AP English Literature and Composition Syllabus

Mrs. Amy Bright

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Primary Texts

Arp, Thomas, Greg Johnson, and Laurence Perrine, eds. Perrine’s Literature:

Structure, Sound and Sense, ninth edition, Boston: Thomas Wadsworth, 2006.

Sebranek, Patrick, Verne Meyer, and David Kemper. Write for College: A Student

Handbook. Wilmington: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004.

Grammar and Composition Handbook. New York: Glencoe/McGraw Hill, 2000.

All required texts and novels for the AP English Literature and Composition Course are available for your use from the English department or the school library. If you want to obtain a personal copy, you may do so, but it should be the same edition that we are using in class.

Course Overview

AP English Literature and Composition is designed to be a college/university course. The Advanced Placement English Program was inaugurated by the College Board to prepare high school seniors for college level work. The analysis and evaluation of short stories, drama, poetry, novels, and nonfiction essays and the development of writing skills are the foundations of this course. Critical thinking skills are emphasized and encouraged through discussions, seminars, independent projects and written analysis of literature.

A national examination, which is given in May, is required of all students who are taking the course. The scoring of the examination is given on a 1-5 point system. A score of 3 is accepted at many colleges and universities, but some academic institutions require a score of 4 or 5 in order for the student to receive college credit.

Competency Goals

Students will be able to

1.  deepen their understanding and enhance their pleasure of reading selected literary works, the majority from Great Britain and the United States.

2.  develop critical standards for interpreting the effects writers create by the artful manipulation of language.

3.  demonstrate knowledge of characters, action, structure, and language.

4.  analyze figurative language such as imagery, symbolism, and tone in diverse literary works.

5.  examine literary works in their historical context and in relation to the lives and experiences of the author and the students.

6.  compose and revise expository, analytical, and argumentative essays, focusing on the critical analysis of literature.

7.  develop stylistic maturity in composition – wide-ranging vocabulary, variety of sentence structure, and logical organization.

8.  master good reading, speaking and listening skills and develop writing skills that incorporate the resources of language: connotation, irony, syntax, tone, and metaphor.

9.  sharpen skills in the close reading of poetry through the considerations of sound and metrical devices.

10.  compose and revise analyses that explicate poetry, including considerations of structure and style as they affect content.

11.  recognize the value of cooperative learning and teamwork through group activities requiring analysis and creativity as related to diverse literary selections.

Grading System

Grading Distribution Grading Scale for Essays______

Poetry Responses 10% A+ 100 C+ 84

Major Test/Projects 30% A 97 C 81

Major Works Data A- 95 C- 78

Sheets 15% B+ 92 D+ 76

Timed essays 25% B 89 D 73

Daily assignment 10% B- 86 D- 70

Quizzes 10% F 60

100%

Holistic Scoring for Essays

9 100 4 78

8 96 3 70

7 92 2 60

6 89 1 50

5 82

Expectations of Student Performance

1.  Students will, through structured assignments, read, respond to, and analyze short stories, novels, drama, poetry, and nonfiction works.

2.  Students will write creatively as a response to various genres of literature and to relevant topics of current interest.

3.  Students will write poetry using models of established writers.

4.  Students will write timed essays using prompts from past AP exams.

5.  Students will answer essay questions as required of college level writers.

6.  Students will write personal essays either in response to text or as practice for the college admission process.

7.  Students will use graphic organizers, dialectical journals, responses to poetry, levels of questions and Major Works Data Sheets in response to literature.

Writing Performance

1. AP English Literature and Composition includes not only the in-depth study and analysis of literature but the expectation that writing will be developed to meet college level standards. Since writing will be essential in courses across the curriculum in the college experience, each assignment in this class requires best writing practices. Composition requirements include, but will not be limited to, statements, paragraphs, essay tests (timed) and formal essays (personal, argumentative, expository, and analytical). In each writing assignment, it will be essential for you to use Standard Written English, a variety of syntax, and effective diction. Both denotation and connotation will be considered to denote the appropriate tone and voice.

2. When you write a timed essay, the scoring guide will be the one used for the AP

English Literature and Composition exam for that specific prompt.

Composition Requirements

Since the purpose of speaking and writing is to communicate effectively and clearly, you should know how to use Standard Written English. Throughout this course there will be lessons that deal with grammar and usage, writing style, syntactical expression, and diction. We will reinforce these issues as you demonstrate the need for assistance. The grammar handbooks we will use will be a good guide for grammar. For basic form, follow these guidelines.

1.  The work is written in black or blue ink or typed, double-spaced, with only 12-point Times New Roman font. Neatness is a necessity in final drafts of any essay to reflect a professional appearance and best effort.

2.  Each essay has a clearly stated thesis statement that contains the main idea of the essay and key words from the prompt. This statement should be at the end of the introduction.

3.  Each body paragraph or a single paragraph that is written in response to an essay question has a topic sentence that contains the main idea of the paragraph.

4.  The paragraph has two or three sentences that explain the topic sentence.

5.  The paragraph has two to four sentences that comment on how the explanatory sentences relate to the topic sentence.

6.  The paragraph contains vivid details that are interesting, appropriate, and relevant to the topic.

7.  The paragraph ends with a strong concluding sentence that refers to the topic sentence.

8.  In an essay, the concluding paragraph restates or reemphasizes the thesis statement and includes significant statements that emphasize the primary points of the essay.

9.  The paragraph has no run-on sentences or sentence fragments.

10.  The paragraph has no problem in agreement: subject/verb, pronoun/antecedent

11.  The punctuation is correct.

12.  The spelling is correct.

Ongoing Assignments

1.  a weekly one page response to a poem provided by the teacher – due on Tuesdays, the first turn is on September 6th.

2.  a literary terms handbook

3.  SAT vocabulary study using varied assignments. First quiz is on September 2nd.

4.  sample AP level multiple-choice practice tests on prose and poetry

5.  current events elevator presentation – a brief account of one pertinent news story during the week, including documentation of article you read in varying formats. First turn in is August 29th.

6.  Major Works Data Sheets – information regarding details on the elements of fiction from each major work

Graduation Project: Throughout the semester students will be working on the Graduation Project. They will complete this work simultaneously with their study of grammar, vocabulary, and literature. The four components are 1) Research Paper; 2) Project; 3) Portfolio; and 4) Oral Presentation. Therefore, the time frame for various units of study will vary as students complete their requirements.

FYI – this is subject to change!!

Units of Study

Unit 1 – Relationship to Self

6 weeks

Works:

Short Stories:

“The Chaser,” by John Collier (excerpt)

“The Story of an Hour,” by Kate Chopin

“A Rose for Miss Emily,” by William Faulkner

“The Most Dangerous Game,” by Richard Connell

“The Destructors,” by Graham Greene

“Miss Brill,” by Katherine Mansfield

“The Lottery,” by Shirley Jackson

“The Jilting of Granny Weatherall,” by Katherine Anne Porter

Other selected stories will be used for group analysis.

Novel:

Their Eyes were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston

Unit 2 – Relationship to Your Future

1 week

College Admission and/or Scholarship Essay

Colleges or organizations providing scholarships usually require an essay that reflects on a student’s past experiences, states an opinion, explains a point of view, or makes clear the importance of a person or event in a student’s life.

Unit 3: Relationships that Result in Tragedy

3 weeks

Works:

Drama:

Macbeth by William Shakespeare

Unit 4: Relationships that Inspire Self-Expression

4 weeks

Works:

Poetry:

1.  “Elements of Poetry” – pp. 646-654, Perrine’s Structure, Sound, and Sense, ninth edition

2.  “Understanding and Evaluating Poetry” – p. 655, Perrine’s Structure, Sound, and Sense, ninth edition

3.  Poetry terms

4.  Ballads – study folk and literary ballads and write an original ballad

5.  Sonnets – study and analyze multiple sonnets and write an original sonnet

6.  Project – Collection of poetry – specifics – TBA

Unit 5: Relationships that Change Lives

2 weeks

Works:

Fiction:

Beowulf - anonymous author

Poetry:

“The Seafarer”

Unit 6: Relationship of the Man to the Soul

3 weeks

Works:

Novel:

Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad

1.  dialectical journal

2.  structured activities for focus and research

3.  timed essay on ethics and the relevant issue

Poem:

“The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,” by Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Unit 7: Relationships that Bring About Change

5 weeks

Works:

Novel:

Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte

Short stories:

“Good Country People,” by Flannery O’Connor

“A Good Man is Hard to Find,” by Flannery O’Connor

Drama:

The Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller

Poetry:

Selected works by John Donne, William Blake, John Keats, A.E. Housman, Robert Frost, Emily Dickinson – other poets will be selected based on the poetry project students completed earlier

Unit 8: Relationships that Create Conflict

4 weeks

Works:

Novel:

The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver

Poetry:

John Keats, John Milton, Lord Byron, William Wordsworth

Unit 9: Relationship of Poetry to Life

3 weeks

Works:

Selected poems:

1.  DIDLS - Diction, Imagery, Details, Language, Syntax

2.  TPCASTT – Title, Paraphrase, connotation, Attitude, Tone, Shift, Title revisited, Theme

3.  villanelle

4.  sestina

5.  free verse

6.  shape poems

7.  personal reflection essays, literary analysis, explication – rubrics will be provided, peer editing will take place, and teacher input will be part of the revision process

8.  timed writing – literary analysis using past AP prompt

Unit 10: Relationship of Literature to World Views

Study of literary criticism through independent novel study.

Review

Specific review for AP exam

Last weeks of semester:

Creative activities – writing, viewing, and oral presentations