their style of worship. Plain, simple, direct.
What is Rationalism? A belief based in logic and reason.
Franklin’s purpose for writing The Autobiography? A explain how to reach moral perfection through study.
What is an aphorism? A short, witty statement that teaches a moral or lesson.
Henry’s purpose in his Speech to the Virginia Convention? To persuade his fellow delegates to fight against the British.
How does Paine end The Crisis? He points out the strengths of the Colonial army.
Rationalist Writers? T. Paine P. Henry B. Franklin T. Jefferson
Colonial Writers? Jonathan Edwards Anne Bradstreet William Bradford
Native American Writing? Oral tradition, informal/diverse language; revered relationship to nature.
Colonial Literature? Journals/sermons/prayers, simple language
Revolutionary Literature? Journals/Speeches/pamphlets/essays
Logos? Appeals to logic.
Ethos? Appeals to the credibility or reputation of the speaker.
Pathos? Appeals to the emotions of the listener/reader
Simile? A comparison using like or as.
Metaphor? A comparison between to thing not using like or as.
Personification? Giving inanimate objects human characteristics or traits.
Hyperbole? An exaggeration.
Allusion? A reference to someone or something not there. Literary Biblical Historical
Repetition? The same word at the beginning of successive clauses
Rhetorical Questions? A question that does not need to be answered and causes the reader to reflect on the issue being discussed.
Tone? The author’s attitude toward the subject he/she is writing about.
Attention Grabber? • A question • A quote • A bold statement • A fact/statistic
3 parts of an effective introduction? • Attention grabber • Background information on the topic • Claim/thesis
Body paragraphs? • Transition that connects to your claim • Example that proves your claim • Explanation of how that example proves your claim
Conclusion? • Restate your claim • Summarize your main points • Leave your reader with a final impression (why they should change their view/why the topic is important/what they should do next)
A summery should NEVER include… Your opinion!