Guidebook for Success In s1
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Ms. Rosey’s Guidebook for Success in Dual Enrollment English I (also known as ENC 1101): Fall 2012 Version Warning: Reading of this guidebook (and completion of all activities herein) will definitely increase student’s intelligence. Use with extreme caution.
Table of Contents Syllabus for ENC 1101 p. 3 Journal Checklist p. 18 Notebook Checklist p. 22 The Last Lecture Topics of Discussion p. 26 The Last Lecture Homework on Dreams p. 45 1 The Last Lecture Cooperative Learning Activity p. 45 Illustrative Exemplification Essay on The Last Lecture p. 46 Brave New World Topics of Discussion p. 47 Brave New World Group Review Activity p. 53 Brave New World Group Creative Activity p. 54 Brave New World Mini-Descriptive Essay p. 55 Brave New World Comparison/Contrast Essay p. 55 Comparison/Contrast Brainstorming Chart p. 56 List of Dystopian Films p. 57 Aldous Huxley Biography p. 57 Information on Brave New World Revisited p. 61 Wadsworth: Writing Paragraphs p. 62 Wadsworth: Thesis Statements and Formal Outlines p. 63 Wadsworth: Commas p. 64 Wadsworth: Using Other Punctuation Marks p. 65 Wadsworth: Chapter 9 “Using Logic,” Chapter 10 “Writing Argumentative Essays,” and Chapter 39: “Revising Run-Ons” p. 66 Wadsworth: True/False on Writing a Research Paper p. 67 Wadsworth: Evaluating Internet Sources and Writing a Research Paper p. 68 Template for Index on The Canterbury Tales p. 69 Notes on The Canterbury Tales p. 79 SHS Pilgrimage/Creative Project/ Chaucerian Food Celebration The Best Storyteller on The Canterbury Tales p. 82 Classify and Divide Your Pilgrims! p. 84 Classification/Division Essay on The Canterbury Tales p. 85 Due Dates for Florida Social Issue Paper p. 86 Template for Florida Social Issue Paper p. 87 Checklist of What to Fix for F.D. of Florida Social Issue Paper p. 92 Scarevenger Hunt Instructions p. 93 Read like a Rock Star Assignments p. 94 Macbeth Argument Essay p. 96 Facebook News Feed Summary of Macbeth p. 97 Spoiler Alert: Notes on Macbeth p. 99
FALL 2012
SOUTH FLORIDA COMMUNITY COLLEGE DIVISION OF ARTS AND SCIENCES COURSE SYLLABUS
2 ENC 1101—FRESHMAN ENGLISH I
COURSE TITLE: ENC 1101 FRESHMAN ENGLISH I 3 CREDIT HOURS* * This credit is what you would receive at SFCC, not the credit accorded at SHS.
CATALOG DESCRIPTION: A study of the forms of discourse, as illustrated in contemporary essays, designed to train you in methods of forceful expression, logical thinking, and intelligent reading. The course includes intensive study and practice in the mechanics of composition including a research paper. Prerequisite: Acceptable scores on placement test. Gordon Rule: requires college-level writing in multiple assignments. (TR)
PREREQUISITES: Acceptable scores on placement test.
COURSE MATERIALS: Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Canterbury Tales. Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell, 1997. Print. Holt McDougal. The Elements of Literature. Sixth Course. Austin: Holt McDougal, 2009. Print. (Online version found at my.hrw.com. My Username is ______and my password is ______.) Huxley, Aldous. Brave New World. New York: Harper & Row, 1932. Print. Kirszner, Laurie, and Stephen Mandell. The Wadsworth Handbook. 9th ed. Boston: Thomson Wadsworth, 2011. Print. McCuen-Metherell, Jo Ray, and Anthony Winkler. Readings for Writers. 13th ed. Boston: Thomson Wadsworth, 2010. Print. Pausch, Randy. The Last Lecture. New York: Hyperion, 2008. Print.
Supplementary photocopied, audiovisual, reserve, or internet materials may be used. Additional novels may be used as well.
INSTRUCTIONAL METHODS: Lecture; small group discussion and oral report; large group discussion; online research; library research; Turnitin.com.
STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES: This Course Supports The Following College-Wide Student Learning Outcomes: 1. Students will demonstrate the ability to communicate (read, write, speak, and listen) effectively. 2. Students will demonstrate the ability to reflect, analyze, synthesize and apply knowledge. 4. Students will demonstrate the ability to find, evaluate, organize, and use information. 5. Prepare students to participate actively as informed and responsible citizens in social, cultural, global and environmental matters.
SPECIFIC COURSE OUTCOMES: 1. Students entering Freshman English I (ENC 1101) have basic skills in grammar, sentence and paragraph structure, punctuation, capitalization, and spelling; however, the more important of these skills will be reviewed and practiced (with exercises) to enable successful completion of this course. 2. Students will develop writing skills in some of the following paragraph modes or essay formats—narration, description, classification, exemplification, definition, comparison/contrast, process analysis, causal analysis, and argument. 3. Students will demonstrate in their writing parallelism, subordination, conciseness, variety and emphasis in sentence structure, the effective use of figurative language and concrete details, and the formal level of diction appropriate to standard written American English. 4. Students will write a formal research paper, demonstrating proper research methods, including the evaluation of evidence and sources; the use of direct quotations, paraphrases, and summaries, and the use of proper documentation formats. 5. Students will demonstrate the correct use of research tools (including the Internet) in the LRC and at home, if the student has his or her own Internet service provider (ISP).
3 6. Students will, individually and in small-group settings, develop analytical, conceptual, and creative thinking skills which will enable them to more coherently and clearly express their thoughts in both oral and written formats, thereby demonstrating the process of moving from analytical thinking and writing to that of synthesis in longer and more complex essays. 7. Reading, active learning exercises, and research topics will be selected so that students develop a greater awareness of cultural, gender, and social issues. 8. Students are expected to apply the knowledge and skills gained in this course to other college courses, present or future work experience, and everyday life.
ONLINE RESOURCES – You may find the URLs listed here useful for this course. Their relevance and utility will be discussed during the introduction/orientation session. Turnitin.com (http://www.turnitin.com) to help proof your papers for use of sources BEFORE you hand them in to the instructor. Purdue Online Writing Lab (http://owl.english.purdue.edu/) to brush up on grammar, punctuation, and MLA documentation format and style. Critical Thinking Across the Curriculum Project. (Longview Community College, Missouri). (http://mcckc.edu/longview/ctac/) for further explanation on logical fallacies. Mission Critical: The Critical Thinking Home Page. (San Jose State University). (http://www.sjsu.edu/depts/itl/graphics/main.html) for further explanation on logical fallacies
ARTS AND SCIENCES POLICIES:
ATTENDANCE (The Arts and Sciences Guideline)– Consistent and timely attendance correlates directly with successful learning. In the School of Arts and Sciences, students could be withdrawn by the instructor if they miss more than a total of four (4) class hours. Individual instructors may publish their own attendance policies. Given the College policy that students be warned before being withdrawn by the instructor for excessive absences, the publication of an attendance policy in the syllabus constitutes the first warning; the second will be mailed from the Registrar’s Office. Students will have seven days to contact the instructor to discuss their continued presence in the class. It is highly recommended that students understand the significance of the last day to withdraw with a grade of W. Dual Enrollment students are expected to abide by their district’s Code of Conduct.
CODE OF CONDUCT: When students are admitted to South Florida Community College they are subject to the jurisdiction of the College during their enrollment. As members of the college community, students are expected to act responsibly in all areas of personal and social conduct. Students are responsible for the observance of all Board policies and procedures as published in the College Catalog, the Student Handbook, and other College information bulletins. Violation of any of these rules may lead to disciplinary action in accordance with prescribed procedures for the handling of disciplinary cases and may range from reprimand to expulsion from the College.
DISABLED STUDENT SERVICES: SFCC offers full educational services to disabled students. However, in order to provide reasonable services and appropriate accommodations, students must self identify to the Disabilities Specialist and provide documentation of the disabling or limiting condition. Services are varied and include, but are not limited to admission and registration assistance, special campus orientation, note taking, tutoring, testing, audiovisual aids, readers, and mobility aids. Disabled Student Services (DSS) is a unit of SFCC Student Services in compliance with Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. The purpose of DSS is to provide services to students with disabilities. These services permit students access to the same educational opportunities as their non-disabled peers and are offered within the institution’s philosophical framework that stresses student independence and self-reliance. DSS operates in cooperation and conjunction with other units in Student Services (Assessment Center and Student Support Services) to ensure continuity of services. In addition, DSS works closely with other public and private rehabilitation agencies to facilitate the coordination of service delivery. Inquiries should be directed to the Disabilities Specialist, Student Services/Classroom Complex Suite B152, Avon Park.
4 INCOMPLETE GRADES: If you have participated throughout the term but are unable to complete all course requirements (such as a term paper, project or final exam) because of illness or other extenuating circumstances, you may request a grade of incomplete. If you receive an I grade, you have six weeks from the beginning of the next college enrollment period to make up the work in the course as outlined on the incomplete form. If you do not complete the assigned work, the grade is automatically changed to the grade assigned by the instructor. Incomplete grades in competency-based programs are governed by the appropriate departmental policies. Dual Enrollment students are expected to abide by their district’s Code of Conduct.
ONLINE COMMUNICATION: Students should check email at least twice a week. Email communication is most suitable for personal questions between you and the instructor or you and a few other people. In all online communication, it is expected that all students will follow rules of online netiquette. See details at http://www.albion.com/netiquette/index.html. Being disruptive or breaking the rules of netiquette may result in revocation of access privileges. Read over your emails before you send them. Be clear enough so that people can understand you without your body language to add clarity; use good English and full sentences, not texting shorthand.
PLAGIARISM AND CHEATING: Plagiarism is the use of another individual’s words, phrases, sentences, or ideas (whether taken word for word, in summary form, or as a paraphrase), without giving credit to the source from which they come (without proper documentation). This also includes handing in another student’s writing (original or researched) as your own. The first offense of willful plagiarism or cheating (verified by the instructor) will result in a grade of “F” (0 value) for the specific assignment. Second offenses are grounds for suspension from the class with a grade of “F”. All instances of plagiarism and other forms of cheating will be referred to the appropriate instructional supervisor, Dean and the Dean of Students. Research papers from other courses will not be accepted in this course.
RELIGIOUS HOLIDAYS: Students who must miss class in order to observe a religious holiday must notify the instructor at least seven (7) days in advance of the day(s) to be missed and shall have until the next class meeting after the observance/holiday to make up missed assignments and/or exams. Dual Enrollment students are expected to abide by their district’s Code of Conduct.
TUTORING: SFCC is committed to student success and, therefore, provides several tutoring services. The Tutoring and Learning Center is located on the first floor of the LRC and offers free tutoring, mainly in Math and Writing. Hours may vary. For online students who have paid a fee to register for the class, the online tutoring service Smarthinking will be available for a specific number of hours (designated for each online class); beyond the set number of hours for the class, students may wish to pay for further Smarthinking tutoring on their own.
NAME OF INSTRUCTOR: Cheryl A. Rosenbaum
5 WEBSITE: http://highmail.highlands.k12.fl.us/~rosenbac/
TELEPHONE: 471-5500 ext. 277
E-MAIL: [email protected]
WELCOME STATEMENT: Welcome to Freshman English I (ENC 1101), a required course for all A.A. and some A.S. degree programs at South Florida Community College. The major purpose of this course is to upgrade language and writing skills at the formal level of Standard American English for use not only in college level courses but also in each student’s future career and to learn the process of writing a research paper.
COURSE REQUIREMENTS: Students will complete a variety of practice writing both in and out of class to meet the Gordon Rule requirement: paragraphs, free writing, journal writing, and rough drafts. In addition, students will submit at least four 500-word essays for formal grading by the instructor per semester. A 1,200-1,500 word research paper will also be required of all students as the accountability part of the research component of this course per semester. Final drafts of essays must meet all MLA writing guidelines both for format and documentation, as applicable to the essay type.
DESCRIPTION OF REQUIREMENTS
JOURNALS:
These must be a minimum of 250-350 words per week. These papers will be written using personal experience. No sources or bibliography will be required; however, you may at times find it helpful to do some research to acquaint you better with your topic. If such is the case, remember to use proper documentation whenever you paraphrase, summarize, or directly quote outside sources. See your handout on Journals for more specific information.
MIDTERM AND FINAL EXAMINATIONS:
The midterm and final exams will be a combination of objective/subjective items and may include: multiple choice, T & F, completion, short answer, and essay. More specific information will be given closer to the exam date. You should be aware that your final exam with your responses will be submitted to the dean at SFCC to ensure the validity of this dual enrollment class.
RESEARCH PAPERS:
A research paper must be a minimum of 1,200 word, typed, double-spaced, using MLA format (See Wadsworth). We will complete a research paper, in addition to other essays, each semester. Topics will be selected by the students but must be approved by the instructor. It is strongly encouraged that the student selects a topic in which he or she is interested. The paper will include a minimum of seven (7) sources and a bibliography page. Because this paper will require much structural and grammatical revision, it is imperative that the student complete the rough draft of this project in a timely manner.
RESEARCH PAPER PRESENTATIONS:
Upon completion of the research paper, students will work collaboratively to present an abstract of their research papers. To this end, students are encouraged to use a variety of media, such as Power Point, web pages, and other visual aids. Students must participate in this activity to receive full credit for the research paper.
IN-CLASS WRITING:
These in-class exercises will be graded largely upon the student’s understanding of the rhetorical concept.
COURSE EXPECTATIONS:
6 1. You will be expected to be WELL PREPARED FOR AND TAKE AN ACTIVE ROLE in class sessions. IF YOU DO NOT UNDERSTAND SOMETHING, ASK! It is preferable that you speak up and are wrong than for you not to speak at all. You will need to have all reading and work done at the assigned time or else. Since so much of what we learn in here will be through group discussion, peer editing, and other such cooperative learning activities, this is the year to come out of your shell!
2. Late work is not accepted.
3. Make-up work is your responsibility. When you return from an EXCUSED absence look over my agendas for the days you missed. Then speak to me about making up the work. If you do not speak to me, I will simply assume you want a 0 for the assignment we did the day you were absent. I will not remind you if you need to make-up a test or quiz. You need to get your make-up work into me in a reasonable amount of time. For example, if you were absent on Monday, get your make-up assignment on Tuesday, and turn it in on Wednesday.
4. If a student knows ahead of time that he or she will be absent on a day when an assignment is due (for example, a pre-arranged absence or field trip), it is the student’s responsibility to turn in the assignment prior to the due date, or send the assignment to the teacher with another student or a parent. Any work may be taken to the school’s office and put in the teacher’s mailbox.
If a student misses class the day an assignment is due but is on campus at any time during that day (for example, missing part of the day due to a half-day field trip), the student is responsible for bringing the assignment to the teacher or getting it to the teacher. Failure to do so will result in a grade of 0.
GRADING:
All grades are done on a point system. In-class assignments and some homework assignments are given a check plus (10 points), a check (8 points), check minus (5 points), or 0; if it is to be worth more I will warn you ahead of time. Your weekly journal assignment is worth 10 points, but is calculated as part of your notebook grade. Group activities are usually worth 25 points. Quizzes are worth 50 points (KEEP IN MIND THAT POP QUIZZES ARE ALWAYS A POSSIBILITY). A participation grade is worth 100 points per nine weeks. Tests are worth 100 points or more. Notebooks are worth at least 100 points each time they are collected. In-class essays and short essays are worth 75 points. Longer essays and research papers will be worth 150-200 points.
NOTEBOOKS:
You are required to have a notebook that you bring to class every day. Blank paper must be kept in the notebook for journal entries, lecture notes, vocabulary and writing assignments. All other class handouts must be kept in the notebook. I will collect these notebooks at the end of each nine weeks. You will need a one-inch three ring binder. The notebook is worth 25 points each time it is collected. The notebook will be collected as followed:
Notebook for 1st Nine Weeks- due October 18 (for __ day) or October 19 (for __ day) Notebook for 2nd Nine Weeks- due January 10 (for ___ day) or January 11 (for ___ day) Notebook for 3rd Nine Weeks- due March 27 (for ___ day) or March 28 (for ___ day) Notebook for 4th Nine Weeks- due May 23 ( for ___ day) or May 24 (for ___day)
Requirements for the Notebook: 1. Notebook must be a folder with three brackets. 2. The notebook must contain notebook paper divided by tabs into these sections: A) HANDOUTS- Your guidebook should be in your handout section. B) JOURNALS- Your journals are to be done weekly, submitted to www.turnitin.com, and completed as described on your journal handout. You only need to include your journal checklist—not your printed out journals since they are already on www.turnitin.com. C) ASSIGNMENTS--includes homework, vocabulary, in-class work, and essays. D) TESTS AND QUIZZES
7 3. The front of the notebook must be clearly marked in the upper right hand corner with the following: A) Name B) Subject C) Period
FORMATTING OF PAPERS (including in-class writings, assignments, formal essays, and journals)
All papers turned in must have the following in the upper left hand corner of the paper: A) Your Name* B) Ms. Rosenbaum C) Class Name- Period D) Date Due
All papers must have a title for the assignment centered on the page. The title should not be underlined, in bold, or in italics. You should have a creative, appropriate, and specific title for each assignment.
Any typed assignment for this class should be done in Times New Roman 12 point font, be double spaced, have one inch margins around the entire page, and have a heading in the upper right hand corner with your last name and page number of the assignment.
All formal essays, journals, and many other assignments will be turned into www.turnitin.com. You will do peer editing of essays using turnitin. The discussion board feature of turnitin will also be used for certain situations. Finally, all papers will be graded directly on turnitin using its GradeMark feature. Unless I tell you otherwise, you will not need to print off a copy of any assignment turned in to turnitin. I will warn you ahead of time what assignments should be turned into www.turnitin.com. (Note: Make sure when you submit an assignment to www.turnitin.com that you choose UPLOAD DOCUMENT rather than copy and paste. If you upload your document, it will appear EXACTLY the same as it did on your computer. When you copy and paste, it changes the font to a notepad document, and this will lower your grade for not having your paper properly formatted.)
You need to sign-up for the class by going to www.turnitin.com and entering the following:
Class id: 5053901 Password: awesome
*Note: Since you are allowed to be anonymous as you peer edit a classmate’s essay on turnitin, I will allow you to make up a pseudonym when you submit a draft of an essay that will be peer edited on www.turnitin.com. I will warn you ahead of time if what you submit will be peer edited.
RULES:
1. Follow directions first time given. 2. Be prepared: in seat, on time, with materials. 3. Show respect for the rights, property, and feelings of others. 4. Stay on task. 5. Speak only at appropriate times.
NEGATIVE CONSEQUENCE 1st time—Warning 2nd time--One detention 3rd time--Two detentions and parental contact 4th time--Referral to office Severe Clause--Immediate Referral to office
REWARDS Verbal praise 8 Written praise Stickers
GRADING SCALE 90-100=A 80-89= B 70-79= C 60-69= D 0-59= F
ASSISTANCE
If at any time you need help, please feel free to make an appointment to speak with me or e-mail me.
COURSE SCHEDULE:
First Nine Weeks:
Week One (Aug 20-24): -Course Rules/Notebook/Journal -Turn in Summer Reading Journal -Summer Reading Quiz -Assign and work on rough draft/peer edit of Illustration/Exemplification Essay based on The Last Lecture -Discussion/Assignment on The Last Lecture -The Wadsworth Handbook Chapter 7: Writing Paragraphs 73-96; in-class we will do ex. 2B on p. 81 and ex. 8 on p. 91 with a partner; we will do handout on paragraphs individually (Note in regards to Wadsworth Handbook: In general you will be responsible for bringing this book to class every other week on the last day your class meets that week. Your bi-weekly reading in Wadsworth SHOULD BE COMPLETED AHEAD OF TIME. Wadsworth should be a review of concepts already familiar to you, so some chapters you will be able to skim in preparation of your assignment. I will give pop mini-quizzes and exercises on the chapters, so you must have read them before class begins.)
Week Two (Aug 27-31): -Continue activities and assignments on The Last Lecture -Discussion/ Group Assignment on Brave New World -Work on rough draft and peer editing of The Last Lecture Essay -Explain Research Paper for 1st semester, process for using library at SFCC -Assign The Canterbury Tales outside reading and index- due ______-go over template for index (available on my website) -go over background information -listen to audio of lines 547-568 of Prologue at: http://www.wwnorton.com/college/english/nael/noa/audio.htm -Readings for Writers Selections/Assignment/Discussion: “Guidelines for Critical Reading” 3-10 (in class), Chapter 2: “What is Rhetoric?” 16-40; “What—and How—to Write When You Have No Time to Write,” 41; “Have a Cigar,” 52; “How to Say Nothing in 500 Words” 65; “Assignment 1: The Research Paper,” 691-729; Chapter 10: “Illustration and Exemplification” 332-337; “Mirror, Mirror on the Wall…” 350; “Don’t Legalize Drugs” 358; “Drug Use: The Continuing Epidemic,” 365 (Note in regards to Readings for Writers: In general you will be responsible for bringing this book every other week. We will read the selections noted on the syllabus in class on the last day of that school week and discuss them; I will let you know in class that day if you are to read selections we did not get to in class for homework. On occasion, you may be asked to read a selection ahead of time or we may read a different selection than those noted on the syllabus.)
Week Three (Sept 4-7): -Continue activities and assignments on Brave New World 9 -Complete Descriptive Essay on what it is like to be a member of a caste in Brave New World -Assign and work on rough draft/peer edit of Comparison/Contrast Essay on Brave New World- final draft due week of Sept 20 -Readings for Writers Selections/Assignment/Discussion: Chapter 4: “What is a Thesis?” 97-111; Chapter 12: “Comparison/Contrast,” 412-419; “That Lean and Hungry Look,” 419; Chapter 5: “How Do I Organize?” 135-145; “Rules for Aging,” 153 “The Editing Booth,” 667-689; “That Time of Year” p. 156-166
Week Four (Sept 10-14): -Complete activities; group assignment on Brave New World -Work on index to The Canterbury Tales or rough draft to Brave New World essay -The Wadsworth Handbook “Constructing an Informal Outline,” 44-46; Chapter 54 “Using Semicolons” 652-658; In-class we will create an informal outline on our Brave New World essay; do ex. 2 (p. 653), ex. 3(p. 654), ex. 5 (p. 656) on own; do ex. 6 (p. 658) with a partner
Week Five (Sept 17-21): -Pass out review guide to next week’s Mid-Midterm Test -In-class time for: -Peer editing on Brave New World essay -Index to The Canterbury Tales -Final draft to Brave New World essay Readings for Writers Selection/Assignment/Discussion: Chapter 3: “What is a Writer’s Voice” 59-65; “Tone: The Writer’s Voice in the Reader’s Mind” 76; “The Waltz” 81; “Division/Classification,” 454-496; “Move Over Teams” 458, “Incidents with White People,” 486; “Warriors Don’t Cry” 481
Week Six (Sept 24-28): -Mid-MidtermTest on Summer Reading books, plus concepts/articles related to Wadsworth and Readings for Writers (worth 200 points) -Time to work on The Canterbury Tales reading/index -Begin unit on The Anglo-Saxons: 449–1066 and The Middle Ages: 1066-1485 -The Wadsworth Handbook Chapter 12 “Writing a Research Paper” 140-165; Chapter 13, “Finding and Evaluating Library Sources” 166-180; Chapter 14, “Finding and Evaluating Web Sources” 181-195 ; complete an assignment in-class on writing a research paper, picking out a topic, and finding sources
Week Seven (Oct 1-5): -Work on index to The Canterbury Tales -Assign creative activities/cooperative learning activities for The Canterbury Tales -Read Beowulf and write story of Grendel as a misunderstood monster - Readings for Writers Selections/Assignment/Discussion: “Annotated Student Research Paper: Modern Language Association (MLA) Style on Choosing Single Motherhood: A Sign of Modern Times?” 701; Chapter 15 “Argument and Persuasion,” 550; “Why Don’t We Complain?” 557; “A Nation in Need of a Vacation” 571
Week Eight (Oct 9-12): -Turn in index and take quiz on The Canterbury Tales -Assign and work on rough draft/peer edit of Division/Classification on The Canterbury Tales-final draft due ______-Complete brainstorming activity on Classifying and Dividing Pilgrims -Work on creative activities/cooperative learning activities for The Canterbury Tales -The Wadsworth Handbook Chapter 15: “Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Quoting Sources,” 196-205; Chapter 16 “Synthesizing Sources” 206-220; Chapter 9 “Using Logic,” 104-114; Chapter 53 “Using Commas,” 638-651
Week Nine (Oct 15-19): -Complete Great Story Tellers activity; Chaucerian Food Celebration; SHS Pilgrimage -Read “The Life and Times of Chaucer” p. 271 -Work on rough draft of division/classification essay on The Canterbury Tales- due end of week -Notebook due October 18 or 19; Favorite Journal due to www.turnitin.com Discussion Board this week; Comment on Someone’s Journal due to www.turnitin.com Discussion Board this week
10 Second Nine Weeks:
Week One (Oct 22-26): -Write a riddle and share -Share SHS Pilgrimage Presentation with your group -Complete peer editing and final draft of division/classification essay on The Canterbury Tales -Assign Research Paper on Florida Social Issue; go over template for research paper (available on my website) -Assign outside reading on Read like a Rock Star Book
Week Two (Oct 29-Nov 2): -Scarevenger Hunt -Work on researching Florida Social Issue paper using Panther Central -Paper proposal of research paper on Florida Social issue is due to Discussion Board of www.turnitin.com; write a response to someone’s paper proposal on www.turnitin.com -Readings for Writers Selection/Assignment/Discussion: Articles on “Issue for Critical Thinking and Debate: Homelessness,” 582; “The View from Eighty,” 314
Week Three (Nov 5-9): -Midterm Test on Middle Ages Literature, Readings for Writers selections, and The Wadsworth Handbook selections -Watch excerpt from The Reduced Shakespeare Company -Go over background information on The Tragedy of Macbeth and begin reading -Hyperlinks of at least six sources for Florida Social Issue research paper due to www.turnitin.com by ______; it needs to be a valid source from 2010-present -Book checked out from SFCC related to Florida Social Issue research paper due ______-The Wadsworth Handbook Chapter 10 “Writing Argumentative Essays,” 115-130; Chapter 41 “Revising Run-ons,” 544- 548; Chapter 56 “Using Other Punctuation Marks” 675-683; Chapter 17 “Avoiding Plagiarism,” 221-228; Chapter 18 “MLA Documentation Style” 234-274
Week Four (Nov 12-16): -Continue reading Macbeth -Annotated Works Cited and Outline/Formal Brainstorming due for research paper is due to www.turnitin.com by ______-Readings for Writers Selections/Assignment/Discussion: “In Praise of the Humble Comma,” 382; “Shame,” 217; “Of Altruism, Heroism, and Nature’s Gifts,” 374; “Wide Open Spaces,” 403
Week Five (Nov 26-Nov 30): -Work on Rough Draft for Research Paper; it is due to www.turnitin.com by ____ -Peer Editing of rough draft done in class -Finish reading Macbeth and complete activities--including Facebook Character Postings and performance of a scene in a cooperative learning group -Work on completing activities for Read like a Rock Star Book -The Wadsworth Handbook Chapter 49 “Using Verbs” 604-616; Chapter 50 “Revising Agreement Errors,” 617-625
Week Six (Dec 3-7): -Work on revision of rough draft of research paper -Shakespeare and More! Test is given on Renaissance Literature, Readings for Writers passages, and The Wadsworth Handbook concepts we have covered- worth 200 points -Complete Argument Essay on Macbeth -Work on projects/assignments for Read like a Rock Star Book -Readings for Writers Selections/Assignment/Discussion “Terrorism,” 633; “Body Image” 636; Ageism,” 639; “Status of Women,” 655; Class Choice
Week Seven (Dec 10-14): -In-class time to work on final draft and Read like a Rock Star assignments -Final Draft due for Research Paper to www.turnitin.com by ______-The Wadsworth Handbook Chapter 56 “Using Quotation Marks,” 666-674
11 Week Eight (Dec 17-19): -Book Talk, assignments, Narration Essay, and other activities for Read like a Rock Star Book -Work on research paper presentations -The Wadsworth Handbook Student choice of exercises based on aspects that need improvement in writing
Week Nine (Jan 8-11): -Research Paper Presentations (done in PowerPoint or other acceptable format) -Notebook due January 10 or January 11; Favorite Journal due to www.turnitin.com Discussion Board by _____; Comment on Someone’s Journal due to www.turnitin.com Discussion Board by ______
Exam Week (Jan 14-18): -Take final exam for ENC 1101 (This final exam will be comprehensive and your responses will be submitted to SFCC.)
NOTE: THIS OUTLINE DOES NOT REFLECT THE ADDITIONAL READINGS, ESSAYS, TESTS, OR HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENTS THAT MIGHT BE ADDED DURING THE COURSE OF THE YEAR BASED ON THE NEEDS OF THE CLASS. ASSIGNMENTS ON SYLLABUS ARE TENTATIVE AND REPRESENT THE EARLIEST DUE DATE FOR AN ASSIGNMENT. THE INSTRUCTOR RESERVES THE RIGHT TO DELAY ASSIGNMENTS BASED ON CLASS PACE.
JOURNAL ASSIGNMENT:
Directions: Your journal will be due on Friday of every school week by 11:59 pm to www.turnitin.com. Each week you need to write between 250-350 words. You may choose between one to three topics per week, but you should not repeat any topic during the school year. You need to have a heading on your paper listing the journal #, then write the number of the question, then your entry. You may choose to work ahead (since all the journals for the year are already listed on www.turnitin.com), but you must make sure you submit your journal every Friday for the correct date (regardless if you were absent or not on that day—this is a college class!) in order to get your 10 points credit per week toward your notebook grade. I will read these journal entries directly off of www.turnitin.com. At the end of each nine weeks you will turn in a copy of your Journal Checklist for the nine weeks when your turn in your notebook (which will be a 3 prong or ring folder).
These journals will be a way for you to creatively express yourself and practice writing fluency. It should be an enjoyable experience (except for those of you who choose to start writing your weekly journal at 11:54 pm the night it is due). You should also keep in mind that you will eventually use these journal entries in your writing portfolio, which is a collection of your best writings of the year, and you will also be sharing your favorite journals with your classmates on the Discussion Board of www.turnitin.com.
The individual journals will be due for the school year as followed:
JOURNAL # 1 due August 24 JOURNAL # 2 due August 31 JOURNAL # 3 due September 7 JOURNAL # 4 due September 14 JOURNAL # 5 due September 21 JOURNAL # 6 due September 28 JOURNAL # 7 due October 5 JOURNAL # 8 due October 12 JOURNAL # 9 due October 19 JOURNAL # 10 due October 26 JOURNAL # 11 due November 2 JOURNAL # 12 due November 9 JOURNAL # 13 due November 16 JOURNAL # 14 due November 30 JOURNAL # 15 due December 7 JOURNAL # 16 due December 14
12 JOURNAL # 17 due January 11 JOURNAL # 18 due January 18 JOURNAL # 19 due January 25 JOURNAL # 20 due February 1 JOURNAL # 21 due February 8 JOURNAL # 22 due February 15 JOURNAL # 23 due February 22 JOURNAL # 24 due March 1 JOURNAL # 25 due March 8 JOURNAL # 26 due March 22 JOURNAL # 27 due March 29 JOURNAL # 28 due April 5 JOURNAL # 29 due April 12 JOURNAL # 30 due April 19 JOURNAL # 31 due April 26 JOURNAL # 32 due May 3 JOURNAL # 33 due May 10 JOURNAL # 34 due May 17
Your journal topics are as followed:
1. Describe your first brush with danger. 2. Tell the story of a job interview that goes badly. (The more your character wants the job, the better the story will be.) 3. According to officials at Graceland, Elvis Presley receives an estimated one hundred valentines every year. Write a story about one. 4. Write an argument between two characters that begins in the middle of the argument. 5. Imagine that you could wake up tomorrow in someone else’s body. Whose would it be? How would your life change? What are some of the first things you’d do? 6. Write about a near-death experience. 7. Write a story about the 1980s (or any other time period in the past). Use as many period elements as you can. 8. Since 1980, more than fifty forgeries have been discovered at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Write about one of them. 9. Write about the biggest secret you failed to keep. 10. Write a story set in the kitchen of a fast-food restaurant. 11. According to the National Coffee Association, there are more than 300,000 Americans who drink more than ten cups of coffee a day. Describe one of them. 12. Chronicle the longest amount of time you’ve ever gone without sleeping. 13. Write about your first artistic expression. 14. Describe the most disappointing gift you have ever received. What did the gift reveal about the giver? 15. Describe the worst driver you have ever known. 16. Think of a person you don’t like, and describe what you might say if you had to share an elevator ride together with this person. Then describe what happens when the elevator breaks down. For six hours. 17. Tell a story that begins with the discovery of a ransom note. 18. Write a story in the form of a political apology. 19. Describe the worst time you ever put your foot in your mouth. 20. Seventeen percent of Americans claim they have seen a ghost. Describe one of their encounter, or one of your own. 21. Describe the youngest baby you ever felt, and how he or she felt in your arms. 22. Write about a time you’ve been lost. 23. Write about a beauty pageant without using stereotypes. 24. Describe the worst date of your life. 25. By the early 1990s more than 30,000 Americans held reservations from Pan-Am airlines for a trip to the moon. Write about one of these people. 26. Set a small mirror beside your desk and write about your reflection. Describe how you might be perceived by a stranger passing you on the street—what assumptions might he or she make about you, based on your appearance? 13 27. Describe the largest crowd you’ve ever been a part of. 28. Write a story that begins with the words, “Why didn’t you call me?” 29. Tell a story in the form of a prayer. 30. More than 10 million prescription medications are filled incorrectly every year. Write about one of them. 31. If you were going to be marooned on a tropical island with one person, who would you want it to be? Write scenes that take place five hours after the shipwreck, five weeks after the shipwreck, and five years after the shipwreck. 32. Describe the last time you were physically involved in a fight. 33. Begin a story with a character who has lost something important to them. 34. Invent a character who has won 76 million dollars in the Florida State Lottery. What is the first thing he or she buys? How much is given to charity? How long before an ex-boyfriend or ex-girlfriend re-enters their lives? 35. Describe the most boring event you have ever suffered through. 36. Write from the point-of-view of someone who committed murder today. Do not mention the murder. 37. Write about the first time you defied your parents. 38. Tell the story of how your parents became engaged. 39. Write about your worst habit. 40. Create a character who is trying to gain access to a club or organization. 41. Create a character who is falsely accused of a crime. 42. Update a classic fairy tale for readers of the 21st century. 43. Write about the black sheep in your family. What is your opinion of him or her? 44. How well do you respond to criticism? 45. Describe your most embarrassing experience. 46. Trace the journey of a five dollar bill through the lives of five different owners. What was exchanged during the transactions? How much (or how little) did these transactions mean to each of the people involved? 47. Tell the story about “the one who got away.” 48. Write about a physical trait you would have loved to have changed in middle school. 49. According to the Florida Department of Corrections, more than 100 people have registered on a waiting list to see an execution. Write about one of them. 50. Describe a time when you pretended to be someone you are not. 51. Describe the biggest risk you have ever taken. 52. Write a story that begins, “The last time I saw my mother was fifteen years ago…” 53. Write a story that begins, “Three days passed before they found the body…” 54. Write about the worst driving you’ve ever done. 55. Thirty-four percent of new American school teachers say they plan to quit their profession within their first five years. Write about one of them. 56. Invent a character that must choose between the lesser of two evils. 57. Write a love story in MySpace. Have the story consist entirely of alternating messages. 58. Describe a time you’ve settled an argument between two friends. 59. Write about a library or bookstore that has a special significance to you. What authors did you discover there? 60. Invent a character whose life is governed by Murphy’s Law (that is, anything that can go wrong will go wrong). 61. Write a story about a phone call that begins at three o’clock in the morning? 62. Write about the worst lie you ever told someone? Did they find out? What was the result? 63. Write from the point of view of a character on his or her deathbed. 64. Write about your favorite childhood toy. 65. Write about a character that is granted three wishes. 66. Write about a victim of “year-end fiscal cutbacks and corporate downsizing.” 67. Write about a wedding in which the bride or groom changes their mind. 68. Tell a story in the form of a love letter. 69. Tell a story that centers around a recipe. 70. Describe an encounter with a celebrity. 71. Write about the most serious injury or illness you have ever faced. 72. Invent a character that sees a phone number on the wall of a bathroom. Describe what happens when he or she dials the number. 73. Describe the most meaningful gift you have ever received. What does it reveal about your relationship to the giver? 74. Describe your favorite experience with Mother Nature. 14 75. Describe the secret life of a school bus driver. 76. More than 25,000 Americans seek help each year with gambling addiction. Write about one of them. 77. Describe your favorite family holiday, and explain what made it so special for you. 78. Describe a bad hair day. 79. According to the Gallup Organization, more than one million American dogs have been named as beneficiaries in a will. Write about one of their owners. 80. Write about your earliest childhood memory. 81. There are approximately 3500 members of the International Flat Earth Society (people who insist the Earth is flat). Write about one of them. 82. Write about the most important event you have ever been late to. 83. Tell the story behind your nickname or the most unusual nickname you have ever heard. 84. Write about your greatest childhood fear. 85. If you could script the plot for the dream you will have tonight, what would it be? 86. Write a dialogue between a radio talk show host and a troubled caller. 87. Every year, more than four hundred Americans are injured or killed by lightning. Write about one of them. 88. Write about a childhood experience that made you cry. 89. Write about the most difficult phone call you’ve ever had to make. 90. Write about a dream or goal you failed to achieve. What went wrong? How did this experience change you? 91. Check the horoscope in today’s newspaper, and use any of the twelve forecasts as a basis for a character. 92. Describe the unhealthiest meal you’ve ever eaten, and how you felt after eating it. 93. Write a description of your dream automobile. 94. Write a story that begins with an explosion. 95. If you won the Texas lottery, what would you do? 96. Why do you think some people don't exercise their right to vote? 97. What is your favorite Disney character or movie and why is it your favorite? 98. My full name and how it was decided on 99. I am the one who.... 100. First Grade Memories 101. In the left corner, behind the filing cabinet..... 102. The Holiday I Wish We Had 103. Summer Memories 104. My Dad 105. My Mom 106. My Grandma 107. My Grandpa 108. If I was President of the United States... 109. Bugs 110. In 20 Years I'd Like to Be.... 111. It was so funny when... 112. Good things about me 113. When I get to college, I will.... 114. The best book I ever read... 115. I'm thankful for... 116. My hero 117. I wish I was there when.... 118. What My Best Friend and I Have in Common 119. Something people usually don't notice about me is... 120. You are a small animal at a historical event. Tell what is happening. 121. Write an alphabet journal entry 26 sentences long, with each sentence starting with the alphabet letter as it appears in sequence. 122. Make a list of all the words that are related to or describe heat. Write a story about Florida in the summer using these words. 123. Write about places you have never been to, but want to go to. 124. Write about people you don't know, but would like to know. 125. Write about things you have never done, but would like to do (conduct an orchestra, etc.) 126. What if our school classes only went until noon each day? 15 127. I Did Something Really Nice 128. Observe at least 5 things you see happen on your way home from school. Write about them. 129. What does a classroom sound like? 130. What is a typical day in the school cafeteria? 131. Write about a perfect day. 132. What I Would Change About My School 133. What I Would Change About My World 134. Where Would I Go in a Time Machine 135. Give advice to a new student who will start school at SHS next year 136. I'll never forget the day ______(teacher's name) did ______137. Some of the richest times in your life can come from your quiet thinking and/or praying alone time. Discuss these times in your life. 138. Review the last movie you saw. 139. Describe the BEST ice cream and tell why you feel that way 140. What is an experience you would hate to repeat? 141. What is the ideal age to be? Why? 142. Do you accept yourself as you are, or would you like to be someone else? 143. Answer this question," Have I in any way done something that has hurt my parents?" 144. "How I think will determine how I live." Do you agree or disagree? Explain 145. Describe a summer thunderstorm 146. Describe the plight of an animal caught in a forest fire. 147. Tell abut a ride on the most exciting amusement park ride you have ever ridden. 148. Write about an Old West shoot-out in the streets of a western town 149. How might an astronaut feel that discovers that he/she will have to return to earth early because of a rocket malfunction? 150. Describe the actions of a person who has just hit his or her thumb with a hammer 151. Describe the feeling of being chased in a dream 152. Tell about the moment when a person realizes that he or she has forgotten to do a major assignment that is due today. 153. Describe the actions of an athlete in the final moments of a close contest when he or she makes a winning (or losing) shot, play, move, or effort. 154. It isn't fair.... 155. Write about some compliments people have given you 156. Write about some compliments you have given others recently. 157. Create a menu from a fictitious restaurant and describe the entrees. 158. The dispute over comic books. Are they good or bad? 159. Should grocery stores continue to throw away good food each day? 160. Do you get enough sleep? How or why not? 161. A horrible babysitting experience was when… 162. What one non-living item would you take from your house if it caught on fire? 163. You’ve landed on another planet. Tell the inhabitants all about earth. 164. If you were your teacher, how would you treat you? 165. What if your teacher fell asleep in class. 166. How would you think your parents’ view would change if they walked in your shoes for a week? 167. List 25 uses for a toothbrush. 168. Assume you are the last person on Earth and you have been granted one wish. What would it be? 169. Imagine a world that contained no written language. What would be different? 170. If you could step back in time to re-live one day, what would you do differently? 171. Imagine you are 25 years old. How will you describe yourself as you are today? 172. Imagine you had a hundred dollars, but you couldn't keep it. You had to give it away to a person or charity. Who would you give it to? What would you want them to do with it? 173. Describe one time when you were brave. 174. If you could cook any meal for your family, what would you cook? Describe the meal and tell how you would make it. 175. Describe your favorite character from a book, a movie, or television. 176. If you could have any animal for a pet, what would it be? Describe the pet and how you would take care of it. 16 177. Do you have any brothers or sisters? If you do, tell what they're like. If not, tell whether or not you would like to have a brother or sister. 178. If you could have lunch with any famous person who would it be? What would you talk about with this person? 179. Describe the oldest person you know. 180. Describe the youngest person you know. 181. Do you think a monkey would make a good pet? Explain why or why not. 182. How old were you four years ago? Describe some things you can do now that you could not do then. 183. Imagine you worked at a football stadium. What would your job be? (examples: quarterback, cheerleader, coach, referee, ticket seller) Describe what you would do while you were on the job. 184. What do you like best about your home? 185. If you could be on any game show, what would it be? Describe what happens when you're on the show. 186. Describe your favorite season (fall, spring, summer, or winter). Tell what kinds of things you like to do during that season. 187. If you could spend an afternoon with one member of your extended family, who would it be? Tell why you chose this person and tell what you do together. 188. Which superpower would you most like to have-- invisibility, super strength, or the ability to fly? Describe what kids of things you would do with your powers. 189. Think of a time when you've won something. Tell what you won and how you won it. 190. Invent a new kind of sandwich. Describe what is on it and how you would make it. 191. Describe one thing you're really good at. 192. Imagine you were twenty feet tall. Describe what life would be like. 193. Take out a photo album or magazine. Find the 14th photo (counting any way you like) and write the story of that photo. 194. Find a poem that you like. Make the last line of that poem the first line of your poem. 195. Make a list of 40 things that have happened to you this month. 196. Write a story about someone you know who is weird. 197. Where do you go when you want to get away from the pressures of life? 198. Rewrite “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” from the perspective of one of the dwarfs. 199. Imagine your life is now a book. Write a blurb for the back cover. 200. Write about the easiest decision you ever had to make. 201. Write an excuse for not working today. 202. Use the following words in a story: hypocrite, cookie jar, telephone, city, onomatopoeia 203. List fifteen simple pleasures. Pick one and write about it. 204. Begin a story with “I wish someone had told me…” 205. List 50 things you’d never do. 206. Write a pure dialogue story. No narration, no description, just dialogue. 207. Write a story 200 years from now about a day in the life of a window washer. 208. Write a feature story about the following: Giant Flies Invade Norway! 209. Write a story about a beggar who loves to hear himself sing.
Bibliography:
Topics 1-94 are from The Writer’s Block by Jason Rehkulak
Topics 95-161 are from http://www.angelfire.com/ok/freshenglish/250journaltopics.html
Topics 162-171 are from http://712educators.about.com/cs/writingresources/l/bljrnlspec.html
Topics 172-192 are from http://www.superteacherworksheets.com/journal-prompts.html
Topics 192-209 are from http://www.creativewritingprompts.com 17 JOURNAL Checklist for 1st Nine Weeks
Directions: Take the following four pages and put it into the JOURNAL Checklist section of your notebook. This will be used to grade your notebook every nine weeks and will help you keep track of the Journal and Quote topics you have completed. Keep in mind that your word count will be individually verified by me (and a teaching assistant who will help me grade these), so if you give an inaccurate word count it will affect your grade. Weekly JOURNALs:
JOURNAL # 1 due August 24 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s _____; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 2 due August 31 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s _____; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 3 due September 7 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 4 due September 14 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 5 due September 21 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 6 due September 28 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 7 due October 5 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 8 due October 12 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
Remember your notebook is due October 18 (for __ Day) or October 19 (for __ Day)!
18 JOURNAL Checklist for Second Nine Weeks
JOURNAL # 9 due October 19 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 10 due October 26 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 11 due November 2 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 12 due November 9 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 13 due November 16 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 14 due November 30 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 15 due December 7 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 16 due December 14 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
Remember your notebook is due January 10 (for ___ day) or January 11 (for ___ day)!
19 JOURNAL Checklist for Third Nine Weeks
JOURNAL # 17 due January 11 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 18 due January 18 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 19 due January 25 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 20 due February 1 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 21 due February 8 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 22 due February 15 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 23 due February 22 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 24 due March 1 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 25 due March 8 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 26 due March 22 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
20 Remember your notebook is due March 27 (for ___ Day) or March 28 (for ___ Day)!
JOURNAL Checklist for Fourth Nine Weeks
JOURNAL # 27 due March 29 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 28 due April 5 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 29 due April 12 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 30 due April 19 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 31 due April 26 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 32 due May 3 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 33 due May 10 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
JOURNAL # 34 due May 17 -I did / did not complete this JOURNAL. I wrote on journal topic/s ______; my word count is ______.
Remember your notebook is due May 23 (for __ Day) or May 24 (for ___ Day)!
21 NOTEBOOK CHECKLIST
1st 9 WEEKS NOTEBOOK CHECK ON OCTOBER 18 (for __ day) or OCTOBER 19 (for ___ day):
(Warning: This checklist will be filled out by the teacher or teacher assistant, so please leave it blank. Remember your JOURNALs will be graded for proper formatting, word length, and intelligence of your responses.) JOURNAL #1= ______/10points JOURNAL #2= ______/10 points JOURNAL #3= ______/10 points JOURNAL #4= ______/10 points JOURNAL #5= ______/10 points JOURNAL #6= ______/10 points JOURNAL #7= ______/10 points JOURNAL #8= ______/10 points Name/Subject/Period on Cover=______/2 points Notebook is divided and labeled with four tabs entitled (in this order: Handouts, Journals, Assignments, Tests and Quizzes)=______/3 points Guidebook is in Handout Section=______/5 points JOURNAL Checklist is filled out properly=______/10 points Proper Papers in Each Section=______/10 points
TOTAL GRADE FOR NOTEBOOK=______/110 POINTS
22 2ND 9 WEEKS NOTEBOOK CHECK ON JANUARY 10 (for __ Day) or JANUARY 11 (for ___ Day):
(Warning: This checklist will be filled out by the teacher or teacher assistant, so please leave it blank. Remember your JOURNALs will be graded for proper formatting, word length, and intelligence of your responses.)
JOURNAL #9= ______/10 points JOURNAL #10= ______/10 points JOURNAL #11= ______/10 points JOURNAL #12= ______/10 points JOURNAL #13= ______/10 points JOURNAL #14= ______/10 points JOURNAL #15= ______/10 points JOURNAL #16= ______/10 points Name/Subject/Period on Cover=______/2 points Notebook is divided and labeled with four tabs entitled (in this order: Handouts, Journals, Assignments, Tests and Quizzes)=______/3 points Guidebook is in Handout Section=______/5 points JOURNAL Checklist is filled out properly=______/10 points Proper Papers in Each Section=______/10 points
TOTAL GRADE FOR NOTEBOOK=______/110 POINTS
23 3rd 9 WEEKS NOTEBOOK CHECK ON MARCH 27 (for ___ day) OR MARCH 28 (for ___ day):
(Warning: This checklist will be filled out by the teacher or teacher assistant, so please leave it blank. Remember your JOURNALs will be graded for proper formatting, word length, and intelligence of your responses.)
JOURNAL #17=______/10 points JOURNAL #18= ______/10 points JOURNAL #19= ______/10 points JOURNAL #20= ______/10 points JOURNAL #21= ______/10 points JOURNAL #22= ______/10 points JOURNAL #23= ______/10 points JOURNAL #24= ______/10 points JOURNAL #25= ______/10 points JOURNAL #26=______/10 points Name/Subject/Period on Cover=______/2 points Notebook is divided and labeled with four tabs entitled (in this order: Handouts, Journals, Assignments, Tests and Quizzes)=______/3 points Guidebook is in Handout Section=______/5 points JOURNAL Checklist is filled out properly=______/10 points Proper Papers in Each Section=______/10 points
TOTAL GRADE FOR NOTEBOOK=______/130 POINTS
24 4TH 9 WEEKS NOTEBOOK CHECK ON MAY 23 (for ___ day) or MAY 24 (for ___ day):
(Warning: This checklist will be filled out by the teacher or teacher assistant, so please leave it blank. Remember your JOURNALs will be graded for proper formatting, word length, and intelligence of your responses.)
JOURNAL #27=______/10 points JOURNAL #28= ______/10 points JOURNAL #29= ______/10 points JOURNAL #30= ______/10 points JOURNAL #31= ______/10 points JOURNAL #32= ______/10 points JOURNAL #33= ______/10 points JOURNAL #34= ______/10 points Name/Subject/Period on Cover=______/2 points Notebook is divided and labeled with four tabs entitled (in this order: Handouts, Journals, Assignments, Tests and Quizzes)=______/3 points Guidebook is in Handout Section=______/5 points JOURNAL Checklist is filled out properly=______/10 points Proper Papers in Each Section=______/10 points
TOTAL GRADE FOR NOTEBOOK=______/110 POINTS
25 The Last Lecture Topics of Discussion:
Author Randy Pausch:
Randy Pausch was a professor of Computer Science, Human Computer Interaction, and Design at Carnegie Mellon University. From 1988 to 1997, he taught at the University of Virginia. He was an award-winning teacher and researcher, and worked with Adobe, Google, Electronic Arts (EA), and Walt Disney Imagineering, and pioneered the non-profit Alice project. (Alice is an innovative 3-D environment that teaches programming to young people via storytelling and interactive game-playing.) He also co-founded The Entertainment Technology Center at Carnegie Mellon with Don Marinelli. (ETC is the premier professional graduate program for interactive entertainment as it is applies across a variety of fields.) Randy lost his battle with pancreatic cancer on July 25th, 2008. (Source: www.thelastlecture.com)
Important People Mentioned in Pausch’s book:
Jai-his wife Dylan, Logan, and Chloe- his 3 children Jeffrey Zaslow- This is who Randy Pausch would tell his story to on his daily bike rides; Zaslow adapted these stories into The Last Lecture. Michele Reiss- Jai and Randy’s psychotherapist, who specialized in treating couples in which one member is terminally ill Steve Seabolt- close friend of Randy’s Randy’s father- tough WWII veteran; founded a nonprofit group to help immigrant kids’ learn English; sold auto insurance; Randy considered him a smart man and followed his advice his whole life Randy’s mother- a former no-nonsense English teacher Tammy- Randy’s sister, who is 2 years older than him. Jack Sheriff- friend who helps paint Randy’s room when he is a child Jim Graham- Randy’s high school football coach, encouraged the fundamentals Chip Walter- co-wrote a book with William Shatner on scientific breakthroughs first mention in Star Trek; this indirectly led to Randy meeting Shatner Jon Snoddy- imaginer in charge of Disney Aladdin virtual reality ride Jessica Hodgins- co-worker of Randy he occasionally brought with him to doctor’s appointments Dr. Herb Zeh- one of Randy’s doctors Dr. Robert Woolf- Randy’s oncologist; Randy was very impressed by the way he delivered bad news Robbee Kosak- Randy’s co-worker who sees him happy in his car and sends him an email Andy van Dam- Randy is a teaching assistant to him; Andy gives him great advice by telling him, “Randy, it’s such a shame that people perceive you as being so arrogant, because it’s going to limit what you’re going to be able to accomplish in life.” (p. 68) Chris and Laura- his sister’ children Tommy Burnett- achieved his childhood dream of working on a Star Wars film Don Marinelli- a drama professor at Carnegie Mellon who co-founded the Entertainment Technology Center with Randy Dennis Kosgrove- Alice’s lead designer
26 Caitlin Kelleher- a professor working getting girls more interested in computer programming through story telling Sandy Blatt- Randy’s former landlord who was a paraplegic Jackie Robinson- first African-American to play Major League Baseball; Randy had a photo of him in his office and Randy was surprised that few students knew his story Dennis Cosgrove- Randy fights for him to not get kicked out of school after he makes an F; eventually he takes charge of the Alice project Norman Meyrowitz- brought a lightbulb to class, which really impressed Randy Nico Habermann- an interview with this man got Randy into the PhD program at Carnegie Mellon Fred Brooks, Jr.- a highly respected computer scientist who was a lifelong mentor to Randy Jared Cohon- president of Carnegie Mellon Scott Sherman- Randy’s college roommate he goes on a scuba diving trip with
The Last Lecture Discussion Questions:
Overall Questions:
1. Why do you think this lecture/book struck a cord with so many people? 2. Where is the speaker/author “coming from”? 3. What are my childhood dreams? How might I achieve them? 4. What were the dreams my parents had and how did they fulfill them? 5. Who are the mentors I can turn to? What lessons have they taught me? 6. And what wisdom would I choose to impart to the world if it was my last chance? What are the lessons of my life?
Introduction: Randy Pausch describes his cancer as “an engineering problem.” How was this a helpful way to look at his illness? He talks about the lecture as a means of expression, and a way to reach his kids: “If I were a painter, I would have painted for them. If I were a musician, I would have composed music. But I am a lecturer. So I lectured.” There are so many ways to communicate. What are your own avenues for self-expression? Randy has always recognized the importance of time management. What did you think of his decision to work on the book while riding his bike?
Chapter 1: An Injured Lion Still Wants to Roar Randy almost didn’t go to Pittsburg to deliver his last lecture. His wife Jai had wanted him to stay home with her and the kids. What did you learn from his discussion with her about this? Randy chose “Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams: as the topic for his lecture. In what ways would this allow him to tell the story of his life, and to enable the dreams of others?
Chapter 3: The Elephant in the Room
27 Randy decided to begin his talk in a specific way—showing his CT scans, introducing “the elephant in the room,” assuring everyone he’s not in denial, and doing push-ups. What made this effective? What were you thinking watching this for the first time via video?
Chapter 4: The Parent Lottery Randy said he realized many of his dreams because he had terrific parents. What details from his childhood do you think led to the successes he had later in life? Are there lessons in Randy’s story for people who’ve had less fulfilling childhoods, or absentee parents? What advice might you give to those who didn’t win “the parent lottery”? Chapter 5: The Elevator in the Ranch House In his talk, Randy encouraged parents to allow their children to paint on their bedroom walls, “As a favor to me,” he said, “let ‘em do it. Don’t worry about the home’s resale value.” The real message he says he was trying to give was this: Find ways to help your kids be creative. Nurture those instincts in them. What would you paint on your bedroom walls if you were given permission to do so? What other creative outlet would you like to pursue, if your parents gave the OK?
Chapter 6: Getting to Zero G The chapter ends with the line: “If you can find an opening, you can probably find a way to float through it.” What’s the lesson to be learned from Randy’s attempts to get onto that “Vomit Comet”?
Chapter 7: I Never Made It to the NFL This is a chapter about football, but so many of the lessons in it can apply elsewhere in our lives: Talk about ways fundamentals are important off the playing field, too. Randy believed our critics are often the ones saying they still care about us. How in your own life has a critic helped you become a better person? Randy loved using “head fakes.” What are some other head fakes that teachers and parents have used?
Chapter 11: The Happiest Place on Earth Throughout the book, Randy says: “Brick walls are there for a reason. They’re not there to keep us out. The brick walls are there to give us a chance to show how badly we want something.” What are the brick walls you’ve faced in your own life? How did you get over them?
Chapter 12: The Park Is Open Until 8 p.m. In this chapter, we see Randy as an advocate for his own medical care. We also get a sense of how he decided to adopt a positive attitude. Have there been people in your own life who’ve faced the challenges of serious illness? What did you learn from them? How has Randy’s journey made you consider how you’ll approach your own mortality?
Chapter 14: The Dutch Uncle Randy credits his professor Andy van Dam with telling him the tough-love things he needed to hear. What was it about Dr. van Dam’s delivery and message that resonated with
28 Randy? Who in your own life has told you things about yourself that made you reconsider your actions or behavior?
Chapter 15: Pouring Soda in the Backseat Throughout the book, Randy makes a distinction between “people” and “things.” What did you think of his decision to empty that can of soda in the backseat of his car?
Chapter 17: Not All Fairy Tales End Smoothly In this chapter and chapter 19 (about the birth of his son) Randy reminds readers that even wonderful life events—such as a wedding or the birth of a child—are fraught with unexpected dangers. What did you learn from the way Randy and Jai handled the problems before them in these chapters?
Chapter 18: Lucy, I’m Home Was Randy right? Was there no need to fix the dents in those two damaged cars?
Chapter 21: Jai It is clear in the book that Randy and Jai have a deep love for one another. And yet, like other married couples, they’ve had to work hard on their relationship. Randy’s illness created additional challenges. By reading about how they’ve faced the issues between them, what did you learn about getting along with others, about mutual respect, and about the power of love?
Chapter 23: I’m on My Honeymoon, But If You Need Me… What do you think of Randy’s time-management tips? Would you have walked out of that grocery store, knowing you overpaid by $16.55? Do you have to-do lists?
Chapter 24: A Recovering Jerk Randy believes the number one goal for educators should be helping students learn how to judge themselves. How crucial do you think this is in the learning process? Have you relied on feedback loops in your life? Has anyone ever told you that you were being a jerk?
Chapter 27: The Promised Land Randy and his colleagues tried to attract girls into the field of computer science. He’s proud of “The Alice Project,” and calls it his greatest legacy. What advice would you give to his colleagues, as they go about trying to carry on Randy’s vision?
Chapter 28: Dream Big Randy missed the 1969 moonwalk because he was sent to bed by camp counselors. Have you ever wished adults in your life were less rigid? What advice would you give to adults about helping kids to dream big?
Chapter 29: Earnest Is Better Than Hip Do you agree with Randy? Is earnest better than hip? Is fashion truly commerce masquerading as hip? Or can fashion be a way in which people express themselves?
Chapter 32: Don’t Complain, Just Work Harder
29 Randy admired Sandy Blatt and Jackie Robinson because they didn’t complain. As Randy puts it: “Complaining is not a strategy.” Do you agree?
Chapter 35: Start by Sitting Together Have you ever had trouble working in groups? How might Randy’s tips help you get along better with others in the future?
Chapter 39: Be the First Penguin Randy writes that “experience is what you get when you didn’t get what you wanted.” How do you think his First Penguin Award was able to inspire his students?
Chapter 41: The Lost Art of Thank-You Notes Do you agree with Randy that handwritten thank-you notes, even in our computer age, can offer a kind of magic? When was the last time you have seen a handwritten thank-you?
Chapter 47: A Bad Apology Is Worse Than No Apology Randy describes two “classic bad apologies.” Have you ever given someone such an apology? How did it turn out?
Chapter 55: All You Have to Do Is Ask What would you like to ask for that you haven’t been able to find the courage to articulate? What do you think will happen if you “just ask”?
Chapter 56: Make a Decision: Tigger or Eeyore OK, so which one are you? And why? If you’d like to be more of a Tigger, how might you go about that?
Chapter 59: Dreams for My Children Randy says parents don’t realize the power of their words: “Depending on a child’s age and sense of self, an offhand comment from Mom or Dad can feel like a shove from a bulldozer.” Have you ever felt that way? What are the vital messages to be drawn from the way Randy is saying goodbye to his kids, and from the tangible things he is leaving behind for them?
Chapter 61: The Dreams Will Come to You Randy realized that he didn’t give the lecture because he wanted to. He gave it because he “had to.” Are there things inside of you that “need to come out”? As you read the final chapter of the book, what were the emotions you were feeling? How would you describe the legacy of Randy Pausch?
(Source of These Discussion Questions: http://www.thelastlecture.com/pdf/LastLecture_EdGuide.pdf)
30 Article: “A Beloved Professor Delivers the Lecture of a Lifetime” by Jeffrey Zaslow, originally published in The Wall Street Journal on September 22, 2007.
Note: This was the original article that inspired people to seek out the lecture online and made Randy Pausch a worldwide phenomenon and inspiration. Randy Pausch, a Carnegie Mellon University computer-science professor, was about to give a lecture Tuesday afternoon, but before he said a word, he received a standing ovation from 400 students and colleagues. He motioned to them to sit down. "Make me earn it," he said. They had come to see him give what was billed as his "last lecture." This is a common title for talks on college campuses today. Schools such as Stanford and the University of Alabama have mounted "Last Lecture Series," in which top professors are asked to think deeply about what matters to them and to give hypothetical final talks. For the audience, the question to be mulled is this: What wisdom would we impart to the world if we knew it was our last chance? It can be an intriguing hour, watching healthy professors consider their demise and ruminate over subjects dear to them. At the University of Northern Iowa, instructor Penny O'Connor recently titled her lecture "Get Over Yourself." At Cornell, Ellis Hanson, who teaches a course titled "Desire," spoke about sex and technology. At Carnegie Mellon, however, Dr. Pausch's speech was more than just an academic exercise. The 46- year-old father of three has pancreatic cancer and expects to live for just a few months. His lecture, using images on a giant screen, turned out to be a rollicking and riveting journey through the lessons of his life. He began by showing his CT scans, revealing 10 tumors on his liver. But after that, he talked about living. If anyone expected him to be morose, he said, "I'm sorry to disappoint you." He then dropped to the floor and did one-handed pushups. Clicking through photos of himself as a boy, he talked about his childhood dreams: to win giant stuffed animals at carnivals, to walk in zero gravity, to design Disney rides, to write a World Book entry. By adulthood, he had achieved each goal. As proof, he had students carry out all the huge stuffed animals he'd won in his life, which he gave to audience members. After all, he doesn't need them anymore. He paid tribute to his techie background. "I've experienced a deathbed conversion," he said, smiling. "I just bought a Macintosh." Flashing his rejection letters on the screen, he talked about setbacks in his career, repeating: "Brick walls are there for a reason. They let us prove how badly we want things." He encouraged us to be patient with others. "Wait long enough, and people will surprise and impress you." After showing photos of his childhood bedroom, decorated with mathematical notations he'd drawn on the walls, he said: "If your kids want to paint their bedrooms, as a favor to me, let 'em do it." While displaying photos of his bosses and students over the years, he said that helping others fulfill their dreams is even more fun than achieving your own. He talked of requiring his students to create videogames without sex and violence. "You'd be surprised how many 19-year-old boys run out of ideas when you take those possibilities away," he said, but they all rose to the challenge. He also saluted his parents, who let him make his childhood bedroom his domain, even if his wall etchings hurt the home's resale value. He knew his mom was proud of him when he got his Ph.D, he said, despite how she'd introduce him: "This is my son. He's a doctor, but not the kind who helps people." He then spoke about his legacy. Considered one of the nation's foremost teachers of videogame and virtual-reality technology, he helped develop "Alice," a Carnegie Mellon software project that allows people to easily create 3-D animations. It had one million downloads in the past year, and usage is expected to soar.
31 "Like Moses, I get to see the Promised Land, but I don't get to step foot in it," Dr. Pausch said. "That's OK. I will live on in Alice." Many people have given last speeches without realizing it. The day before he was killed, Martin Luther King Jr. spoke prophetically: "Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has its place." He talked of how he had seen the Promised Land, even though "I may not get there with you." Dr. Pausch's lecture, in the same way, became a call to his colleagues and students to go on without him and do great things. But he was also addressing those closer to his heart. Near the end of his talk, he had a cake brought out for his wife, whose birthday was the day before. As she cried and they embraced on stage, the audience sang "Happy Birthday," many wiping away their own tears. Dr. Pausch's speech was taped so his children, ages 5, 2 and 1, can watch it when they're older. His last words in his last lecture were simple: "This was for my kids." Then those of us in the audience rose for one last standing ovation.
Article: “The Professor’s Manifesto: What It Meant to Readers” by Jeffrey Zaslow, published in The Wall Street Journal on September 27, 2007. Note: This article was published only a few days after Zaslow’s original article as Pausch’s worldwide recognition began to change his life. As a boy, Randy Pausch painted an elevator door, a submarine and mathematical formulas on his bedroom walls. His parents let him do it, encouraging his creativity. Last week, Dr. Pausch, a computer-science professor at Carnegie Mellon University, told this story in a lecture to 400 students and colleagues. "If your kids want to paint their bedrooms, as a favor to me, let 'em do it," he said. "Don't worry about resale values." As I wrote last week, his talk was a riveting and rollicking journey through the lessons of his life. It was also his last lecture, since he has pancreatic cancer and expects to live for just a few months. After he spoke, his only plans were to quietly spend whatever time he has left with his wife and three young children. He never imagined the whirlwind that would envelop him. As video clips of his speech spread across the Internet, thousands of people contacted him to say he had made a profound impact on their lives. Many were moved to tears by his words -- and moved to action. Parents everywhere vowed to let their kids do what they'd like on their bedroom walls. "I am going to go right home and let my daughter paint her wall the bright pink she has been desiring instead of the "resalable" vanilla I wanted," Carol Castle of Spring Creek, Nev., wrote to me to forward to Dr. Pausch People wanted Dr. Pausch to know that his talk had inspired them to quit pitying themselves, or to move on from divorces, or to pay more attention to their families. One woman wrote that his words had given her the strength to leave an abusive relationship. And terminally ill people wrote that they would try to live their lives as the 46-year-old Dr. Pausch is living his. "I'm dying and I'm having fun," he said in the lecture. "And I'm going to keep having fun every day, because there's no other way to play it." For Don Frankenfeld of Rapid City, S.D., watching the full lecture was "the best hour I have spent in years." Many echoed that sentiment. ABC News, which featured Dr. Pausch on "Good Morning America," named him its "Person of the Week." Other media descended on him. And hundreds of bloggers world-wide wrote essays celebrating
32 him as their new hero. Their headlines were effusive: "Best Lecture Ever," "The Most Important Thing I've Ever Seen," "Randy Pausch, Worth Every Second." In his lecture, Dr. Pausch had said, "Brick walls are there for a reason. They let us prove how badly we want things." Scores of Web sites now feature those words. Some include photos of brick walls for emphasis. Meanwhile, rabbis and ministers shared his brick-wall metaphor in sermons this past weekend. Some compared the lecture to Lou Gehrig's "Luckiest Man Alive" speech. Celina Levin, 15, of Marlton, N.J., told Dr. Pausch that her AP English class had been analyzing the Gehrig speech, and "I have a feeling that we'll be analyzing your speech for years to come." Already, the Naperville, Ill., Central High School speech team plans to have a student deliver the Pausch speech word for word in competition. As Dr. Pausch's fans emailed links of his speech to friends, some were sheepish about it. "I am a deeply cynical person who reminds people frequently not to send me those sappy feel-good emails," wrote Mark Pfeifer, a technology project manager at a New York investment bank. "Randy Pausch's lecture moved me deeply, and I intend to forward it on." In Miami, retiree Ronald Trazenfeld emailed the lecture to friends with a note to "stop complaining about bad service and shoddy merchandise." He suggested they instead hug someone they love. Near the end of his lecture, Dr. Pausch had talked about earning his Ph.D., and how his mother would kiddingly introduce him: "This is my son. He's a doctor, but not the kind who helps people." It was a laugh line, but it led dozens of people to reassure Dr. Pausch: "You ARE the kind of doctor who helps people," wrote Cheryl Davis of Oakland, Calif. Dr. Pausch feels overwhelmed and moved that what started in a lecture hall with 400 people has now been experienced by millions. Still, he has retained his sense of humor. "There's a limit to how many times you can read how great you are and what an inspiration you are," he says, "but I'm not there yet." Carnegie Mellon has a plan to honor Dr. Pausch. As a techie with the heart of a performer, he was always a link between the arts and sciences on campus. A new computer-science building is being built, and a footbridge will connect it to the nearby arts building. The bridge will be named the Randy Pausch Memorial Footbridge. "Based on your talk, we're thinking of putting a brick wall on either end," joked the university's president, Jared Cohon, announcing the honor. He went on to say: "Randy, there will be generations of students and faculty who will not know you, but they will cross that bridge and see your name and they'll ask those of us who did know you. And we will tell them." Dr. Pausch has asked Carnegie Mellon not to copyright his last lecture, and instead to leave it in the public domain. It will remain his legacy, and his footbridge, to the world. Article: “A Final Farewell” by Jeffrey Zaslow, published in The Wall Street Journal on May 3, 2008 Note: In this article Jeffrey Zaslow reflects on what was like knowing and writing The Last Lecture with Randy Pausch. Saying goodbye. It's a part of the human experience that we encounter every day, sometimes nonchalantly, sometimes with great emotion. Then, eventually, the time comes for the final goodbye. When death is near, how do we phrase our words? How do we show our love? Randy Pausch, a professor at Pittsburgh's Carnegie Mellon University, has become famous for the way in which he chose to say goodbye to his students and colleagues. His final lecture to them, delivered last September, turned into a phenomenon, viewed by millions on the Internet. Dying of pancreatic cancer, he showed a love of life and an approach to death that people have found inspiring. For many of us, his lecture has become a reminder that our own futures are similarly -- if not as drastically -- brief. His fate is ours, sped up.
33 Since the lecture, I've been privileged to spend a great deal of time with Randy, while co-writing his new book, "The Last Lecture." I've seen how, in some ways, he is peacefully reconciled to his fate, and in other ways, understandably, he is struggling. The lecture was directed at his "work family," a call to them to go on without him and do great things. But since the talk, Randy has been most focused on his actual family -- his wife, Jai, and their three children, ages 6, 3, and 1. For months after receiving his terminal diagnosis last August, Randy and Jai (pronounced "Jay") didn't tell the kids he was dying. They were advised to wait until Randy was more symptomatic. "I still look pretty healthy," he told me in December, "and so my kids remain unaware that in my every encounter with them I'm saying goodbye. There's this sense of urgency that I try not to let them pick up on." Through both his lecture and his life, Randy offers a realistic road map to the final farewell. His approach -- pragmatic, heartfelt, sometimes quirky, often joyous -- can't help but leave you wondering: "How will I say goodbye?" Maybe 150. That's how many people Randy expected would attend his last lecture. He bet a friend $50 that he'd never fill the 400-seat auditorium. After all, it was a warm September day. He assumed people would have better things to do than listen to a dying computer-science professor in his 40s give his final lesson. Randy lost his bet. The room was packed. He was thrilled by the turnout, and determined to deliver a talk that offered all he had in him. He arrived onstage to a standing ovation, but motioned to the audience to sit down. "Make me earn it," he said. He hardly mentioned his cancer. Instead, he took everyone on a rollicking journey through the lessons of his life. He talked about the importance of childhood dreams, and the fortitude needed to overcome setbacks. ("Brick walls are there for a reason. They let us prove how badly we want things.") He encouraged his audience to be patient with others. ("Wait long enough, and people will surprise and impress you.") And, to show the crowd that he wasn't ready to climb into his deathbed, he dropped to the floor and did push-ups. His colleagues and students sat there, buoyed by his words and startled by how the rush of one man's passion could leave them feeling so introspective and emotionally spent -- all at once saddened and exhilarated. In 70 minutes onstage, he gave his audience reasons to reconsider their own ambitions, and to find new ways to look at other people's flaws and talents. He celebrated mentors and protégés with an open heart. And through a few simple gestures -- including a birthday cake for his wife -- he showed everyone the depth of his love for his family. In his smiling delivery, he was so full of life that it was almost impossible to reconcile the fact that he was near death -- that this performance was his goodbye. I'm a columnist for The Wall Street Journal, and a week before Randy gave the lecture, I got a heads-up about it from the Journal's Pittsburgh bureau chief. Because my column focuses on life transitions, she thought Randy might be fodder for a story. I was aware that professors are often asked to give "last lectures" as an academic exercise, imagining what wisdom they would impart if it was their final chance. In Randy's case, of course, his talk would not be hypothetical. I first spoke to him by phone the day before his talk, and he was so engaging that I was curious to see what he'd be like onstage. I was slightly ill at ease in our conversation; it's hard to know what to say to a dying man. But Randy found ways to lighten things up. He was driving his car, talking to me on his cellphone. I didn't want him to get in an accident, so I suggested we reconnect when he got to a land line. He laughed. "Hey, if I die in a car crash, what difference would it make?"
34 I almost didn't go to Pittsburgh to see him. The plane fare from my home in Detroit was a hefty $850, and my editors said that if I wanted, I could just do a phone interview with him after the talk, asking him how it went. In the end, I sensed that I shouldn't miss seeing his lecture in person, and so I drove the 300 miles to Pittsburgh. Like others in the room that day, I knew I was seeing something extraordinary. I hoped I could put together a compelling story, but I had no expectations beyond that. Neither did Randy. When the lecture ended, his only plan was to quietly spend whatever time he had left with Jai and the kids. He never imagined the whirlwind that would envelop him. The lecture had been videotaped -- WSJ.com posted highlights -- and footage began spreading across thousands of Web sites. (The full talk can now be seen at thelastlecture.com.) Randy was soon receiving emails from all over the world. People wrote about how his lecture had inspired them to spend more time with loved ones, to quit pitying themselves, or even to shake off suicidal urges. Terminally ill people said the lecture had persuaded them to embrace their own goodbyes, and as Randy said, "to keep having fun every day I have left, because there's no other way to play it." In the weeks after the talk, people translated the lecture into other languages, and posted their versions online. A university in India held a screening of the video. Hundreds of students attended and told their friends how powerful it was; hundreds more demanded a second screening a week later. In the U.S., Randy reprised part of his talk on "The Oprah Winfrey Show." ABC News would later name him one of its three "Persons of the Year." Thousands of bloggers wrote essays celebrating him. Randy was overwhelmed and moved by the response. Still, he retained his sense of humor. "There's a limit to how many times you can read how great you are and what an inspiration you are," he said. "But I'm not there yet." Years ago, Jai had suggested that Randy compile his advice into a book for her and the kids. She wanted to call it “The Manual.” Now, in the wake of the lecture, otheres were also telling Randy that he had a book in him. He resisted at first. Yes, there were things he felt an urge to express. But given his prognosis, he wanted to spend his limited time with his family. Then he caught a break. Palliative chemotherapy stalled the growth of his tumors. “This will be the first book to ever list the drug Gemcitabine on the acknowlegments page,” he joked. But he still didn’t want the book to get in the way of his last months with his kids. So he came up with a plan. Because exercise was crucial to his health, he would ride his bicycle around his neighborhood for an hour each day. This was time he couldn’t be with his kids, anyway. He and I agreed that he would wear a cellphone headset on these rides, and we’d talk about everything on his mind—the lecture, his life, his dreams for his family. Every day, as soon as his bike ride came to an end, so did our conversation. “Gotta go!” he’d say, and I knew he felt an aching urge (and responsibility) to return to his family life. But the next day, he’d be back on the bike, enthusiastic about the conversation. He confided in me that since his diagnosis, he had found himself feeling saddest when he was alone, driving his car or riding his bike. So I sensed that he enjoyed my company in his ears as he pedaled. Randy had a way of framing human experiences in his own distinctive way, mixing humor here, unexpected inspiration there, and wrapping it all in an uncommon optimism. In the three months after the lecture, he went on 53 long bike rides, and the stories he told became not just his book, but also part of his process of saying goodbye.
35 Right now, Randy's children -- Dylan, Logan and Chloe -- are too young to understand all the things he yearns to share with them. "I want the kids to know what I've always believed in," he told me, "and all the ways in which I've come to love them." Those who die at older ages, after their children have grown to adulthood, can find comfort in the fact that they've been a presence in their offspring's lives. "When I cry in the shower," Randy said, "I'm not usually thinking, 'I won't get to see the kids do this' or 'I won't get to see them do that.' I'm thinking about the kids not having a father. I'm focused more on what they're going to lose than on what I'm going to lose. Yes, a percentage of my sadness is, 'I won't, I won't, I won't.' But a bigger part of me grieves for them. I keep thinking, 'They won't, they won't, they won't.' " Early on, he had vowed to do the logistical things necessary to ease his family's path into a life without him. His minister helped him think beyond estate planning and funeral arrangements. "You have life insurance, right?" the minister asked. "Yes, it's all in place," Randy told him. "Well, you also need emotional insurance," the minister explained. The premiums for that insurance would be paid for with Randy's time, not his money. The minister suggested that Randy spend hours making videotapes of himself with the kids. Years from now, they will be able to see how easily they touched each other and laughed together. Knowing his kids' memories of him could be fuzzy, Randy has been doing things with them that he hopes they'll find unforgettable. For instance, he and Dylan, 6, went on a minivacation to swim with dolphins. "A kid swims with dolphins, he doesn't easily forget it," Randy said. "We took lots of photos." Randy took Logan, 3, to Disney World to meet his hero, Mickey Mouse. "I'd met him, so I could make the introduction." Randy also made a point of talking to people who lost parents when they were very young. They told him they found it consoling to learn about how much their mothers and fathers loved them. The more they knew, the more they could still feel that love. To that end, Randy built separate lists of his memories of each child. He also has written down his advice for them, things like: "If I could only give three words of advice, they would be, 'Tell the truth.' If I got three more words, I'd add, 'All the time.' " The advice he's leaving for Chloe includes this: "When men are romantically interested in you, it's really simple. Just ignore everything they say and only pay attention to what they do." Chloe, not yet 2 years old, may end up having no memory of her father. "But I want her to grow up knowing," Randy said, "that I was the first man ever to fall in love with her." Saying goodbye to a spouse requires more than just loving words. There are details that must be addressed. Shortly after his terminal diagnosis, Randy and his family moved from Pittsburgh to southeastern Virginia, so that after he dies, Jai and the kids will be closer to her family for support. At first, Jai didn't even want Randy returning to Pittsburgh to give his last lecture; she thought he should be home, unpacking boxes or interacting with the kids. "Call me selfish," Jai told him, "but I want all of you. Any time you'll spend working on this lecture is lost time, because it's time away from the kids and from me." Jai finally relented when Randy explained how much he yearned to give one last talk. "An injured lion still wants to roar," he told her. In the months after the talk, while chemo was still keeping his tumors from growing, Randy wouldn't use the word "lucky" to describe his situation. Still, he said, "a part of me does feel fortunate that I didn't get hit by the proverbial bus." Cancer had given him the time to have vital conversations with Jai that wouldn't be possible if his fate were a heart attack or car accident. What did they talk about?
36 For starters, they both tried to remember that flight attendants offer terrific caregiving advice: "Put on your own oxygen mask before assisting others." "Jai is such a giver that she often forgets to take care of herself," Randy said. "When we become physically or emotionally run down, we can't help anybody else, least of all small children." Randy has reminded Jai that, once he's gone, she should give herself permission to make herself a priority. Randy and Jai also talked about the fact that she will make mistakes in the years ahead, and she shouldn't attribute them all to the fact that she'll be raising the kids herself. "Mistakes are part of the process of parenting," Randy told her. "If I were able to live, we'd be making those mistakes together." In some ways, the couple found it helpful to try to live together as if their marriage had decades to go. "We discuss, we get frustrated, we get mad, we make up," Randy said. At the same time, given Randy's prognosis, Jai has been trying to let little stuff slide. Randy can be messy, with clothes everywhere. "Obviously, I ought to be neater," Randy said. "I owe Jai many apologies. But do we really want to spend our last months together arguing that I haven't hung up my khakis? We do not. So now Jai kicks my clothes in a corner and moves on." A friend suggested to Jai that she keep a daily journal. She writes in there things that get on her nerves about Randy. He can be cocky, dismissive, a know-it-all. "Randy didn't put his plate in the dishwasher tonight," she wrote one night. "He just left it there on the table and went to his computer." She knew he was preoccupied, heading to the Internet to research medical treatments. Still, the dish bothered her. She wrote about it, felt better, and they didn't need to argue over it. There are days when Jai tells Randy things, and there's little he can say in response. She has said to him: "I can't imagine rolling over in bed and you're not there." And: "I can't picture myself taking the kids on vacation and you not being with us." Randy and Jai have gone to a therapist who specializes in counseling couples in which one spouse is terminally ill. That's been helpful. But they've still struggled. They've cried together in bed at 3 a.m., fallen back asleep, woken up at 4 a.m. and cried some more. "We've gotten through in part by focusing on the tasks at hand," Randy said. "We can't fall to pieces. We've got to get some sleep because one of us has to get up in the morning and give the kids breakfast. That person, for the record, is almost always Jai." For Randy, part of saying goodbye is trying to remain optimistic. After his diagnosis, Randy's doctor gave him advice: "It's important to behave as if you're going to be around awhile." Randy was already way ahead of him: "Doc, I just bought a new convertible and got a vasectomy. What more do you want from me?" In December, Randy went on a short scuba-diving vacation with three close friends. The men were all aware of the subtext; they were banding together to give Randy a farewell weekend. Still, they successfully avoided any emotional "I love you, man" dialogue related to Randy's cancer. Instead, they reminisced, horsed around and made fun of each other. (Actually, it was mostly the other guys making fun of Randy for the "St. Randy of Pittsburgh" reputation he had gotten since his lecture.) Nothing was off-limits. When Randy put on sunscreen, his friend Steve Seabolt said, "Afraid of skin cancer, Randy? That's like putting good money after bad." Randy loved that weekend. As he later explained it: "I am maintaining my clear-eyed sense of the inevitable. I'm living like I'm dying. But at the same time, I'm very much living like I'm still living." Since Randy's lecture began spreading on the Internet, he has heard from thousands of strangers, many offering advice on how they dealt with final goodbyes. A woman who lost her husband to pancreatic cancer said his last speech was to a small audience: her, his children, parents and siblings. He thanked them for their guidance and love, and reminisced about places they had gone together. Another woman, whose husband died of a brain tumor, suggested that Randy talk to Jai about how she'll need to reassure their kids, as they get older, that they will have a normal life.
37 "There will be graduations, marriages, children of their own. When a parent dies at such an early age, some children think that other normal life-cycle events may not happen for them, either." Randy was moved by comments such as the one he received from a man with serious heart problems. The man wrote to tell Randy about Krishnamurti, a spiritual leader in India who died in 1986. Krishnamurti was once asked what was the most appropriate way to say goodbye to a man who was about to die. He answered: "Tell your friend that in his death, a part of you dies and goes with him. Wherever he goes, you also go. He will not be alone." In his email to Randy, this man was reassuring: "I know you are not alone." The chemotherapy keeping Randy alive took a toll on his body. By March, he was fighting off kidney and heart failure, along with debilitating fatigue. Still, he kept a commitment to go to Washington, D.C., to speak before Congress on behalf of the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network. He spoke forcefully about research needed to fight pancreatic cancer, the deadliest of all the cancers, and then held up a large photo of Jai and the kids. When he pointed to Jai, he told the congressmen: "This is my widow. That's not a grammatical construction you get to use every day.... Pancreatic cancer can be beat, but it will take more courage and funding." Randy has now stopped chemotherapy, and as he regains his strength, he hopes to begin liver-specific treatments. He is engaged in the process, but expects no miracles. He knows his road is short. Meanwhile, I feel forever changed by my time with Randy; I saw his love of life from a front-row seat. He and I traded countless emails, and I've filed them all safely in my computer. His daily emails -- smart, funny, wise -- have brightened my inbox. I dread the day I will no longer hear from him. Randy rarely got emotional in all his hours with me. He was brave, talking about death like a scientist. In fact, until we got to discussing what should be in the book's last chapter, he never choked up. The last chapter, we decided, would be about the last moments of his lecture -- how he felt, what he said. He thought hard about that, and then described for me how his emotions swelled as he took a breath and prepared to deliver his closing lines. It was tough, he said, "because the end of the talk had to be a distillation of how I felt about the end of my life." In the same way, discussing the end of the book was emotional for him. I could hear his voice cracking as we spoke. Left unsaid was the fact that this part of our journey together was ending. He no longer needed to ride his bike, wearing that headset, while I sat at my computer, tapping away, his voice in my ears. Within weeks, he had no energy to exercise. Randy is thrilled that so many people are finding his lecture beneficial, and he hopes the book also will be a meaningful legacy for him. Still, all along, he kept reminding me that he was reaching into his heart, offering his life lessons, mostly to address an audience of three. "I'm attempting to put myself in a bottle that will one day wash up on the beach for my children," he said. And so despite all his goodbyes, he has found solace in the idea that he'll remain a presence. "Kids, more than anything else, need to know their parents love them," he said. "Their parents don't have to be alive for that to happen." Chapter cut from the book:
Question: Why do you think this chapter was cut?
THE LOST CHAPTER The Bridge When I was first diagnosed with cancer, I went to see Carnegie Mellon’s president, Jared Cohon, to let him know. He met me in his reception area, and just making small-talk, told me I looked thin and trim.
38 “I see you’re down to your fighting weight,” he said. “Well, that’s what I’ve come to talk to about,” I told him as he closed his door. “I’m thin because I have cancer.” He immediately vowed to do whatever he could for me, to call anyone he knew in medicine who might help. And then he took out his business card and wrote his cell-phone number on the back of it. “This is for Jai,” he said. “You tell her to call me, day or night, if there’s anything this university can do to help, or anything I can do as an individual.” President Cohon, and others at the university, did indeed make great efforts on my behalf. My surgeon later said to me: “Every time the phone rings, it’s another person politely insinuating that you’re not the guy to lose on the table.” But Carnegie Mellon also had given me a break by reconsidering my graduate-school application. Then, years later, the school hired me. Then it allowed me to set up academic programs that few other universities would even consider. Now, once again, I felt this school rallying behind me. Let me just say it: To the extent that a human being can love an institution, I love Carnegie Mellon. On the day of my last lecture, I was told that President Cohon was out of town and couldn’t attend. I was disappointed. But actually, his plan was to fly back to Pittsburgh the afternoon of the talk. He arrived halfway through the lecture, and I saw him enter the room out of the corner of my eye. I paused for a second. He stood against the side wall, watching me speak. I didn’t know it, but he was set to follow me on stage. He also had a surprise. Less than a block from the lecture hall, a new computer-science building was under construction. A 220- foot-long footbridge, three stories high, is being built to connect the computer center to the nearby arts and drama building. President Cohon had come to announce that a decision had been made to name the bridge “The Randy Pausch Memorial Footbridge.” “Based on your talk,” he ad-libbed, “we’re thinking of putting a brick wall at either end. Let’s see what our students can do with that.” His announcement was an overwhelming moment in my life. The idea of this bridge took my breath away. Turned out, President Cohon wasn’t kidding about the brick walls, either. Carnegie Mellon gave its architects and bridge designers the green light to be completely creative. They first considered having some kind of hologram of a brick wall on the bridge, allowing students to walk right through it. Now they’re planning to design the bridge in a way that gives pedestrians a sense that a brick wall is ahead of them at the end. I’ve never been a big fan of memorials or buildings being named in people’s memories. Walt Disney had said he didn’t like the idea of statues of dead guys in the park. And yet, I’m a big believer in symbols as a way to communicate. The symbolism of this bridge is just amazing to me because I've spent my career trying to be a bridge. My goal was always to connect people from different disciplines, while helping them find their way over brick walls. I am moved and pleased when I picture all the people who will one day cross that bridge: Jai, our kids, my former students and colleagues, and a lot of young people with somewhere to go.
Pausch Footbridge Design To Commemorate "First Penguin Award"
39 Note: This article describes the footbridge mentioned in the lost chapter. It is currently being built.
At the Randy Pausch Memorial Service this past Monday, President Jared Cohon announced that the aluminum panel sidewalls to the Pausch Memorial Footbridge connecting the Purnell Center for the Arts to the new Gates Center for Computer Science will have an abstract design of cutout penguins. The design commemorates the "The First Penguin Award" that Pausch established for his Building Virtual Worlds class, which was given to the team of students who took the greatest risk but failed to achieve their goal. "The title of the award came from the notion that when penguins are about to jump into water that might contain predators, well, somebody's got to be the first penguin," Pausch said in his book "The Last Lecture." The design was created by Mack Scogin, architect for the new School of Computer Science Complex.
In addition to the abstract design, Cohon said that the sidewalls would have programmable LED lights running continuously across the top and bottom. The LED lights are from Philips Color Kinetics, founded by Carnegie Mellon alumni George Mueller and Ihor Lys, who was recently named National Inventor of the Year by the Intellectual Property Owners Education Foundation. C & C Lighting Design, owned by Drama Professor Cindy Limauro and her husband, Christopher Popowich, are creating the lighting design. "We will be programming the lights to change colors in a variety of visual looks that can also be triggered by motion sensors. In addition to our lighting, students will be able to log on to the system at designated times to create their own lighting looks," Limauro said.
Near the Gates Center, the bridge also will have a brick wall covered with more aluminum penguin cutout panels and LED lights. The barrier serves as a reminder of Pausch's adage that brick walls exist to make you realize how badly you want something. "It is only when you get to the end of the bridge that you realize it isn't a dead end brick wall. There is a door to the right that goes into the building," Limauro said. (Source: http://www.cmu.edu/news/weekly/2008/September/september-25.shtml)
Information from Carnegie Mellon University: We at Carnegie Mellon have been blessed to know and work with Randy Pausch and to see the profound influence he has had on our students, on entertainment technologies and on the teaching of computer science. We--all of us--are fortunate that Randy has been able to record his insights into how a good life is lived. Randy’s gifts of inspiration are no longer restricted to our lecture halls and labs; they are now here for all to read and experience. — Jared L. Cohon, President, Carnegie Mellon University Carnegie Mellon is a private research university with more than 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students participating in a distinctive mix of programs in engineering, computer science, robotics, business, public policy, fine arts and the humanities. A global university, Carnegie Mellon has campuses in Pittsburgh, PA, Silicon Valley, CA, and Doha, Qatar. Carnegie Mellon also has degree-granting programs in Asia, Australia and Europe.
40 Watch videos and get more information about The Last Lecture DVD, Randy's other lectures, and media coverage for the book at Randy Pausch's Carnegie Mellon website. The Entertainment Technology Center at Carnegie Mellon University is the premiere professional graduate program for interactive entertainment as it is applied across a variety of fields. Co-founded by Don Marinelli and Randy Pausch, the ETC emphasizes leadership, innovation and communication by creating challenging experiences through which students learn how to collaborate, experiment, and iterate solutions. Graduates are prepared for any environment where technologists and artists work closely on a team; like theme parks, children and science museums, web sites, mobile computing, video games and more. (Source: www.thelastlecture.com) www.alice.org Note: Alice is the program that Randy Pausch initiated at Carnegie Mellon. It is available to download for free at www.alice.org. It looks pretty awesome, so if you are interested in creating animation and video games, check it out. Alice is an innovative 3D programming environment that makes it easy to create an animation for telling a story, playing an interactive game, or a video to share on the web. Alice is a freely available teaching tool designed to be a student's first exposure to object-oriented programming. It allows students to learn fundamental programming concepts in the context of creating animated movies and simple video games. In Alice, 3-D objects (e.g., people, animals, and vehicles) populate a virtual world and students create a program to animate the objects. In Alice's interactive interface, students drag and drop graphic tiles to create a program, where the instructions correspond to standard statements in a production oriented programming language, such as Java, C++, and C#. Alice allows students to immediately see how their animation programs run, enabling them to easily understand the relationship between the programming statements and the behavior of objects in their animation. By manipulating the objects in their virtual world, students gain experience with all the programming constructs typically taught in an introductory programming course. (Source: www.alice.org)
Article: “Shrines to Childhood” by Kate Stone Lombardi, published in The New York Times on April 5, 2009
Note: This article talks about what happens to childhood bedrooms after the child moves out. It is worth noting since many of you will be going away to college next year, and Randy Pausch had such an attachment to his childhood room. MY son’s room has been described more than once as a shrine. The object of his homage? The New York Rangers. We are not just talking about a few posters on the wall. Nearly every square inch trumpets Paul’s support of the team. A huge Rangers banner that hangs from the ceiling dominates the room. In the corner is a larger-than-life cardboard cutout of Wayne Gretzky, hockey stick outstretched, waiting for a pass. The bed has not only a Rangers cover and a Rangers pillow, but also sheets with hockey pucks on them. There are signed hockey sticks over the windows, which themselves are decorated with Rangers decals. The computer mouse pad has the team logo. There are framed, signed Rangers jerseys above the computer.
41 It goes without saying that the walls are covered with posters, photographs and calendars that celebrate the team. (Ticket stubs from games are kept in a separate box, memories too precious to stick on the wall.) I think you get the picture. My son is the kind of fan whose spirits rise and fall with the performance of the team, who follows every blip of Rangers news, remains highly opinionated about the strengths and weaknesses of each player, and who sounds to me at this point as if he’s ready to step up to the coach’s job, in the event that the latest one doesn’t work out. This room didn’t come together overnight, of course. The memorabilia was collected from the time he was an early fan — back in his elementary school days — until now. Today he is a college sophomore. He still lives and breathes hockey. But he doesn’t really live in that room anymore. I am careful about going in there while he’s at school, because it makes me miss him too much. Just standing in the doorway sets me back. That’s because to me this room is more than a monument to a hockey team. It’s really a shrine to the little boy who grew up there. Paul was placed in a crib as a newborn in that room. He spent endless hours of his childhood in there, playing with his Matchbox cars, painstakingly organizing his hockey cards, reading and, as he got older, studying, cramming for SATs, logging hours on Facebook with his friends and, finally, packing for college. When I look past all the Rangers stuff, I can still see remnants of other parts of Paul’s childhood. High up on a shelf is the stuffed penguin he once slept with. There are a few little cars on the shelf — and of course, a few mini-Zambonis. There are class pictures from elementary school, team pictures from high school, soccer trophies and a program from a jazz concert he played in. Recently, I spotted a brochure about a college study-abroad program — he hopes to spend a semester in Spain next year. There was also a pile of clothes he had outgrown. As it is, he can barely fit his long frame in that childhood bed. This, I know, is a room in transition. His sister’s room is just down the hall, and farther along in the process of transforming from a child’s room to the room of someone who once lived there. Jeanie graduated from college two years ago. Her room, too, mirrors the girl she once was. The canopied bed still has a Laura Ashley spread, and there are matching curtains on the windows. But there is also a Zebra-patterned throw that appealed to her in middle school. At one point she balked at her pink walls and carpets — now the carpet is a moss green and the walls a sky blue. It feels as if you are outside and it also feels very much like a reflection of Jeanie’s spirit. Photos of laughing groups of friends are tacked on the wall, spread on the bureau and tucked into the corners of her mirror. There are half-melted candles and countless hair accessories. The shelves and the desk are crammed with dozens of books, ranging from childhood favorites to Michel Foucault’s “Ethics: Subjectivity and Truth,” with plenty of trashy novels and great literature in between. But things are also starting to disappear from that room. A lamp went to her apartment in the city. So did some sheets and blankets. And a small painting that used to hang on her wall. And some framed photos. It’s still my daughter’s room, but as she settles more deeply into her independent life, her essence gets more and more stripped out of those four walls. I would be lying to say that I miss the disorder — the scattered papers, the piles of clothes, the dirty tea mugs — that were also very much a part of Jeanie’s occupancy. But I do miss the girl who lived there. On a recent college vacation, Paul brought a friend home, and as they entered his room, it seemed like the Rangers shrine had for the first time become slightly embarrassing. “It’s sort of a little boy’s room,” he said with a small smile. Paul will probably always root for the team and follow its fortunes. In the years to come, he will see great players rise and fall, playoffs come and go, and coaches hired and fired. And if all the stars align, he will 42 see the Rangers bring home another Stanley Cup, something that will bring him enormous joy no matter what age he’ll be. But the little-boy adoration that was reflected in his room has already been replaced with a more nuanced understanding of professional sports. I suspect, over time, his monument to the hockey team will slowly be dismantled. A poster here. A signed photograph there. I doubt that the Rangers bedspread will make the move to an adult apartment, though you never know. If it doesn’t, I doubt I will ever remove it.
The Last Lecture Homework Assignment: "If you lead your life the right way, the karma will take care of itself. The dreams will come to you."- Randy Pausch Make a list of your childhood and/or current dreams (probably you will have at least five, but I am not requiring that you have a certain number of dreams—this is about your dreams, after all). They must fit onto a standard piece of printer paper, and you must also include a photograph of yourself as a child. You may also choose to creatively decorate this to fit your personality. Be forewarned that this project will be hung up in the classroom. It should be formatted as thus:
This project will be worth 20 points. The Last Lecture Cooperative Group Activity One of the many wonderful points Randy Pausch made in his book was the need for his students to work together and contribute equally. With that in mind, I am going to assign you to a group of approximately four and give you a box of paper clips. Your goal will be to put together the biggest, best, most creative object you can with these paper clips. When the time expires, everyone reconvenes at a predefined location for the show-and-tell and judging process. This in-class activity will be worth 10 points.
43 Illustrative/Exemplification Essay on The Last Lecture
For your first essay, you are going to write your own 500-750 word essay giving advice on how to live your life, based on the life lessons you have learned so far. You need to break up your advice into five to seven short chapters and give each chapter a title (and you will need to give the overall essay a title). You will also need to include short anecdotes from your life to support your life lessons.
The following are your due dates for this essay:
Rough draft is due to www.turnitin.com by ______at 11:59 pm- worth 10 points
Peer editing is done in class on ______; it is due to www.turnitin.com by ______at 11:59 pm- worth 15 points
Final draft is due to www.turnitin.com by ______at 11:59 pm- worth 75 points
Brave New World Topics of Discussion Where does the title come from? It is a quote from William Shakespeare’s The Tempest, which states, “O brave new world/ That has such people in’t” (V, i). What is the translation of the Nicholas Berdiaeff quote after the title page? Utopias appear to be much easier to realize than one formerly believed. We currently face a question that would otherwise fill us with anguish: How to avoid their becoming definitely real?
44 Main Characters (in order of appearance): Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning (D.H.C.)/ Thomas-
Henry Foster-
Lenina Crowne-
Mustpha Mond-
Bernard Marx-
Fanny Crowne-
Benito Hoover-
Helmholtz Watson-
Linda- Who do you think is the actual main character of the book? Explain.
Setting: Twenty-sixth century London and a traditional pueblo Malpais (or “bad country”) on an Indian Reservation in New Mexico.
Conflicts:
External: between Mustapha Mond and Bernard and John; others?
Internal: within Bernard, within John; others?
Themes:
1. The price for technological progress is the loss of individuality and human freedom.
2. The triumph of reason over passion and science over art leads to distortions of human nature.
Additional Questions:
Note: These will be broken down and assigned to a group. You do not have to do all of these questions on your own, but you should be able to answer all of them by the time we take a test on the book.
45 Chapter 1 1. Why is the first sentence strange? What does it set up? 2. What is the meaning of the World State’s motto “COMMUNITY, IDENTITY, STABILITY?” 3. Why does the fertilizing room look so cold, when it is actually hot inside? What goes on there? 4. Why do particulars “make for virtue and happiness,” while generalities “are intellectually necessary evils?” 5. How do people know who they are in this society? 6. Why use the Bokanovsky process at all? How is it an instrument “of social stability?” 7. Why don’t the Epsilons “need human intelligence?” Chapter 2 1. What work does the conditioning do? Who gets conditioned? How does hypnopaedia work? 2. Why condition the Deltas to hate nature but love outdoor sports? 3. How does time work in this book? History? Why does Ford say “History is Bunk?” 4. What are the various castes like, and why? 5. How do the students demonstrate their own conditioning? Chapter 3 1. How do the children play together? What is childhood like? 2. How is our world depicted? How do we get from here to there? 3. Why must games be so complex in this society? 4. Why are strong emotions dangerous? Family relationships? Romance? Religion? Art? Culture? 5. How is sexuality used in this novel? Do you see any problems with it? 6. What does Mustapha Mond do? What is his relationship to history? 7. Is there anything unusual about Lenina Crowne? Bernard Marx? What? Why? 8. How does Huxley use the cinematic technique toward the end of this chapter? 9. What is soma? What are its uses? 10. How do people age in this society? Chapter 4 1. What is life like for the Epsilon-Minus Semi-Moron who runs the elevator? 2. How do the other Alphas relate to Bernard? 3. What does Lenina do on her date? 4. What does she think of the lower castes? 5. Why is Bernard the way he is? What does he really want? 6. Why is Helmholtz the way he is? What does he want? How is he different from Bernard? Chapter 5 1. What do Lenina and Henry talk about on their way home? What happens at the crematorium? 2. Why are stars depressing? 3. What are the solidarity services like? What role do they play? How does Bernard fit?
46 Chapter 6 1. Why is being alone a bad thing? 2. What do Lenina and Bernard do on their first date? Why is the ocean important? The moon? 3. What does Bernard say about freedom? What does he mean? 4. How does the date end? 5. What does it mean to be infantile in this society? 6. How does the director feel about Bernard? Why is he warning him? 7. What does his story mean? What does it show us about him? 8. How does Helmholtz feel about Bernard after he hears the story of the meeting with the director? 9. What do we learn from the Warden? What are the reservations like? 10. What does the word Malpais mean? Chapter 7 1. How is the mesa like a ship? 2. Why doesn’t Lenina like their Indian guide? 3. What is the city itself like? What are the people like? How does Lenina respond? Bernard? 4. What ceremony do they witness? What does it mean? What does it seem like to Lenina? 5. What idols emerge from the ground? 6. How is John Savage different? What does he want? How does he respond to Lenina? 7. What is Linda’s story? What has her life been like here? How does Linda react to her? Chapter 8 1. What was John’s upbringing like? His relationship with Linda? His education? 2. Why doesn’t Linda want to be called a mother? 3. What social positions do Linda and John hold in Malpais? 4. What does John want in his life? 5. What does Linda tell him about the Other Place? 6. What does he learn from Shakespeare? How does he relate to Hamlet? The Tempest? 7. What does it mean to discover “Time and Death and God?” 8. What do John and Bernard have in common? 9. Why does Bernard want to take John to London? Chapter 9 1. Why does Mustapha Mond agree to the plan? 2. What happens when John watches Lenina sleep? What does he think or feel? Chapter 10 1. How and why was the DHC planing to make an example out of Bernard? 2. Why is unorthodoxy worse than murder? 3. How does Linda act in the hatchery? How does the DHC react? The spectators? Chapter 11 1. Why does John become popular, but not Linda? 2. How does Bernard’s life change? How does he react? What does Helmholtz think?
47 3. How does Linda spend her time? 4. How does Bernard talk in public? 5. What does Mustapha Mond think of Bernard’s reports? 6. What does John think of the caste system? Of the clones? How does he use The Tempest now? 7. What do we learn about the reservations at Eton? What does John think? 8. How do the children respond to dying? Why? 9. How does Lenina feel about John? 10. What does John think about the feelies? Why? Chapter 12 1. Why does John decide not to come to Bernard’s party? What does this mean for Bernard? 2. How does Lenina feel at the party? Why does she feel this way? 3. How does John feel? Why is he reading Romeo and Juliet? 4. What does it mean that Lenina likes looking at the moon now? 5. What role does Mustapha Mond play as a censor? Why does he do it? What does he censor? What does he really want? 6. How does Bernard’s position change? How do John and Helmholtz respond to Bernard now? 7. Why is Helmholtz in trouble with the authorities? What has he done that is dangerous, and why is it dangerous? Why did he do it? What does he want? 8. What does Helmholtz think of Shakespeare? Romeo and Juliet? 9. What does Helmholtz think is necessary for good writing? Chapter 13 1. What are the consequences of Lenina’s emotion? What is happening? 2. How does she feel for John? What does she do to get what she wants? 3. How does John feel for Lenina? What does he want to do to prove it? 3. How does John react to Lenina’s actions? Why does he respond this way? What did he want from her? Chapter 14 1. What is the hospital for the dying like? What are the dying like? 2. Note the television. Recall TV did not exist as we know it in 1932. 3. Why is Linda dying? 4. What memories flood over John as he stands before his mother? Why these particular memories? What are his memories of the “other place”? What role does memory play in civilization? 5. Why are the Delta children at the hospital? What does John think of this? 6. Why isn’t death terrible for those in the civilized world? What does this mean for the individual? Chapter 15 1. The title phrase recurs here. How is it used differently than before? What does it mean now? 2. Why does John decide to interfere with the soma distribution? Why does he say it is poison? 3. What is John’s conception of slavery and freedom? Manhood? Liberty? 4. What does he think of the Deltas to whom he delivers his speech?
48 5. What roles do Bernard and Helmholtz play here? What does this tell us about their characters? 6. How does the soma riot end? What does it mean to be happy and good? Chapter 16 1. How would you describe Bernard’s behavior in this chapter? Why does he act this way? 2. Why doesn’t John like civilization? 3. Why does Mond say old and beautiful things are forbidden? 4. Why can’t tragedies be written now? What is necessary for tragedy? 5. What does art mean in the new world? What can’t it mean? What is Helmholtz’s role? 6. What does Mond say is the role of liberty? Happiness? Stability? Truth and Beauty? 7. How does Mond explain the caste system? Do you agree? 8. What would happen with an entire society of Alphas? 9. Why must science be constrained? Progress? Do you agree? 10. What choice did Mond make as a young physicist? Why? What is his real position? 11. Why does Helmholtz make the choice he makes? Chapter 17 1. Why does Mond want to talk with John alone? What do they talk about? 2. What is the significance of their discussion of religion? What does John argue religion can give to civilization? Why does Mond argue that it is unnecessary and potentially dangerous? 3. What does Mond believe is the role of God? How is it related to the self? 4. What role does solitude play in spirituality? 5. How does John argue that the civilized man has been degraded? From what and to what? 6. What are your conceptions of the roles of self-denial, chastity, nobility, heroism? What would John or Mond say? 7. What role does Mond say soma plays in this? What is an “opiate of the masses”? 8. What does it mean “to suffer the sling and arrows of outrageous fortune” or oppose them? 9. What does John mean by saying that nothing in civilization costs enough? 10. In saying no to civilization, what does John say yes to? Would you make the same decision? Chapter 18 1. How does John purify himself? 2. Where does he go, and what does he plan to do there? 3. Does this represent a healthy alternative from society? 4. Why the self-flagellation? 5. What are his thoughts of Lenina? 6. What makes the film so popular back in London? 7. What does Lenina want? What does John think she wants? 8. How does the crowd respond? What happens that evening? What becomes of Lenina? 9. What is John’s decision? Why does he make it? Were there alternatives?
Overall 1. How do you know who you are?
49 2. Is this a utopia or a dystopia? 3. How do you know? (Explaining #2) 4. What is so special about Ford or Freud? 5. Should our main goal in life be happiness? Explain. 6. What should be the goal of any society? 7. Who has power here? 8. How is stability maintained? 9. What role does the individual play in this society? How is that individual defined? 10. Who is the stability good for? 11. From whose point of view are we seeing this society? 12. What point of view does John represent? 13. Isn’t this “peace on earth and goodwill towards men”? 14. What would you be willing to give up for world peace, an end to poverty, hunger, etc.? 15. What would you consider to be a utopia?
(Source for Additional Questions: http://wiki.english.ucsb.edu/index.php/English_192_Brave_New_World_Discussion_Questions)
Group Review Activity:
Each group will be assigned two to three chapters to cover. You should then do the following: -Summarize ALL of your chapters in at least fifteen sentences -Have three quotes from each chapter that you feel are significant. Explain their significance in at least one sentence. -List at least five occurrences in your chapters that shocked/amazed/humored you in terms of its prophetic nature or in regards to its subject. -Answer the questions (under Additional Questions) that pertain to the chapters you have been assigned. -Write an at least ten sentence review of the book.
We will work on this in-class on______.
You will then turn in YOUR ASSIGNMENT FROM YOUR GROUP to www.turnitin.com by ______at 11:59 pm.
You will present it to the class on ______.
After you give your presentations, I will turn ALL of them into one document that you will be able to download from my website. You will then be able to use this to study for your test.
Group Creative Activity:
Choose one of the following activities to complete in a group of your choosing (of no more than four):
1. Society of the Future- Create your own vision of how you picture society in the twenty-sixth century. You will need to present (on a poster or other creative display option) your ideas of the buildings, the
50 clothing, the technology, the cars, and anything else you can think of. Please do not just google “future cars” and tape a bunch of pictures together. Instead, your project should be well-thought out and impressive. You also need to include a short written explanation of whether you believe your society will be better than the society we currently live in.
2. Create Your Own Dystopian Society! If you had me as a teacher last year, you created your own utopian society. Now, think of a society in the exact opposite way. Give the community a name, a geographical setting, a government system, an economic base, the “attractions” of life available, the population, a map, and a list of five reasons why your society would fail. The map should be in the center of the poster, with the other information organized neatly around it.
3. Create a PSA (Public Service Announcement for Mustapha Mond’s Department of Propaganda) Your group needs to pretend you are currently living in Huxley’s vision of 26th century London. You need to videotape a PSA that will “be polished and smooth, upbeat yet to the point, and simple but catchy. It must effectively and dramatically convey the message that obedience to the values and organization of our society leads to individual virtue and sanity, thereby bringing about stability and happiness for all. The broadcast should last between one to two minutes and should be perfectly understandable and equally digestible to both an Alpha-Plus and Delta-Minus” (Geib). You should also think about including the slogans of this society in your presentation. In addition, make sure you have answered the following questions in your videotaped presentation: -How can you fashion your message to gain maximum acceptance by the target audience? -What tricks can you use to make your message seem reasonable and not overbearing? -What techniques can you use to influence people without their feeling manipulated or controlled? -Is your message upbeat and is the tone appropriate to our brave new world? -Will your slogans and/or jingles stay in people’s mind afterwards? Are they simple? Are they catchy? -Is this video broadcast polished and attention grabbing? -Does it reinforce the core values of the society?
You should consider covering one of the following aspects in your PSA: -Encouraging people to shop -Explain why being a test tube is so wonderful -Encourage people to take soma -Other ideas? In fact, you must run your idea by me before you film. Some aspects of this novel are adult in nature, you do not want to film a PSA that will A: Get you into trouble or B. Have your parents ask “What on earth are you filming?”
(Source of this assignment: R. Geib at http://foothilltech.org/rgeib/english/bnw/culminating_project/index.htm)
We will work on this activity in class on ______. It will be due on ______. It is worth 25 points.
Mini-Descriptive Essay on Brave New World:
Pretend you are an Alpha, Beta, Gamma, or Epsilon writing in your diary. Describe a typical day in your life. You can be serious or humorous in tone. This assignment should be 25-0-350 words. We will work on it in class on ______. It is due to www.turnitin.com by ______at 11:59 pm. It is worth 25 points.
51 Comparison/Contrast Essay on Brave New World:
Your essay should be 500-750 words. It must include at least three quotes from the novel with a parenthetical citation crediting the source at the end of the sentence. You also need to include at least one quote from a literary criticism. You may only use a literary criticism that is found through accessing a Gale Database at Panther Central. It is not necessary to do additional research in the writing of this paper, but if you do choose to include other literary criticisms you should credit these sources as well. (Of course, since you will be using a minimum of two sources you must include a Works Cited page.) Please keep in mind that SparkNotes, Cliffs Notes, the summary on Wikipedia, and the like are not considered literary criticism.
Some aspects to consider comparing/contrasting may include: any two suitable characters, savage society vs. “modern” society (such as view of art of love in each), Huxley’s fictional “modern” society vs. today’s society.
More Hints for this Essay:
-Make sure you mention the book title and author at the beginning of the essay -Start with an interesting first line -Give brief background into the novel in the opening paragraph -Remember to discuss LITERATURE USING THE PRESENT TENSE -Your last sentence of your first paragraph will be your thesis statement. Your thesis statement should be specific and concise. It should NOT contain the words compare, contrast, different, similar (or anything else like that). -In your body paragraphs, make sure every body paragraph contains a quote. -Make sure you use copious details to explain what you are comparing and contrasting -Make sure you follow the guidelines in your Readings for Writers book for writing a comparison/contrast essay -In your conclusion be sure to sum up your paper without restating the thesis. -End your paper with an exciting clincher statement
The following are your due dates for this paper:
You need to show me your literary criticism in class on ______. It is worth 10 points. Your rough draft is due to www.turnitin.com by ______at 11:59 pm. It is worth 10 points. Your peer editing will be done in class on ______; it is due to www.turnitin.com by ______at 11:59 pm. It is worth 10 points. Your final draft will be due ______by 11:59 pm to www.turnitin.com. It is worth 75 points.
52 53 List of Some Awesome/Not-so Awesome (Depending on Your Taste) Dystopian Movies
(Note: No, we are not watching these in class. This is just because I happen to like dystopian movies and I thought you might like to Netflix a few if you do as well.)
Equilibrium Idiocracy Strange Days Logan’s Run I Robot 1984 Artificial Intelligence (A.I.) A Scanner Darkly Gattaca V for Vendetta Pleasantville Twelve Monkeys Minority Report The Matrix Children of Men Blade Runner A Clockwork Orange
Can you think of any others?
Aldous Huxley Biography (1894-1953)
English novelist and critic, grandson of the prominent biologist T.H. Huxley (see further below) and brother of Julian Huxley, also a biologist. Aldous Huxley's production was wide. Besides novels he published travel books, histories, poems, plays, and essays on philosophy, arts, sociology, religion and morals. Among Huxley's best known novels is BRAVE NEW WORLD (1932), which is one of the classical works of science fiction along with George Orwell's Nineteen-Eighty-Four. "Half of the human race lives in manifest obedience to the lunar rhythm; and there is evidence to show that the psychological and therefore the spiritual life, not only of women, but of men too, mysteriously ebbs and flows with the changes of the moon. There are unreasoned joys, inexplicable miseries, laughters and remorses without a cause. Their sudden and fantastic alternations constitute the ordinary weather of our minds. These moods, of which the more gravely numinous may be hypostasized as gods, the lighter, if we will, as hobgoblins and fairies, are the children of the blood and humours. But the blood and humours obey, among many other masters, the changing moon. Touching the soul directly through the eyes and, indirectly, along the dark channels of the blood, the moon is doubly a divinity." (from 'Meditations of the Moon' in Music at Night and Other Essays, 1931)
54 Aldous Leonard Huxley was born in Godalming, Surrey, into a well-to-do upper-middle-class family. Leonard Huxley, his father, was a biographer, editor, and poet. Huxley's mother, Julia Arnold, was the daughter of Thomas Arnold, a brother of Matthew Arnold, the great British humanist. Julia's sister was the novelist Mary Augusta Ward, who published under the name Mrs. Humphry Ward. Julia Arnold died of cancer when Huxley was fourteen. Later Huxley said that it gave him a sense of the transience of human happiness. Huxley first studied at Eton College, Berkshire (1908-13). At the age of 16 Huxley suffered an attack of keratitis punctata and became for a period of about 18 months totally blind. By using special glasses and one eye recovered sufficiently he was able to read and he also learned braille. Despite a condition of near-blindness, Huxley continued his studies at Balliol College, Oxford (1913-15), receiving his B.A. in English in 1916. Unable to pursue his chosen career as a scientist - or fight in World War on the front - Huxley turned to writing. He worked for the War Office in London in 1917, and taught briefly at Eton College and Repton. His first collection of poetry appeared in 1916 and two more volumes followed by 1920. In 1919-20 he was member of the editorial staff of Athenaeum under Middleton Murray, Katherine Mansfield's husband. Huxley wrote biographical and architectural articles and reviews of fiction, drama music and art. "I met, not long ago, a young man who aspired to become a novelist. Knowing that I was in the profession, he asked me to tell him how he should set to work to realize his ambition. I did my best to explain. 'The first thing,' I said, 'is to buy quite a lot of paper, a bottle of ink, and a pen. After that you merely have to write.'" (from 'Sermons in Cats' in Music at Night) In 1920-21 Huxley was drama a critic for Westminster Gazette, an assistant at the Chelsea Book Club and worked for Condé Nast Publications (1922). His first novel, CROME YELLOW (1921), a witty criticism of society, appeared in 1921. Huxley's style, a combination of brilliant dialogue, cynicism, and social criticism, made him one of the most fashionable literary figures of the decade. He was a friend of Lady Ottoline Morrell and the Bloomsbury group, which included such writers as Virginia Woolf, Clive Bell, Lytton Strachey, and E.M. Forster. In eight years he published a dozen books, among them POINT COUNTER POINT (1928), in which the numerous characters, among them D.H. Lawrence, Murray, Mansfield, and the author himself, are compared to instruments in an orchestra, and each character plays his separate portion of Huxley's vision of life. Later these early works, mostly satirical comments on contemporary events, have been criticized for their rather one-dimensional characters, which the author used as a mouthpiece to say "almost everything about almost anything" - as Huxley once described the nature of the essay. In DO WHAT YOU WILL (1929) Huxley predicts that Karl Marx's Proletariat becomes "a bourgeoisie with oily instead of inky fingers", compares the first motion picture in which spoken dialogue is heard, 'The Jazz Singer', to a "brimming bowl of hog-wash", and sees that at out time "monotheism has lost the value which circumstances once gave it. It lacks political utility, and to the individual it is a poison." In the essay 'Fashions on Love' he defends D.H. Lawrence's doctrine of the 'natural love' but rejects "the sexual impulse, which now spends itself purposelessly..." During the 1920s Huxley formed a close friendship with D.H. Lawrence with whom he traveled in Italy and France. For most of the 1920s Huxley lived in Italy with his wife and son Matthew. With her Huxley also traveled in India and the Dutch Indies. In the 1930s he moved to Sanary, near Toulon, where he wrote in four months Brave New World, a dystopian vision of a highly technological society of the future (the word "utopia" comes from Thomas More's novel Utopia). Huxley turned upside down H.G. Wells' scientific optimism. Developments in sciences and
55 cultural changes in his own time inspired much of imagination - such as mass production, which revolutionized industry, air travel, glamorized by Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart, behaviorist psychology, and explorations in genetics. Margaret Mead's Coming of Age in Samoa (1928) also was among the books he read for the novel. In the book Huxley answered to fears of hopes of wide variety of his readers and in its first year it sold a total of twenty-eight thousand copies in England and in the United States, and enjoyed respectable sales throughout the remainder of the century. In the1930s Huxley was deeply concerned with the Peace Pledge Union. He moved in 1937 with the guru-figure Gerald Heard to the United States, believing that the Californian climate would help his eyesight, a constant burden, which he treated with Dr. W.H. Bates's eye-training method. The results he described in THE ART OF SEEING (1942). After this turning point in his life, Huxley abandoned pure fictional writing and chose the essay as the vehicle for expressing his ideas. He also wrote screenplays in collaboration with Christopher Isherwood for film studios, but did not gain success in this field. Among their unproduced film treatments was Jacob's Hands, a story about healing powers and disappointment in love. Huxley also was a regular contributor to Vedanta and the West, the magazine Isherwood edited while a discipline of Swami Prabhavananda. Brave New World A cry of warning and nightmarish black comedy of a future society.- The Nine Year War, a global holocaust, has reshaped the history. In the year 632 after Ford (i.e., the 26th century) the world has attained a kind of scientifically balanced communist utopia. Universal happiness is preserved by psychotropic drugs. Religion, art, theoretical science are unimportant, but life is free of illness and old age. Scientists are able to produce babies who will fit their future job exactly. There are five types of humans, ranging from the intellectually superior Alphas to the semimoronic Epsilons. Alpha-Plus Bernard Marx resists soma, the soporific drug carried by all citizens. It helps to stop any signs of stress or dissatisfaction and longing for a fuller life. Eventually Bernard is exiled to Iceland. John the Savage, raised in a reservation of American Indian primitives and abandoned by his mother in a primitive outpost, comes into this world. John is thinking, feeling individual, who has read Shakespeare and witnessed primitive religious rituals. Bernard brings John and his ruined Beta-Minus mother Linda to England. When his mother dies of an overdose of the feel-good drug, John swells a violent revolt. He engages in a dialogue with the World Controller Mustapha Mond and debates the merits of freedom and passion. He is harassed as a freak of the accepted social order. In the end the Savage yields to the temptations of the carefree world, and kills himself in disgust. - The book received mixed critics. H.G. Wells was offended by what he regarded as Huxley's betrayal of science and the future. Bertrand Russell and Hermann Hesse recognized the serious intent beneath the surface of playful wit. The novelist, essayist and critic C.P. Snow dismissed in a 1959 review both Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four (1948) and Brave New World especially for their pessimism about scientific progress and social purpose. Several of Huxley's screenplays never got filmed. His best screenplays for Hollywood included MGM's Pride and Prejudice (1940). The first film project offered was an adaptation of Galsworthy's Forsyte Saga, which Huxley turned down, explaining in a letter, ''Even the lure of enormous lucre could not reconcile me to remaining closeted for months with the ghost of the late poor John Galsworthy. I couldn't face it.'' In 1938 he wrote an uncredited treatment for Madame Curie, directed by Mervyn LeRoy. With John Houseman and Robert Stevenson he
56 worked for the 20th Century-Fox film Jane Eyre (1944), starring Orson Welles and Joan Fontaine. Woman's Vengeance (1947), directed by Zoltan Korda and starring Charles Boyer and Jessica Tandy, was based on Huxley's story 'The Gioconda Smile.' "One Folk, One Realm, One Leader. Union with the unity of an insect swarm. Knowledgeless understanding of nonsense and diabolism. And then the newsreel camera had cut back to the serried ranks, the swastikas, the brass bands, the yelling hypnotist on the rostrum. And here once again, in the glare of his inner light, was the brown insectlike column, marching endlessly to the tunes of this rococo horror-music. Onward Nazi soldiers, onward Christian soldiers, onward Marxists and Muslims, onward every chosen People, every Crusader and Holy War- maker. Onward into misery, into all wickedness, into death!" (from Island, 1962) BRAVE NEW WORLD REVISED appeared in 1958. He stated that in writing Brave New World he had failed to recognize the ominous potential of nuclear fission, "for the possibilities of atomic energy had been a popular topic of conversation for years before the book was written." He believed that individual freedom was much closer to extinction than he had imagined. Huxley's other later works include THE DEVILS OF LOUDON (1952), depicting mass-hysteria and exorcism in the 17th-century France. ISLAND (1962) was an utopian novel and a return to the territory of Brave New World, in which a journalist shipwrecks on Pala, the fabled island, and discovers there a kind and happy people. But the earthly paradise is not immune to the harsh realities of oil policy. BRAVE NEW WORLD REVISITED (1959) was a sequel to his classic novel. Huxley compared the predictions of his earlier work with subsequent developments in science and society. In 1963 appeared LITERATURE AND SCIENCE, a collection of essays. In his later years Huxley wrote two books about mind-altering drugs, becoming a guru among Californian hippies'. While writing Brave New World Huxley had read about drugs, but it took 22 years before he experimented with them himself. In a article from 1931, Huxley stated that drug-taking "constitutes one of the most curious and also, it seems to me, one of the most significant chapters in the natural history of human beings." THE DOORS OF PERCEPTION (see Jim Morrison), published in 1954, was an influential study of consciousness expansion through mescaline. Huxley also started to use LSD and showed interest in Hindu philosophy. The Doors of Perception prompted Thomas Mann to write in a letter, that it is a "completely – I don't want to say immoral, but one must say irresponsible book, which can only contribute to the stupefaction of the world and to its inability to meet the deadly serious questions of the time with intelligence." Kingsley Amis said in the Spectator that Huxley's "present role" is "that of a crank". In 1961 Huxley suffered a severe loss when his house and his papers were totally destroyed in a bush-fire. Little survived apart from the manuscript of Island. Huxley died in Los Angeles on November 22, 1963. In the media news of his death were overshadowed by the assassination of President Kennedy. Huxley was married twice. In 1919 he married Maria Nys, a Belgian, who died 1955. They had one son. In 1956 he married the violinist and psychotherapist Laura Archera. They had first met in 1848 when Laura Archera was planning to make a film on the Palio, the annual horse race in Siena. She hoped that Huxley would write it. As a essayist Huxley was concerned about the power of science and technology. His skepticism caused much controversy among his readers. Huxley's philosophical cul-de-sac led him finally to seek answers from mysticism and the thought of the East. One of Huxley's most puzzling ideas was the education of the human being as 'amphibian', one capable of living in different environments. Late in his life Huxley remarked, "It is a bit embarrassing to have been concerned
57 with the human problem all one's life and find at the end that one has no more to offer by way of advice than 'Try to be a little kinder.'" (Source: www.kirjasto.sci.fi/ahuxley.htm) Information on Brave New World Revisited:
If you liked Brave New World, you might find it interesting that in 1958 Aldous Huxley wrote a sequel of sorts commenting on how many of his predictions had (sadly) come true. He mentions “I feel a good deal less optimistic than I did when I was writing Brave New World. The prophecies made in 1931 are coming true much sooner than I thought they would” (2). The chapters in Brave New World Revisited are:
Overpopulation- He considered it a major threat to the world. Quantity, Quality, Morality Over-Organization- He explains, “We begin to close our identity when society and technology becomes too organized and stabilized.” Propaganda in a Democratic Society- o Rational- which enlightens those to whom it is meant for o Non-Rational- appeals to passion Propaganda under a Dictatorship- Discusses Hitler’s use of propaganda The Arts of Selling Brainwashing- discusses Pavlov; Communist use of fear Chemical Persuasion- discusses soma and how it causes no ill-effects. Karl Marx said “Religion was opium of people” and in BNW “soma was people’s religion” (83). Subconscious Persuasion o If a person is in “abnormally high suggestibility” (100) through stress or other influence one can be convinced to do something o Mentions his only mistake in BNW is “There is no reference in my fable to subliminal projection. It is a mistake of omission which, if I were to rewrite the book today, I should most certainly correct” (102). Hypnopaedia o In BNW only used for moral teaching o Does not actually occur when person is asleep but almost asleep (i.e. person is told he is thirsty in sleep, gets up and gets a drink of water) Education for Freedom- stresses individuality, even though we are programmed by society What Can Be Done?- discusses solutions to society’s ills (140-143)
Which of these chapters (based on the brief information you see here) do you see as problem in our modern society?
Which do you not perceive as a problem?
Wadworth: Writing Paragraphs
Exercise B
58 Determine one possible pattern of development for a paragraph on each of these topics. Then, write a paragraph (of at least five sentences) below on one of the topics.
1. What success is (or is not)
2. The two kinds of people who appear on television reality shows
3. My worst experience
4. The connection between coffee consumption and heart disease
5. The dangers of using a cell phone while driving
Wadsworth: Thesis Statements and Formal Outlines Attached you will find an editorial entitled Why the Insanity of College Admissions Will Change by Patrick Mattimore. Please read this editorial and write a formal outline of it. You need to have a minimum of a thesis statement, three Roman numeral subheadings, and an a and b to go with each subheading: 59 My college alma mater, Dartmouth College, announced recently that the College had received a record number of applications for spots in the freshmen class. The admissions’ department has also projected that Dartmouth would accept the lowest percentage of students in the College’s history, about 11-12% of applicants.
Sometime this coming fall, I expect to receive a letter from Dartmouth informing me that this year’s class of freshmen is the best-prepared, most diverse, smartest, highest potential group of students to ever enroll at Dartmouth, thereby knocking my class, which was also all the “bests”, from 40th to 41st place on that esteemed list. Coincidentally, I will also receive a solicitation to donate to the alumni fund, presumably to help push my class into 42nd place.
Yale, Harvard, Princeton, and Stanford already accept less than 10% of applicants annually, and Yale recently publicized the fact that the College had accepted a record low number of early admissions’ applicants which will help keep their overall acceptance rate below 10%. I’m pretty sure Dartmouth’s goal is to break into that 90% rejection club too. The irony is that these same admissions’ departments regularly broadcast the fact that nearly all their applicants are capable of doing the work that would be expected of them at the respective colleges. Stories are legion of students with perfect SAT scores and 4.0 high school grade point averages being turned down at these elite schools. Everyone seems to agree that competitive admissions have become too competitive but, like a high stakes game of chicken, no one seems willing to step back from the edge.
Two years ago, during my last full year teaching high school, my seniors exacted some revenge by compiling some of the most obsequious, self-serving rejection letters that colleges sent out and combining extracts from those letters. Several large daily newspapers published our story along with several students’ editorial suggestions. Various people have suggested solutions to tamp back the competitive college admissions game, perhaps the most radical of which is the idea proposed by Barry Schwartz at Swarthmore. Schwartz has recommended that competitive colleges establish minimum acceptance standards and then take all the student applicants that meet the criteria and put them into a lottery.
The real answer, though, will come not from making the system one of chance, or dictating solutions, but from the market itself. Much as the housing bubble burst after years of increasing demand and prices, demand for the name colleges will begin to recede in the next few years for several reasons.
First, the population of college-age students is expected to decline. That fact alone will produce a lesser demand for spots in colleges.
Second, the financial crisis will cause a greater demand among students for financial aid. While many of the better endowed colleges can now promise to provide 100% of demonstrated need for admitted students, those generous pledges may not last. In any event, the colleges may tighten definitions of demonstrated need.
Third, markets reveal frauds. Or rather, commodities that are overpriced, deflate. At some point, the perception that only a narrow band of elite schools are acceptable and that those elite schools are better than many other colleges will fade. The public will likely realize that the letter on someone’s college sweatshirt has a lot less to do with the quality of that person’s education than what the person wearing the sweatshirt makes of her opportunities, no matter where she goes. Unfortunately, that realization will come a little late for the Class of 2013.
Wadsworth: Commas
Part I: Add commas to the following sentences so they make sense.
1. Kahlo was a young, energetic girl of sixteen when her life was interrupted by a devastating bus accident so she was forces to convalesce in bed for a long time.
60 2. Her love of painting could not be stopped and she found ways to paint while she was recovering.
3. Kahlo painted smaller self-portraits with bright glossy colors and lush vivid flowers.
4. While many of her images are warmly tropical details such as a bleeding heart her wounded and broken body and twisted limbs are also featured.
5. In 1892 Diego Rivera and his family moved to Mexico City.
6. At the San Carlos Academy he studied art.
7. In 1987 an exhibit of Frida Kahlo’s art was brought to the Plaza de la Raza a site in East Los Angeles.
8. The exhibit among the most extensive in the United States at that time drew the attention of Tina Guotta a young artist.
9. Born in Guanajuanto Mexico in 1886 Diego Rivera spent a lifetime committed to the struggles of workers both in Mexico and internationally.
10. Although he and his wife Frida Kahlo noted Mexican artist were controversial for their Communist sympathies they both acquired an international reputation for their great art.
Evaluating Sources- Do Exercise 1 on p. 193 and 194 of your Wadsworth on your own. Be sure to write down at least two significant characteristics about each website below. www.cancer.org 1.
2. http://canhelp.com 1.
2.
Wadsworth: Using Other Punctuation Marks
Directions: Add appropriate punctuation—colons, dashes, parentheses, brackets, or slashes—to the following sentences. If a sentence is correct, mark it with a C.
61 1. Mark Twain Samuel Clemens made the following statement “I can live for two months on a good compliment.”
2. Liza Minnelli, the actress singer who starred in several films, is the daughter of legendary singer Judy Garland.
3. Saudi Arabia, Oman, Yemen, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates all these are located on the Arabian Peninsula.
4. John Adams 1735-1826 was the second president of the United States; John Quincy Adams 1767-1848 was the sixth.
5. The sign said, “No trespassing sic.”
6. Checkmate a term derived from the Persian phrase meaning “the king is dead” announces victory in chess.
7. The following people were present at the meeting the president of the board of trustees, three trustees, and twenty reporters.
8. Before the introduction of the potato in Europe, the parsnip was a major source of carbohydrates in fact, it was a dietary staple.
9. In the well-researched book Crime Movies (New York Norton, 1980), Carlos Clarens studies the gangster genre in film.
10. I remember reading thought I can’t remember where that Upton Sinclair sold plots to Jack London.
Wadsworth: Chapter 9 “Using Logic,” Chapter 10 “Writing Argumentative Essays,” and Chapter 39: “Revising Run-Ons”
1. Do Exercise #1 on p. 114-115 and write the answer below:
62 2. Choose one of the enthymemes for Exercise #2 on p. 117, supply the missing premise, and determine if the resulting syllogism is sound.
3. Do #7 in Exercise #4 on p. 122-123.
4. Do Exercise #2 on p. 141
5. Combine each of the following sentence pairs into one sentence without creating comma splices or fused sentences. In each case, either connect the clauses into a compound sentence or subordinate one clause to the other to create a complex sentence. You may need to add, delete, reorder, or change words or punctuation. a. The sound of waves is comforting. The sand gets into everything. b. Several reasons have been given for this decline in historical literacy. The main reason is the way history is taught. c. One way to avoid this problem is to use good textbooks. Textbooks should be accurate, lively, and focused.
Wadsworth: Writing a Research Paper, including Writing a Rough Draft, Revising Your Drafts, and Preparing a Final Draft
1. True False: You can put your thesis statement anywhere in a research paper; it does not need to be in the introduction.
63 2. True False: You lead readers through the body of your paper with strong topic sentences that correspond to the divisions of your outline.
3. True False: If two sources present conflicting interpretations, you should be especially careful to use precise language and accurate transitions to make the contrast apparent.
4. True False : Photographs and other visuals should not be used in an argument research paper.
5. True False: Your teacher’s revision suggestions can help you revise your research paper.
6. True False : Feedback you get from peer review is usually not helpful and should not be used to revise.
7. True False: It may be necessary to add more research in order to find support for certain points in your research paper.
8. True False: You should always remove sources you did not use in the paper in your final Works Cited.
9. True False: You do not need to proofread your paper; you should always trust in your judgment that you have done your best work at 4 am the day before the paper is due.
10. True False It is an asset to have a general title instead of a title that is specific and interesting.
Wadsworth: Evaluating Internet Sources; Writing a Research Paper
Directions: This assignment will be due at the end of class on ______. You will also need to bring your Wadsworth book since it is necessary to complete your assignment.
64 Your research paper this semester will be on a social issue that is relevant to Florida. (We will begin it officially in November.) The requirements are: 1200-1500 words MLA style Six (or more) internet sources dated from 2010-present One source that is a book that has been checked out from the SFCC library (does not need to be from 2010-present); you will need to turn in a photocopy of the pages you used, plus the title page, copyright information page, and proof you checked out the book from SFCC
To aid you in writing your research paper, you definitely need to know how to evaluate sources. Please answer the following questions to aid in learning how to evaluate sources:
1. Make a list of at least three topics you think you could write your research paper on:
2. Now that you’ve thought about it a bit, choose one of the topics and do a search with several of the popular search engines listed in section 14a (p. 186) of your Wadsworth. Compare the results, especially of the first items listed on each search. Was there much duplication? Did some sources appear only on one search? How many “hits” did each search engine provide for a particular topic?
3. Try using one of the metasearch engines listed in 14a (p. 187). What were the results?
4. Try using one or two of the specialized search engines also listed in 14a (p. 187). What were the results?
5. Was a particular search engine faster or slower than the others?
6. Try narrowing your search. Put quotation marks around a phrase and search again. Use combining keywords—and, or, or not—to conduct a Boolean search. Try plus or minus signs with word combinations. How were the results different from your earlier searches?
Now that you’ve had some time to search, pretend you must pick out your research paper topic right now. (Relax—you can change it later, or you might find out that you get much work done for your research paper right now by choosing the topic that works for you!)
65 Topic of argument research paper:
Thesis of research paper (w/ side that agrees with your opinion):
Thesis of research paper (w/ side that disagrees with your opinion):
Why would I make you write a thesis on both sides of the issue?
Now, find two authoritative sources on your topic. (One with a fact or opinion that agrees with your opinion; one with a fact or opinion that disagrees with your opinion.) Below you should write the title and author, website name, and brief explanation of how you would use this source in your paper.
Source #1-
Source #2-
My Name
Ms. Rosenbaum
Dual Enrollment English I or II- Period ___
66 Date
Here is Where I Add My Specific and Interesting Title for This Assignment
Index on The Canterbury Tales:
1. Knight
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
2. Squire
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
3. Yeoman
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
4. Nun (Prioress)--travels with another nun, three priests
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
67 5. Monk
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
6. Friar
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
7. Merchant
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
8. Oxford cleric
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
9. Serjeant [sic] at the Law
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
68 Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
10. Franklin
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
11. Haberdasher, Dyer, Carpenter, Weaver, Carpet-Maker
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
12. Cook
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
13. Skipper
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
14. Doctor
69 Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
15. Woman (or Wife) of Bath
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
16. Parson
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
17. Plowman
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
18. Miller
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
70 Significance of Quote #2:
19. Manciple
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
20. Reeve
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
21. Summoner
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
22. Pardoner
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
23. Host
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
71 Significance of Quote #1:
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
24. Quote/Significance #1 from The Pardoner’s Tale
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
25. Quote/Significance #2 from The Pardoner’s Tale
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
26. Quote/Significance #3 from The Pardoner’s Tale
Quote #3: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #3:
27. Quote/Significance #4 from The Pardoner’s Tale
Quote #4: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #4:
28. Quote/Significance #5 from The Pardoner’s Tale
Quote #5: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #5:
29. Quote/Significance #1 from The Summoner’s Tale
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
30. Quote/Significance #2 from The Summoner’s Tale
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
72 Significance of Quote #2:
31. Quote/Significance #3 from The Summoner’s Tale
Quote #3: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #3:
32. Quote/Significance #4 from The Summoner’s Tale
Quote #4: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #4:
33. Quote/Significance #5 from The Summoner’s Tale
Quote #5: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #5:
34. Quote/Significance #1 from The Wife of Bath’s Tale
Quote #1: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #1:
35. Quote/Significance #2 from The Wife of Bath’s Tale
Quote #2: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #2:
36. Quote/Significance #3 from The Wife of Bath’s Tale
Quote #3: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #3:
37. Quote/Significance #4 from The Wife of Bath’s Tale
Quote #4: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #4:
38. Quote/Significance #5 from The Wife of Bath’s Tale
73 Quote #5: “ ” (Chaucer __).
Significance of Quote #5:
Works Cited
74 Notes on The Canterbury Tales
Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400)
Known an “father of English poetry”
75 Second in praise only to Shakespeare amongst English authors was first to write in English, a language considered vulgar at the time; he is actually credited with making English “respectable” member of upper middle class was captured while serving country in France; king paid his ransom for release
Background on The Canterbury Tales
Chaucer originally intended to write 120 tales; 2 stories from each pilgrim on the way there and 2 on the way back Chaucer died—so only 24 were written However, The Canterbury Tales provides a telling description of the way different people were in the Middle Ages Time of extreme corruption in Christianity (i.e. Prioress, Monk, Friar, Summoner, Pardoner) Some pilgrims are probably based on people Chaucer knew (i.e. Merchant, Friar— Chaucer once beat up a Friar)
General Prologue
Mentions 30 pilgrims (including Chaucer) and the Host Presents reader with variety of types of people who were part of Middle Ages society Only by a pilgrimage could Chaucer have an excuse to present all of these characters, since all different types went on a pilgrimage
Where are these people going?
When did they begin the pilgrimage?
What are the religious people Chaucer describes generally like?
Who is/are the exception to this?
What was the bet the Host made with the pilgrims?
How was it decided who would tell their story first?
Chaucer at one point talks about how he felt relaying these stories to the reader (lines 745-749). How did he feel about expressing the crudeness of some of the tales?
The pilgrims
Knight
Squire
76 Yeoman
Prioress (Nun)
Monk
Friar
Merchant
Oxford Cleric
Serjeant at Law
Franklin
the Guild Fraternity (Haberdasher, Dyer, Carpenter, Weaver, Carpet-maker)
Cook
Skipper
Doctor
Woman (Wife) of Bath
Parson
Plowman
Miller
Manciple
Summoner
Pardoner
Reeve
Host
77 The Pardoner’s Prologue and Tale
The Wife of Bath’s Tale
The Summoner’s Tale
SHS Pilgrimage/Creative Project/ Chaucerian Food Celebration/ The Best Storyteller on The Canterbury Tales
I. SHS Pilgrimage- worth 25 points
78 Since we cannot afford to go on a pilgrimage to see the shrine of the Archbishop of Canterbury in England, we are going to do the next best thing. We are going to do a pilgrimage to all the sights of Sebring High School! I will serve as tour guide, and you can bring your camera (no—not on your cell phone) to take pictures and/or video. After our tour ends, you can get into a group and decide how best to explain to the class what you learned on your SHS Pilgrimage. You may present this as a film or powerpoint or slide show. We will work on this in-class on ______and present it on ______.
II. Creative Project- Choose one of the following creative assignments to complete on ______on The Canterbury Tales. This project will be worth 50 points.
Ye Olde Advert Assignment- Create a travel brochure advertising Canterbury pilgrimages starting from the Tabard Inn in Chaucer’s day. Include appropriate details from The Canterbury Tales, such as the name of the inn’s proprietor. You should take into account the following categories with your travel brochure: food, entertainment, lodging, and travel clothing.
Sebringian Pilgrimage (Children’s Story)-Create a children’s book with at least ten photographs of places of significance to you in Sebring. Find a way to tell a story that makes sense and is appropriate for a child. If it makes sense to make the story autobiographical, that is acceptable as well.
Sebringian Pilgrimage (Film Version)-Create a short film with you standing in front of at least ten places or with at least ten people (or a combination of each) that are significant to you in Sebring. Find a way to create a film that makes sense and is appropriate for the classroom. If you wish the people of significance to you to speak in your film, that is appropriate as well. It should be about five minutes long.
I Am a Sebring Pilgrim!-Come dressed as a teacher or fellow student that would be familiar to all students in class. Then, you will need to read an original poem to the class that you have written. It should be about your pilgrim and be modeled after the style of Chaucer. Your poem should be in rhyming couplets and at least twenty lines long. It goes without saying that your costume/imitation/poem should be complimentary and not cruel in nature.
I Am A Canterbury Pilgrim!- Come dressed as your favorite pilgrim mentioned in Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales. You will then need to read to the class the original description of the pilgrim in Middle English. You can find the Middle English version for each pilgrim at: http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/CT-prolog-para.html (This contains a side-by-side Middle English and Modern English version.) You can find a pronunciation guide for Middle English at: http://www.ajdrake.com/e211_spr_05/materials/guides/med_chaucers_english.htm
III. Chaucerian Food Celebration- worth 15 points
The same day you present your creative project, we will also do a Chaucerian Food Celebration. You need to bring in a medieval food that will serve eight to ten people. (A good place to find medieval recipes from Chaucer’s times is: http://www.godecookery.com/mtrans/mtrans.htm) Since medieval people used their hands in most of what they ate, try to bring in a recipe that can be eaten with one’s hands. If you choose to bring in something that requires utensils, please supply the utensils as well. You may also choose to buy something, but you simply need to justify to me how the food relates to medieval times. (Yes, it will be okay if you buy Oreos and cover up the name Oreos with “Ye Olde Chocolate and Cream Cookies.”) IV. The Best Storyteller- worth 15 points
During the class before our Chaucerian Food Celebration, everyone is going to write a story that begins with the same first line, is entertaining, and contains a moral at the end (just like the pilgrims did to entertain themselves on the way to Canterbury!). If you wish to do so, you may hang up your story on the wall (without your name on it). The day of our Chaucerian Food Celebration, you will be given a sticky note (which you should put your name on). 79 The student whose story ends up with the most sticky notes under it will be given the reward of “The Best Storyteller” and will receive a goody bag.
Classify and Divide Your Pilgrims!
In order to aid you in writing your next short essay, we are going to classify and divide the pilgrims in five minutes. Each person in the group needs to fill out the chart below with the name of all of the following pilgrims, who are the: Knight, Squire, Yeoman, Prioress (Nun),
80 Monk, Friar, Merchant, Oxford Cleric, Serjeant at Law, Franklin, the Guild Fraternity (Haberdasher, Dyer, Carpenter, Weaver, Carpet-maker), Cook, Skipper, Doctor, Woman (Wife) of Bath, Parson, Plowman, Miller, Manciple, Summoner, Pardoner, Reeve, Host.
Remember--You do not need to fill out every box in order to complete the assignment. You simply need to put the names of all the pilgrims in boxes.
Category Category Category Category Category Category Name: Name: Name: Name: Name: Name:
Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Name: Name: Name: Name: Name: Name:
Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Name: Name: Name: Name: Name: Name:
Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Name: Name: Name: Name: Name: Name:
Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Name: Name: Name: Name: Name: Name:
Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Name: Name: Name: Name: Name: Name:
Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Name: Name: Name: Name: Name: Name:
Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Pilgrim Name: Name: Name: Name: Name: Name:
Classification/Division Essay on The Prologue to The Canterbury Tales
81 Topic: In 500-750 words, write a classification/division essay on The Prologue to The Canterbury Tales. You should consider classifying and dividing the pilgrims by class, profession, morality, or any other such topic you find appropriate. You will also need to include two quotes from the Prologue, and properly credit those quotes with a parenthetical citation and a Works Cited page. If you choose to use outside sources, you must credit them as well. Please review the pages in your Readings for Writers on classification/division if you are struggling with the concept of how to set it up.
Rough draft due (including submission to www.turnitin.com) on ______(worth 10 points)
Peer/self-editing (done online at www.turnitin.com) by ______at 11:59 pm (worth 15 points)
Final draft due on ______with submission of revised version to www.turnitin.com (worth 75 points)
Due Dates for Florida Social Issue Research Paper ______Research Time in class using Panther Central ______Paper proposal (an at least five sentence explanation of topic; the last sentence of which is your debatable thesis statement for paper) is due to www.turnitin.com by 11:59 pm (10 points) ______Response to someone else’s paper proposal is due to www.turnitin.com by 11:59 pm (5 points) ______Hyperlinks of six sources from 2010-present turned in to www.turnitin.com by 11:59 pm (10 points) ______Book from SFCC shown to teacher (20 points) ______Annotated Works Cited (with an at least two sentence explanation of source plus how it will be used in paper) due to www.turnitin.com by 11:59 pm (20 points)
82 ______Outline/Formal Brainstorming—you should complete an outline, do bullet points of the major points of your paper, or simply a sketch of your ideas; it needs to be at least 200 words and turned in to www.turnitin.com by 11:59 pm (20 points) ______Rough draft of research paper is due to www.turnitin.com by 11:59 pm (50 points) ______Peer/Self Editing of research paper is due to www.turnitin.com by 11:59 pm (15 points) ______Final draft of research paper is due to www.turnitin.com by 11:59 pm (200 points) ______Research Paper Presentation given. Your presentation is essentially a powerpoint of your main points of your research paper. Be sure to include a title slide, a works cited slide, and at least 10 other content slides that sum up your paper in an interesting way. (50 points)
My Name
Ms. Rosenbaum
Dual Enrollment English I- Period ___
Date
My Wonderful and Specific Title Goes Here
Extremely interesting opening line goes here. One more sentence to add to the excitement of my topic, such as a fascinating quote or statistic to grab the reader’s attention, which I will then cite (Source). I will then give brief background information about my source that is at least two sentences long. I will make sure I explain how my topic specifically relates to
83 Florida in my opening paragraph. My debatable thesis statement will be the last sentence of my first paragraph and it will be underlined.
My topic sentence will contains information on my first specific example (or subheading) of how I am breaking down my topic and how it relates specifically to Florida. I might use an emotional appeal here, also known as pathos. Then, since I need to have information from a source in every body paragraph, here is where I put an interesting quote from a source that includes a transitional statement before a quote (Source). I put an additional sentence/s after this quote explaining the significance of the information I just noted. I might add my sentence from my book from SFCC here, including an interesting transitional statement such as
______once said, “Here is where I put the quote from my book from SFCC” (Last
Name__). Here is where I put sentence/s explaining the significance of what this quote means. I conclude my paragraph with a concluding sentence to this paragraph.
My next topic sentence of my next specific example (or subheading) and how it relates specifically to Florida, although I am careful I am not making my essay sound FCATy in any way as I move from one topic to another. I have heard it said, and I agree, that compound- complex sentences are easy to write; I might put one here. To vary the way the second body paragraph is set up, I might put another quote or fact from a source here (Source). I will add sentences explaining the significance of this quote here, including why this topic is significant to
Florida. I might have a sentence/s explaining the significance of this source with a concluding sentence to this paragraph.
My next topic sentence of my next specific subheading or another specific example and how it relates specifically to Florida. To vary the way I am presenting my information, here I might include a chart. When I introduce a chart, advertisement, political cartoon, graph, or
84 visual art it will not take up more than one-fourth of the page; there will also be a transitional statement with a phrase like “as followed” or “the following” with a : after that. For example, the following is an example of a graph that displays how cool seniors are compared to freshmen, sophomores, and juniors:
(“U.S. Dept…”)
I would them write a sentence/s about the significance of this graph. For example, one could say a comment about how the coolness factor of seniors has only continued since this study was done in the 1990s. I might have a compound sentence here, or I might not have a compound sentence here. I might also add an original metaphor here to make my writing exciting. Then, I could go on to add additional logical appeals here, and therefore I would highlight a sentence that stated something like, “90.7% of students love writing research papers” (Source). Since I do not want to end my paragraph with information from a source, I can add a concluding sentence to this paragraph here.
Here is where I put a topic sentence for my next subheading and how it relates specifically to Florida. This might be the perfect time to incorporate ethos, by explaining an expert on your topic once stated “Here is where the very important quote he or she said goes”
(Source). Here you explain the significance of this quote in a sentence/s. Since some people may interpret your expert’s opinion ironically, here might be a good place to have irony. Since irony
85 can be a challenging concept for some, you may have to include a complex sentence here to explain it. I would also include another quote or example from another source here (Source). I would explain the significance of this quote or example in a sentence/s here. I might also want to add a political cartoon or advertisement here that is significant to my topic. Here is where I put my transition introducing my political cartoon or advertisement:
(Glasbergen)
Here is where I would list a sentence/s explaining the significance of this cartoon or advertisement. I would add a concluding sentence to my paragraph here.
Here is where I put a topic sentence on the opposing side of my opinion and how it relates specifically to Florida. I would include information from a source that gives details on the opposing side—as either a quote or a fact—right here (Source). Here is where I would explain in a sentence/s the reason/s why the opposing side is incorrect. This would also be a good place to include an original paradox, since the logic of this point of view might be paradoxical. I might include information from a source on the side (or another bit of information on the opposing side) right here (Source). I would then include a sentence/s explaining why I agree or disagree with this point of view. I would include a concluding sentence to this paragraph here.
86 Here is where I start my concluding paragraph without repeating my thesis statement or other information from my introduction. I might include an allusion here since it would be something interesting to put into a conclusion. I would then include a sentence or two summing up what is significant to take away from my paper. I will avoid using first person point of view in my research paper even though I have used it repeatedly throughout this template. I will end my paper with an exciting clincher statement.
Works Cited
Glasbergen, Randy. "Education Cartoons | Randy Glasbergen - Today's Cartoon." TODAYS
CARTOON by Randy Glasbergen. Promote Globally, 2011. Web. 16 Nov. 2011.
Last name, First Name of author. “This is Where You Put the Article Title.” Website Title.
Publisher, Date published. Web. Date Accessed.
Last name, First Name of author. “This is Where You Put the Article Title.” Website Title.
Publisher, Date published. Web. Date Accessed.
87 Last name, First Name of author. “This is Where You Put the Article Title.” Website Title.
Publisher, Date published. Web. Date Accessed.
Last name, First Name of author. “This is Where You Put the Article Title.” Website Title.
Publisher, Date published. Web. Date Accessed.
Last Name, First Name of Author of SFCC Book. Book Title. Place Published: Publisher,
Year Published. Print.
"U.S. Department of Education Study Reveals Seniors Rule." The Onion - America's Finest
News Source. Onion, 4 Sept. 1996. Web. 16 Nov. 2011.
Disclaimer: You may use this template however you choose or completely ignore it. This was meant to help you organize your paper so you can see what I expect it to look like.
Name ______Period______
Stuff to Fix (or Not Fix) for Final Draft of Florida Social Issue Research Paper
Thesis Statement ______Still not strong enough ______Needs to be underlined ______Needs to be last sentence of 1st paragraph ______By evidence presented here, you did not prove your own thesis ______Looks good- Keep it up!
References to Florida or how this issue effects Florida ______Needs to be referenced to more often ______Not incorporated into paper ______Not incorporated into paper in an appropriate and interesting way ______Effective use of references to Florida
Citations
88 ______Need to have one in every body paragraph ______Need to have a citations from six sources ______Need to have a citation from book from SFCC ______Need to have a citation after you paraphrase information ______Need to properly cite (Last name of author and p. #) or (1st 2 words of article and p #) ______Citations are done properly—You rule the school!
Paper Itself ______Need to fix heading ______Need to fix title ______Need a more interesting introduction ______Need stronger support in body paragraphs ______Paper is not discussed in a logical order ______Paper seems rushed, as if you did not spend a lot of time working on it ______Need to discuss opposing side of the argument ______Need a stronger conclusion ______Need to add to length ______Need to shorten length ______Need to double space ______Need to make it Times New Roman 12 pt font ______Need to have page #s done properly (your last name and p # in upper right hand corner) ______Looks good—I look forward to reading your final draft.
Works Cited ______You have work cited entries here that were not cited in your paper ______You need to remove the annotation ______Entries are not done according to instructions; need to fix ______Again it looks good—Hooray for you!
Overall Comments (if any):
Ms. Rosey’s 4th Annual Scarevenger Hunt
89 -This frightening activity will be done in-class on ______(for A Days) and ______(for B Days). -You need to make sure you wear comfortable shoes and clothing the day of the Scarevenger Hunt, as we will be doing terrifying tasks inside and outside of the classroom. -You also need to either bring in a bag of candy OR turn in a story to turnitin.com about the topic of Halloween that is 250-350 words by the time class starts. You will receive 15 points for this. (Guess what most people did last year? You got it! Brought in candy!) -When we are done with the Scarevenger Hunt, everyone will be given a brown bag. We will then take all of the candy that has been brought in and go “trick or treating.” -Finally, we will end the class by writing a spooky circle story in a group.
Read like a Rock Star 2nd 9 Weeks Assignment What to Read --Choose a book from the list that is worthy of your intelligence (that you have not read for another class or are not going to read for another class). You must get the book approved by me. Just so you know, you will HAVE to read a British literature book on a specific list I give you for our next Read like a Rock Star. Reading Log Assignment--You will need to complete four reading logs during Read like a Rock Star. Your reading logs will be turned in to www.turnitin.com. The following are your due dates: Reading Log #1- ______by 11:59 pm Reading Log #2- ______by 11:59 pm Reading Log #3- ______by 11:59 pm Reading Log #4- ______by 11: 59 pm This is what you need to do for each reading log: 1. Write your book title (italicized) and author’s name centered on the page
2. Write the page numbers you read this week directly below it. (Ex—I read p. 14-58.)
3. Write an at least five sentence summary of the pages you read. (Keep in mind that you should be reading about twenty minutes a day.)
4. Answer five of the following per log with an at least three sentence response for each. Your options are:
90 a. Three things I learned are…
b. A really good description is…
c. The best part of this section was...because…
d. I want to know more about…
e. I can relate to (name a character) because…
f. The setting is important because…
g. This reminds me of…
h. I predict______will happen…
i. These pages were boring because…
j. The theme in this story is…
k. (Name a character) surprised me when…
l. (Name a literary device) was used in the line…
m. These pages were interesting because…
n. The conflict in this section is… You are allowed to use some of the same questions on your log, but obviously your answers may not be the same. Your log will be worth 20 points each week.
Discussion Board Assignment
On the discussion board section of www.turnitin.com, you need to respond to a discussion I started on “Why I Do (or Do Not) Recommend my Read like a Rock Star book…” by writing at least four sentences. Write a response to one of your peer’s sentences that is at least one sentence long. This will be due on ______by 11: 59 pm.
This assignment is worth 10 points.
Project Assignment
Choose one of the following projects to complete by the time class starts on ______. Your choices are:
91 Design an advertising campaign to promote the sale of the book you read. Include each of the following: a poster, a magazine or newspaper ad, a bumper sticker, a button, and a 30 second television commercial. (Note: This must be original. Do not violate copyright law in the making of your advertising campaign.)
Create a comic-book summary of the book you read complete with bubble-style conversations and illustrations. This needs to be a minimum of fifteen pages.
Write at least ten diary entries for a diary kept by one of the characters in your book. This should be a minimum of 500 words. You may choose to handwrite or type this. You may want to follow the style of the times. (For example, if you are reading Pride and Prejudice you have a diary of the time period and write in cursive.)
Create a time capsule of significant items representing the events of the book or their lives in general. Make a list of the items included, explaining why each was chosen. (If this turns out to be financially impossible, you may make models of items to go into the capsule. I do not want you to buy an actual ipod, for example, to go into your time capsule.)
Write a proposal explaining why your book should be studied in a course at school. It could be in an English class, or it could be offered in another subject—such as social studies, science, or art. To make a strong case, your proposal should show you understand the scope and goals of the class and should explain how including the book would enrich this particular class. You will initially need to present your proposal to the class, then you will (after the class’ suggestions) submit your proposal to an administrator.
On a poster board, use words, pictures, paint, markers, and whatever else you deem artistically and creatively necessary to make a collage on your book. The collage should illustrate the plot or characters. You will want to include at least ten phrases or quotes from the book. Include a written explanation of the images/quotes on the bottom corner of the collage.
Compile a scrapbook on your book. The scrapbook should illustrate one of the characters, including items mentioned in the book as well as items you think that character would collect. This is worth 75 points. How you do on all of these assignments combined will determine if you receive a literacy card the next nine weeks. Macbeth Argument Essay- worth 50 points
In order to prepare you for writing essays under timed pressure (something you will have to do in upper-level college classes and on the SAT and ACT), your Macbeth argument essay will be completed in class on ______. You will have some time in class today to pick out two quotes you will use in your essay. Choose one of the topics below and do the following:
. Write a clear introduction paragraph with a thesis statement, have at least three body paragraphs, and a concluding paragraph
92 . Use at least two quotes from the play to support your argument (including a parenthetical citation after the quote) . Include a Works Cited page
1. Is Macbeth a heroic figure? If he has redeeming qualities, what are they and where do we see them? If he is beyond being deemed a hero, why? How does he fail to achieve heroic status?
2. Explore the character of Lady Macbeth. How is she a model woman? How is she a failure to be a good woman? Does she have any heroic or redeeming qualities? What are her failures and what are her successes? What does her ultimate fate say about her?
3. What is the role of fate in this play? Is Macbeth a helpless victim of his fate? Is he completely in control, and therefore responsible for, his actions? How do the witches and the apparent supernatural forces of evil factor into either fate or free will?
4. How do the disturbances to nature and to human nature reflect the disturbances to the moral order of the play? Examine the references to supernatural events alongside the ways the Macbeths become "sub-human" (loss of sleep, giving up of reason, etc.).
Facebook News Feed Summary of Macbeth
Directions: Read the following Facebook News Feed Edition of Hamlet written by Sarah Schmelling (yes, that is her real name) and found at www.mcsweeneys.net (so you know, this is a clever and quite funny website). Then, in a group of no more than four, come up with your own Facebook News Feed Summary of Macbeth.
- - - - Horatio thinks he saw a ghost. Hamlet thinks it's annoying when your uncle marries your mother right after your dad dies. The king thinks Hamlet's annoying. Laertes thinks Ophelia can do better. Hamlet's father is now a zombie.
93 - - - - The king poked the queen. The queen poked the king back. Hamlet and the queen are no longer friends. Marcellus is pretty sure something's rotten around here. Hamlet became a fan of daggers. - - - - Polonius says Hamlet's crazy ... crazy in love! Rosencrantz, Guildenstern, and Hamlet are now friends. Hamlet wonders if he should continue to exist. Or not. Hamlet thinks Ophelia might be happier in a convent. Ophelia removed "moody princes" from her interests. Hamlet posted an event: A Play That's Totally Fictional and In No Way About My Family The king commented on Hamlet's play: "What is wrong with you?" Polonius thinks this curtain looks like a good thing to hide behind. Polonius is no longer online. - - - - Hamlet added England to the Places I've Been application. The queen is worried about Ophelia. Ophelia loves flowers. Flowers flowers flowers flowers flowers. Oh, look, a river. Ophelia joined the group Maidens Who Don't Float. Laertes wonders what the hell happened while he was gone. - - - - The king sent Hamlet a goblet of wine. The queen likes wine! The king likes ... oh crap. The queen, the king, Laertes, and Hamlet are now zombies. Horatio says well that was tragic. Fortinbras, Prince of Norway, says yes, tragic. We'll take it from here. Denmark is now Norwegian. - - - -
94 SPOILER ALERT: Notes on Macbeth
Type of Work ...... Macbeth is a stage play in the form of a tragedy. It is one of several Shakespeare plays in which the protagonist commits murder. Other such plays are Richard III, Othello, and Julius Caesar (Brutus). Macbeth is the shortest of Shakespeare's tragedies. It has no subplots. (The shortest of all Shakespeare plays is The Comedy of Errors.) Key Dates Date Written: Probably by 1605 but no later than 1607. First Performance of Play: Probably between 1605 and 1607 at the Globe Theatre. Publication: 1623 as part of the First Folio, the first authorized collection of Shakespeare's play. Sources ...... Shakespeare based Macbeth primarily on accounts in The Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland (Holinshed’s Chronicles), by Raphael Holinshed (?-1580?), who began work on this history under the royal printer Reginald Wolfe. The first edition of the chronicles was published in 1577 in two volumes. Shakespeare may also have used Declaration of Egregious Popishe Impostures (1603), by Samuel Harsnett; Rerum Scoticarum Historia (1582), by George Buchanan; and published reports of witch trials in Scotland. Settings ...... Macbeth takes place in northern Scotland and in England. The scenes in Scotland are set at or near King Duncan’s castle at Forres, at Macbeth’s castle on Dunsinane Hill in the county of Inverness, and in countryside locales where three witches meet. A scene is also set at a castle in England. Characters . Protagonist: Macbeth Antagonists: Psychological and Supernatural Forces, Including the Witches and the Three Apparitions Foils of Macbeth: Banquo, Macduff, Malcolm, Lady Macbeth . Macbeth: Ambitious army general in Scotland. His hunger for kingly power, fed by a prophecy of three witches, causes him to murder the rightful king, Duncan I of Scotland, and take his place. Macbeth presents a problem for the audience in that he evokes both sympathy and condemnation; he is both hero, in a manner of speaking, and villain. Lady Macbeth: Wife of Macbeth, who abets his murder. Her grandfather was a Scottish king who was killed in defense of his throne against the king who immediately preceded King Duncan I. On the surface, she appears ruthless and hardened, but her participation in the murder of Duncan gnaws at her conscience and she goes insane, imagining that she sees the blood of Duncan on her hands. Duncan I: King of Scotland. Malcolm, Donalbain: Sons of King Duncan. Malcolm, the older son, is the Prince of Cumberland. He becomes King of Scotland (as Malcom III) at the end of the play.
95 Banquo: Army general murdered on Macbeth's orders to prevent Banquo from begetting a line of kings, as predicted by the three witches whom Macbeth and Banquo encounter on a heath. Banquo’s ghost later appears to Macbeth. Three Witches: Hags who predict Macbeth will become king. Shakespeare refers to the three witches as the weird sisters. Weird is derived from the Anglo-Saxon word wyrd, meaning fate. Thus, the witches appear to represent fate, a force that predetermines destiny. The Greek poet Hesiod (eighth century BC) was the first writer to represent fate as three old women. These three hags were actually goddesses. Clotho was in charge of weaving the fabric of a person's life. Lachesis determined a person's life span and destiny. Atropos cut the threads of the fabric of life when it was time for a person to die. No one—not even the mightiest god—could change the decisions of the Fates. Collectively, the Greeks called them Moirae. Latin speakers referred to them as Parcae. The given name Moira means fate. Hecate, Witch 4: Mistress of the witches' charms and queen of Hades. She is the fourth witch in the play (or the fifth for those who believe Lady Macbeth, in view of her invocations of evil, is a witch.) Macduff: Scottish nobleman and lord of Fife who is known for his wisdom and integrity. He becomes Macbeth's enemy. He and Macbeth cross swords at the end of the play. Lady Macduff: Wife of Macduff. She is murdered on Macbeth’s orders. Son of Macduff: One of the Macduff children who are murdered on Macbeth’s orders. Lennox, Ross, Menteith, Angus, Caithness: Scottish noblemen Fleance: Son of Banquo. Siward: Earl of Northumberland, general of the English forces. Young Siward: Son of Siward. Seyton: Officer attending Macbeth. Sweno: King of Norway during the war against Scotland. Sweno, referred to in Act I, Scene II, has no speaking part in the play. English Doctor: He treats the King of England (who does not appear in the play) for an illness while Macduff and Malcolm are at the king’s palace planning the overthrow of Macbeth. Scottish Doctor: Doctor who attends Lady Macbeth during her descent into madness. Soldier Porter Old Man Gentlewoman: Lady Macbeth's attendant. First Apparition: : A head with arms. This apparition, conjured by the witches, warns Macbeth to beware of Macduff.. Second Apparition: : A bloody child. This apparition, conjured by the witches, tells Macbeth that no one born of woman can kill him. Third Apparition: : A crowned child holding a tree. This apparition, conjured by the witches, tells Macbeth that no one can defeat him until a forest, Birnham Wood, marches against him. Macbeth is heartened, believing it is impossible for a forest to march. Sinel: Macbeth's deceased father. Macbeth refers to him when he says, "By Sinel's death I know I am Thane of Glamis" (1.3.75). Minor Characters: Lords, gentlemen, officers, soldiers, murderers, attendants, and messengers. . Plot Summary Based on the Oxford Shakespeare By Michael J. Cummings © 2003, 2008 ...... In a desert place during a thunderstorm, three witches conclude a meeting. They decide to convene next on a heath to confront the great Scottish general Macbeth on his return from a war between Scotland and Norway. As they depart, they recite a paradox that foreshadows events in the play: “Fair is foul, and foul is fair” (1.1.14). In other words, what is perceived as good will be bad; what is perceived as bad will be good.
96 ...... While camped near his castle at Forres in the Moray province of northeastern Scotland, the Scottish king, Duncan, receives news of the fighting from a wounded sergeant: Macbeth has defeated and beheaded a turncoat rebel leader named Macdonwald and “fix’d his head upon our battlements” (1.2.27). When the Norwegians launched a new assault, the sergeant says, Macbeth and another general, Banquo, set upon their foes like lions upon hares. Ross, a Scottish lord, then arrives to report the coup de grâce: Duncan’s forces have vanquished the Norwegians and a Scottish defector, the thane (lord) of Cawdor1. The Scots extracted a tribute of ten thousand dollars from the Norwegian king, Sweno, who is begging terms of peace. After ordering Cawdor’s execution, Duncan decides to confer the title of the disloyal Cawdor on the heroic Macbeth...... Meanwhile, on their way to the king’s castle, Macbeth and Banquo happen upon the three witches, now reconvened in the heath, while thunder cracks and rumbles. The First Witch addresses Macbeth as Thane of Glamis2, a title Macbeth inherited from his father, Sinel. When the Second Witch addresses him as Thane of Cawdor, Macbeth is dumbfounded. (He has not yet received news that the king has bestowed on him the title of the traitorous Cawdor.) The Third Witch then predicts that Macbeth will one day become king and that Banquo will beget a line of kings, although he himself will not ascend the throne. Macbeth commands the witches to explain their prophecies, but they vanish. Shortly thereafter, other Scottish soldiers—Ross and Angus—catch up with Macbeth and Banquo to deliver a message from the king: He is greatly pleased with Macbeth’s battlefield valor and, says Ross, “He bade me, from him, call thee Thane of Cawdor” (1.3.112). The almost immediate fulfillment of the Second Witch’s prophecy makes Macbeth yearn for the fulfillment of the Third Witch’s prophecy, that he will become king. He begins to think about murdering Duncan even though the prospect of committing such a deed “doth unfix my hair / And make my seated heart knock at my ribs” (1.3.147-148).
Forres Castle ...... Forres is in northeastern Scotland. After William I became King of Scotland in 1165, the castle at Forres served as a sort of hunting lodge for royalty. The real-life Macbeth and Duncan were among those said to have used the castle. Nearby is a curious tourist attraction, the Witches’ Stone, where accused witches were burned. .
...... After Macbeth presents himself before Duncan, the king heaps praises on the general for his battlefield prowess and announces that he will visit Macbeth at his castle at Inverness. Macbeth is in his glory, but his jubilation is tempered by the fact that the king’s son—Malcolm, Prince of Cumberland—is heir to the Scottish throne. In a whisper, he says to himself: ...... The Prince of Cumberland! That is a step ...... On which I must fall down or else o’erleap, ...... For in my way it lies. Stars hide your fires, ...... Let not light see my black and deep desires. (1.4.58-61) Thus his appetite is further whetted for murder. Bursting with pride and ambition, Macbeth sends a letter home to his wife, Lady Macbeth, informing her of the prediction of the witches, who “have more in them than mortal knowledge” (1. 5. 3), that he will one day become king. Lady Macbeth immediately wonders why he should wait for that “one day.” He could murder Duncan and gain the throne now. But she fears he lacks what it takes to do the deed. She says that his nature “is too full ‘o the milk of human kindness / To catch the nearest way [murder]. . .” (1.5.6-7). A messenger arrives to tell Lady Macbeth that King Duncan will visit her and Macbeth that very night. Excited by the prospect of the king’s visit—and the murderous reception he will receive—Lady Macbeth recites some of the most chilling and cold-hearted lines in all of Shakespeare: ...... A messenger arrives to tell Lady Macbeth that King Duncan will visit her and Macbeth that very night. Excited by the prospect of the king’s visit—and his death—Lady Macbeth recites some of the most chilling and cold-hearted lines in all of Shakespeare: ...... The raven himself is hoarse ...... That croaks the fatal entrance of Duncan ...... Under my battlements. Come, you spirits ...... That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here,
97 ...... And fill me from the crown to the toe top-full ...... Of direst cruelty! make thick my blood; ...... Stop up the access and passage to remorse, ...... That no compunctious visitings of nature ...... Shake my fell purpose, nor keep peace between ...... The effect and it! Come to my woman's breasts, ...... And take my milk for gall, you murdering ministers, ...... Wherever in your sightless substances ...... You wait on nature's mischief! Come, thick night, ...... And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell, ...... That my keen knife see not the wound it makes, ...... Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark, To cry 'Hold, hold!' (1.5.31-46) ...... When Macbeth arrives home, he and his wife read murder in each other’s eyes. In anticipation of Duncan’s visit, she tells her husband to ...... look like the innocent flower, ...... But be the serpent under ’t. He that’s coming ...... Must be provided for; and you shall put ...... This night’s great business into my dispatch. (1.5.63) ...... After Duncan arrives at Macbeth's castle with his sons and his entourage, Lady Macbeth greets the king while Macbeth broods elsewhere in the castle. He is having second thoughts about the murder plot. After the feast begins, Macbeth enters the dining hall, still ruminating about his sinister plans. To kill a king is a terrible thing. His wife, who has been looking for him, follows not far behind him. Macbeth speaks his mind to her: ...... We will proceed no further in this business ...... He [Duncan] hath honour'd me of late; and I have bought ...... Golden opinions from all sorts of people, ...... Which would be worn now in their newest gloss ...... Not cast aside so soon. (1.7.36-40) ...... But Lady Macbeth holds him to his vow to kill Duncan, telling him that ...... I have given suck, and know ...... How tender ‘tis to love the babe that milks me: ...... I would, while it was smiling in my face, ...... Have pluck’d my nipple from his boneless gums, ...... And dash’d the brains out, had I so sworn as you ...... Have done to this.” (1.7.62-67) ...... Macbeth, swayed, asks her: “If we should fail—?” (1.7.68) She answers, “But screw your courage to the sticking-place, / And we’ll not fail” (1.7.70-71). She then lays out the plan. While the king sleeps, she will ply his guards with “wine and wassail"3 (1.7.74), enough to make them fall into deep repose. Macbeth will then kill the king with the guards’ daggers and stain their clothing with blood to cast suspicion on them...... After midnight, while King Duncan sleeps, Lady Macbeth gives the guards a nightcap of milk and ale (called a posset) spiked with a drug. She then rings a bell signaling Macbeth that all is ready. Before going into the king’s chamber, Macbeth hallucinates, seeing a dagger in mid-air that leads him to the king’s bedside. After committing the murder, he tells Lady Macbeth that he thought he heard a voice saying, “Sleep no more! Macbeth does murder
98 sleep” (2. 2. 46-47) and that he “shall sleep no more” (2.2.47). Lady Macbeth attempts to hearten him, telling him not to dwell on “brainsickly” things (2.2.58). When she notices that Macbeth is still carrying the bloodied daggers, she tells him to return them to the king’s chamber and plant them on the guards as they had planned. But Macbeth, guilt-stricken, cannot bring himself to return to the room. Lady Macbeth, still bold with resolve, scolds him, then plants the daggers herself, smearing blood on the guards...... Early in the morning, two noblemen, Macduff and Lennox, call at the castle to visit Duncan. “O horror, horror, horror!” (2.3.42), Madcuff exclaims upon entering Duncan’s chamber and discovering the body. Macbeth and Lennox, standing outside, ask what the matter is. Macduff says,
...... Approach the chamber, and destroy your sight ...... With a new Gorgon4. Do not bid me speak...... See, and then speak yourselves. (2.3.51-53) ...... Macduff then awakens everyone, shouting, “Murder and treason!” (2.3.55). Before anyone can investigate, Macbeth kills the guards, claiming their bloodied daggers are proof that they committed the foul deed. Duncan’s sons, Malcolm and Donalbain, do not for a moment believe Macbeth. However, fearing for their own lives, they flee Scotland—Malcolm for England and Donalbain for Ireland. Because their hasty departure makes them appear guilty—Macduff speculates that they may have bribed the guards to kill Duncan—the crown passes to the nearest eligible kin, Macbeth. Duncan’s body is removed to Colmekill, a burial place for the kings of Scotland...... But now that he is king, Macbeth cannot rest easy. He remembers too well the prophecy of the witches that Banquo will father a kingly line. So Macbeth sends two hired assassins to murder Banquo and his son Fleance as they travel to Macbeth’s castle (now the royal palace at Forres) for dinner. Ambushing their prey, the assassins slay Banquo “with twenty trenched gashes on his head” (3.4.32), the First Murderer tells Macbeth. But Fleance escapes...... Just as the dinner begins, one of the assassins reports the news to Macbeth. When Macbeth sits down to eat, the bloodied ghost of Banquo appears to him but to no one else. Macbeth begins to act and speak strangely, and one guest, Ross, says, “Gentlemen, rise: his highness is not well” (3.4.64). But Lady Macbeth entreats the guests to remain in their seats, for “my lord is often thus, / And hath been from his youth. . . .The fit is momentary; upon a thought / He will again be well. . .” (3.4.65-68). After the ghost vanishes, Macbeth regains himself and tells his guests that he has a strange infirmity “which is nothing / To those that know me” (3.4.103-104). The ghost then reappears and Macbeth shouts, ...... Avaunt5! and quit my sight! let the earth hide thee! ...... Thy bones are marrowless, thy blood is cold; ...... Thou hast no speculation6 in those eyes ...... Which thou dost glare with! (3.4.112-115) ...... When Ross questions Macbeth about what he has seen, Lady Macbeth says the king’s fit has grown worse, and she sends the guests away. Later, preoccupied with the fear of being discovered, Macbeth begins to suspect that Macduff, who refused to attend the feast, is onto him...... When Macbeth meets with the witches again—this time in a cavern—they conjure an apparition of an armed head that tells him he has good reason to fear Macduff. But they also ease his fears when they conjure a second apparition, that of a bloody child, which tells him that no one born of woman can harm him. A third apparition, that of a crowned child holding a tree, tells him that no one can conquer him until Birnham Wood comes to Dunsinane...... After the meeting, Macbeth learns that Macduff is urging Duncan's son, Malcolm, to reclaim the throne. In revenge, Macbeth has Macduff's wife and son murdered. When Macduff hears the terrible news, he organizes an army to bring down Macbeth...... Meanwhile, Lady Macbeth's conscience—long absent earlier—now begins to torture her. She talks to herself and hallucinates, imagining that her hands are covered with blood. After the forces of Malcolm and Macduff arrive at Birnham Wood and advance on Macbeth’s castle, Macbeth prepares for battle just as Lady Macbeth's battle with her conscience ends in her suicide...... As they advance, the invaders cut branches of trees to hold in front of them as camouflage. Birnham Wood is coming to Dunsinane—a hill near the castle—just as the witches predicted. Finally, Macbeth meets Macduff in
99 hand-to-hand combat, bragging that he will win the day because (according to the apparition of the bloody child) no man born of a woman can harm him. However, Macduff reveals that he was not of woman born but was “untimely ripp’d” (5.7.62) from his mother’s womb (in a cesarean birth). Macduff then kills Macbeth, and Malcolm becomes king. .
Themes Ambition ...... Overweening ambition, or inordinate lust for power, ultimately brings ruin. For ignoring this ancient rule of living, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth pay with their lives. Deceit ...... In Macbeth, evil frequently wears a pretty cloak. Early in the play, the three witches declare that “fair is foul,” a paradox suggesting that whatever appears good is really bad. For example, murdering Duncan appears to be a “fair” idea to Macbeth and Lady Macbeth, for Macbeth would accede to the throne. But the Macbeths soon discover that only bad has come of their deed, and their very lives—and immortal souls—are in jeopardy. Macbeth also perceives the prophecies made by the “armed head” and the “bloody child” as good omens; in fact, these prophecies are deceptive wordplays that foretell Macbeth’s downfall. In a further exposition of the theme of deceptive appearances, King Duncan speaks the following lines when arriving at Macbeth’s castle: “This castle hath a pleasant seat; the air / Nimbly and sweetly recommends itself / Unto our gentle senses” (1. 6.3-5)...... Other quotations that buttress this theme are the following: Look like the innocent flower, But be the serpent under ’t. (1.5.63-64) Away, and mock the time with fairest show: False face must hide what the false heart doth know. (1.7.94-95) To show an unfelt sorrow is an office Which the false man does easy. (2.3.135-136) Temptation ...... Temptation can defeat even the strongest human beings. On the battlefield, Macbeth is a lion and a leader of men. But when the witches tempt him by prophesying that he will become king of Scotland, he succumbs to the lure of power. When his resolve weakens, Lady Macbeth fortifies it with strong words. Guilt ...... Guilt haunts the evildoer. Whether from prick of conscience or fear of discovery, Macbeth’s guilt begins to manifest itself immediately after he murders Duncan and the guards (Act II, Scene II). “This is a sorry sight” (2.2.29), he tells Lady Macbeth, looking at the blood on his hands. When he speaks further of the guilt he feels, Lady Macbeth—foreshadowing her descent into insanity—says, “These deeds must not be thought / After these ways; so, it will make us mad” (2.2.44-45). Macbeth then says he thought he heard a voice saying, “Sleep no more! / Macbeth does murder sleep” (2.2.46-47). When they hear knocking moments later at the castle door, it is the sound of their guilt as much as the sound of the knocker, Macduff.. Climax ...... The climax of a play or another literary work, such as a short story or a novel, can be defined as (1) the turning point at which the conflict begins to resolve itself for better or worse, or as (2) the final and most exciting event in a
100 series of events. The climax of Macbeth occurs, according to the first definition, when Macbeth murders Duncan and becomes king. According to the second definition, the climax occurs in the final act when Macduff corners and kills Macbeth. . Imagery Darkness ...... Shakespeare casts a pall of darkness over the play to call attention to the evil deeds unfolding and the foul atmosphere in which they are taking place. At the very beginning of the play, Shakespeare introduces an image of dark clouds suggested in the words spoken by the First Witch: When shall we three meet again In thunder, lightning, or in rain? (1.1.3-4) Near the end of the third scene in Act I, Banquo foreshadows the terrible events to come with an allusion to the witches as “instruments of darkness” that sometimes speak the truth in order to bring their listeners to ruin. Banquo says that [O]ftentimes, to win us to our harm, The instruments of darkness tell us truths, Win us with honest trifles, to betray ’s [betray us] In deepest consequence. (1.3.133-137) Lady Macbeth later entreats blackest night to cloak her when she takes part in the murder of Duncan, saying: Come, thick night, And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell, That my keen knife see not the wound it makes, Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark. (1.5.43-46) Late at night in Inverness Castle, after King Duncan goes to bed and the Macbeths make final plans for his murder, Banquo and Fleance meet in a courtyard within the castle walls while a servant holds a torch. Their conversation centers on the blackness of the night and on sleep: BANQUO How goes the night, boy? FLEANCE The moon is down; I have not heard the clock. BANQUO And she goes down at twelve. FLEANCE I take’t, ’tis later, sir. BANQUO Hold, take my sword. There’s husbandry in heaven; Their candles are all out. Take thee that too. A heavy summons lies like lead upon me, And yet I would not sleep: merciful powers, Restrain in me the cursed thoughts that nature Gives way to in repose! (2.1.3-12 ...... In his analysis of the images of darkness in Macbeth, Shakespearean scholar A.C. Bradley writes: It is remarkable that almost all the scenes which at once recur to memory take place either at night or in some dark spot. The vision of the dagger, the murder of Duncan, the murder of Banquo, the sleep-walking of Lady Macbeth, all come in night-scenes. The witches dance in the thick air of a storm, or, 'black and midnight hags' receive Macbeth in a cavern. The blackness of night [makes] the hero a thing of fear, even of horror; and that which he feels becomes the spirit of the play."—Quoted in Eastman, A.M., and G.B. Harrison, eds. Shakespeare's Critics: From Jonson to Auden. Ann Arbor, Mich.: U of Michigan, 1964 (pages 238-239)
Blood ...... Shakespeare frequently presents images of blood in Macbeth. Sometimes it is the hot blood of the Macbeths as they plot murder; sometimes it is the spilled, innocent blood of their victims. It is also blood of guilt that does not
101 wash away and the blood of kinship that drives enemies of Macbeth to action. In general, the images of blood—like the images of darkness—bathe the play in a macabre, netherworldly atmosphere. Here are examples from the play: Come, you spirits That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here,And fill me from the crown to the toe top-full Of direst cruelty! make thick my blood. (Lady Macbeth: 1.5.48-51) Is this a dagger which I see before me, The handle toward my hand? Come, let me clutch thee.
I have thee not, and yet I see thee still...... [ellipsis of seven lines] And on thy blade and dudgeon gouts of blood, Which was not so before. There's no such thing: It is the bloody business which informs Thus to mine eyes (Speaker, Macbeth: 2.1.44-46, 57-60)
MACBETH...Will all great Neptune's7 ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand? No, this my hand will rather The multitudinous seas in incarnadine8, Making the green one red. LADY MACBETH...My hands are of your colour; but I shame To wear a heart so white. (2.2.75-80) To Ireland, I; our separated fortune Shall keep us both the safer: where we are, There's daggers in men's smiles: the near in blood, The nearer bloody. (Donalbain: 2.3.137-140) In their analysis of the images of blood and darkness in Macbeth, Shakespearean scholars K.L. Knickerbock and H. Willard Reninger write: The very title of Macbeth conjures up the dense, suffocating metaphoric climate of primeval evil, darkness, blood, violated sleep, and nature poisoned at its source."—Interpreting Literature. 4th ed. New York: Holt, 1969 (page 854). Adam and Eve ...... Critic Maynard Mack and psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud both noticed that Lady Macbeth resembles Eve in her eagerness to tempt Macbeth to eat of forbidden fruit (in this case, murder) and that Macbeth resembles Adam in his early passivity. Supporting their views are these two passages in Act 1, Scene VII, in which Lady Macbeth goads her wavering husband: First Passage: Lady Macbeth tells her husband it is cowardly to hesitate like a scared cat. . Art thou afeard To be the same in thine own act and valour As thou art in desire? Wouldst thou have that Which thou esteem'st the ornament of life, And live a coward in thine own esteem, Letting "I dare not" wait upon "I would," Like the poor cat i' the adage? (1.7.45-51) . Second Passage: Lady Macbeth challenges her husband to be a man.
102 . What beast was't, then, That made you break this enterprise to me? When you durst do it, then you were a man; And, to be more than what you were, you would Be so much more the man. Nor time nor place Did then adhere, and yet you would make both: They have made themselves, and that their fitness now Does unmake you. I have given suck, and know How tender 'tis to love the babe that milks me: I would, while it was smiling in my face, Have pluck'd my nipple from his boneless gums, And dash'd the brains out, had I so sworn as you Have done to this. (1.7 55-67) Ambition ...... Raging ambition drives Macbeth to murder. After the witches play to his ambition with a prophecy that he will become king, he cannot keep this desire under control. He realizes that Duncan is a good king—humble, noble, virtuous. But he rationalizes that a terrible evil grips him that he cannot overcome. I have no spur To prick the sides of my intent, but only Vaulting ambition, which o'erleaps itself And falls on the other. (1.7.27-30) Examples of Figures of Speech Following are examples of figures of speech in the play. For definitions of figures of speech, see Literary Terms. Alliteration That will be ere the set of sun. (1.1.7) the Norways’ king, craves composition; Nor would we deign him burial of his men. (1.2.72-73) False face must hide what the false heart doth know. (1.7.95) ’Tis safer to be that which we destroy Than by destruction dwell in doubtful joy. (3.2.10-11). Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn and cauldron bubble. (4.1.12-13) Anaphora When the hurlyburly’s done, When the battle’s lost and won. (1.1.5-6) FIRST WITCH All hail, Macbeth!hail to thee, Thane of Glamis! SECOND WITCH All hail, Macbeth!hail to thee, Thane of Cawdor! Hyperbole Here's the smell of the blood still: all the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand. (5.1.55) Irony, Dramatic This castle hath a pleasant seat; the air Nimbly and sweetly recommends itself
103 Unto our gentle senses. (1.6.1) Duncan is unaware of what the audience knows: that death, not a pleasant sojourn, awaits him in the castle. Metaphor If I say sooth, I must report they were As cannons overcharg’d with double cracks. (1.2.42-43) Comparison of Macbeth and Banquo to cannons Sleep shall neither night nor day Hang upon his pent-house lid. (1.3.21-22) Comparison of sleep to a hanging object
[We must] make our faces vizards to our hearts, Disguising what they are. (3.2.40-41) Macbeth compares his and Lady Macbeth's faces to the visors (vizards) on the helmet of a suit of armor
Come, seeling night, Scarf up the tender eye of pitiful day. (3.2.54-55) Macbeth compares night to a falconer who sews together (seels) the eyes of a young hawk. He also compares the sun to an eye. Canst thou not minister to a mind diseas’d, Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow[?] (5.3.50-51) While speaking with the doctor, Macbeth compares Lady Macbeth's mental illness to a rooted plant. Metaphor and Personification Go get some water, And wash this filthy witness from your hand. (2.2.58-59) Comparison of blood (implied) to a person (witness) Treason has done his worst. (3.2.29) Comparison of treason to a person Paradox Fair is foul, and foul is fair. (1.1.13) What! can the devil speak true? (1.3.107) Nothing in his life Became him like the leaving it. . . . (1.4.10-11) The Real Macbeth ...... Macbeth was an eleventh-century Scot who took the throne in 1040 after killing King Duncan I, his cousin, in a battle near Elgin in the Moray district of Scotland. Of his reign, Fitzroy MacLean has written the following: "Macbeth appears, contrary to popular belief, to have been a wise monarch and to have ruled Scotland successfully and well for seventeen prosperous years. In 1050 we hear that he went on a pilgrimage to Rome and there [lavished money to the poor]." (Work cited: MacLean, Fitzroy. A Concise History of Scotland. New York: Beekman House, 1970, Page 23.) In 1057, Duncan's oldest son, Malcolm, ended Macbeth's reign by killing him in battle and later assuming the throne as Malcolm III. The Real Banquo ...... In Holinshed's Chronicles, the historical work on which Shakespeare based his play, the real Banquo is depicted as a conniver who took part in the plot to assassinate King Duncan. Why did Shakespeare portray Banquo as one of
104 Macbeth's innocent victims? Perhaps because James I, the King of England when the play debuted, was a descendant of Banquo. It would not do to suggest that His Royal Majesty's ancestor was a murderer. Influence of Seneca ...... The Roman dramatist Seneca (AD 4-65), a tutor to Emperor Nero, wrote plays that described in elaborate detail the grisly horror of murder and revenge. After Elizabethans began translating Seneca's works in 1559, writers read and relished them, then wrote plays imitating them. Shakespeare appears to have seasoned Macbeth and an earlier play, Titus Andronicus, with some of Seneca's ghoulish condiments. . Witchcraft in Shakespeare's Time ...... In Shakespeare's time, many people believed in the power of witches. One was King James I. In 1591, when he was King of Scotland during the reign of Elizabeth I, a group of witches and sorcerers attempted to murder him. Their trial and testimony convinced him that they were agents of evil. Thereafter, he studied the occult and wrote a book called Daemonologie (Demonology), published in 1597. This book—and an earlier one called Malleus Maleficarum (The Witches' Hammer, 1486), describing the demonic rites of witches—helped inflame people against practitioners of sorcery...... Shakespeare, good businessman that he was, well knew that a play featuring witches would attract theatergoers and put a jingle in his pocket. Moreover, such a play would ingratiate him with James, who became King of England in 1603. So, about two years after James acceded to the English throne, Shakespeare began working on Macbeth. When it was first performed in about 1605, it probably frightened audiences in the same way that The Exorcist, the 1973 film about diabolical possession, scared American audiences. Magically, this play about murder and witches swelled Shakespeare's bank account and reputation. Shakespeare himself, a man of extraordinary intellect and insight, probably regarded witchcraft for what it was: poppycock...... Four named witches appear in Macbeth—the three hags who open the play and later Hecate, the goddess of sorcery. But is there a fifth witch, Lady Macbeth? In fact, she invokes spirits to “unsex” (1.5.34) her and bids “thick night” (1.5.43) to dress “in the dunnest smoke of hell” (1.5.44) so that she may assist her husband in the murder of King Duncan. . Questions and Essay Topics Murdering a king was considered an especially heinous crime in the aftermath of the Gunpowder Plot in England in November 1605. What was the Gunpowder Plot? Did Shakespeare intend the witches to be symbols of something everyone faces—temptation? The word fear occurs 48 times in Macbeth in noun and verb forms and as a root in words such as afeard and fearful. Which characters exhibit the most fear? What causes their fear? How does fear differ from guilt? Julius Caesar, the title character of a Shakespeare play set in ancient Rome, was also a military commander, like Macbeth, who was consumed by ambition and died because of it. What other great leaders in history or fiction fell to ruin, or death, because of their ambition? Lady Macbeth repeatedly washes her hands to expiate her guilt. In modern psychology, what is the term used to describe Lady Macbeth's disorder? If you were a psychologist—or a priest—what would you advise Lady Macbeth to do to unburden her conscience? Read the information under Theme 2 (above). Then write an essay about persons, places, things or ideas that appear "fair" when they are really "foul"—or appear "foul" when they are really "fair." Lady Macbeth advises her husband to “Look like the innocent flower, / But be the serpent under it” (Act I, Scene V, Lines 66-67). Write an essay about things in the modern world that present themselves as "innocent flowers" even though they are really "serpents." Fascinating Fact
105 ...... The words blood and night (or forms of them, such as bloody and tonight) occur more than 40 times each in Macbeth. Other commonly occurring words that help maintain the mood of the play are terrible, horrible, black, devil, and evil. . What Was a Castle? ...... Many of the scenes in Macbeth are set in a castle. A castle was a walled fortress of a king or lord. The word castle is derived from the Latin castellum, meaning a fortified place. Generally, a castle was situated on an eminence (a piece of high ground) that had formed naturally or was constructed by laborers. High ground constructed by laborers was called a motte (French for mound); the motte may have been 100 to 200 feet wide and 40 to 80 feet high. The area inside the castle wall was called the bailey...... Some castles had several walls, with smaller circles within a larger circle or smaller squares within a larger square. The outer wall of a castle was usually topped with a battlement, a protective barrier with spaced openings through which defenders could shoot arrows at attackers. This wall sometimes was surrounded by a water-filled ditch called a moat, a defensive barrier to prevent the advance of soldiers, horses and war machines. At the main entrance was a drawbridge, which could be raised to prevent entry. Behind the drawbridge was a portcullis [port KUL is], or iron gate, which could be lowered to further secure the castle. Within the castle was a tower, or keep, to which castle residents could withdraw if an enemy breached the portcullis and other defenses. Over the entrance of many castles was a projecting gallery with machicolations [muh CHIK uh LAY shuns], openings in the floor through which defenders could drop hot liquids or stones on attackers. In the living quarters of a castle, the king and his family dined in a great hall on an elevated platform called a dais [DAY is], and they slept in a chamber called a solar. The age of castles ended after the development of gunpowder and artillery fire enabled armies to breach thick castle walls instead of climbing over them. Glossary of Animals and Animal Parts in Witches' Brew (Act IV, Scene I) Adder’s Fork: Forked tongue of an adder, a poisonous snake. Baboon’s Blood: Blood of a fierce monkey (genus, Papio) with long teeth. Blindworm: Legless lizard common in Great Britain. When fully grown, it is usually about a foot long. Eye of Newt: Eye of a type of salamander (an amphibian with a tail) that spends part of its time in the water and part of its time on land. The young newt (larval stage) is called an eft. It is bright red with black spots. The adult newt is generally olive green with red spots circumscribed with black spots. In mythological tales, the salamander was a creature that was said to be able to live in fire. Fillet of Fenny: Slice of a snake that inhabits fens (swamps, bogs). Gall of Goat: Gallbladder of a goat. Lizard: Reptile with four legs. Examples are the iguana, the chameleon, and the gecko. Maw and Gulf of Ravined Salt-Sea Shark: Stomach of a hungry (ravined) shark. Owlet’s Wing: Wing of a baby owl. Scale of Dragon: Scales (overlapping plates covering the body) of a dragon, a mythological flying reptile of gigantic size. Tiger’s Chaudron: Tiger’s intestines or guts. Toad: Hopping amphibian, resembling a frog, with short legs and rough skin. Unlike a frog, which has moist skin, a toad has dry skin. Toe of Frog: Toe of an amphibian with webbed feet and strong hind legs for leaping. Unlike a toad, a frog has moist skin. Tooth of Wolf: Fang of a wolf, a canine that lives in the wilds. Wool of Bat: Fur or hair of a bat, the world’s only flying mammal. A bat can weigh up to three pounds and fly at speeds up to 60 miles an hour. Although literature often portrays bats as sinister, evil creatures, they are beneficial to humankind because their insect diet eliminates many annoying—and dangerous—pests. .
106 Notes 1. Cawdor: Village in the Highlands of Scotland, near Inverness. 2. Glamis: Village in the Tayside region of Scotland. 3. Wassail: Spiced ale. 4. Gorgon: Snake-headed monster in Greek mythology. Looking upon it turned the viewer to stone. 5. Avaunt: Go away; begone; get out of here. 6. Speculation: Ability to see. 7. Neptune: Roman name for the Greek sea god, Poseidon. 8. Incarnadine: Verb meaning to make something blood red. (Source of Notes on Macbeth: http://www.shakespearestudyguide.com/Macbeth.html#Macbeth)
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