Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Wed 8 31 Notes and Assignments


Nice.

10th: Write 1 - 2 paragraphs discussing the Mayflower compact. Consider the following points:
       Its purpose
       What it said and did
       Why it remains significant today.

11/12: Work on the final draft of your Personal Narrative.
DUE DATE: Final draft is due the Wednesday after Labor Day, Sept. 7.

Don't procrastinate. We will be working on other matters during class hours. Start working NOW and come to me with any problems or questions BEFORE Tuesday. Okay?

8th: Due to electrical outage and consequent failure to complete the lesson plan, there is NO HOMEWORK for tonight. But be ready tomorrow...

9th: Come to class tomorrow ready to invest effort and attention in your own education.


RHETORIC: Critique of Aristotle and Socrates Essay. 

RHETORIC ASSIGNMENT: Write a minimum two page typed critique of the Socratic and Aristotelian views of rhetoric. Compare their views, and offer your own evaluative discussion. 
Due dates:
Outline and thesis statement  Friday Sept 2
Draft paragraph(s)                   Tues Sept 6
Draft of essay                         Thurs Sept 8
Edited (final) draft                 Mon Sept 12

FORMAT: All typed papers for this class should be double spaced, in a plain 12-point font, with one inch margins on all sides. Heading and title should look like this:
 
Charlie White

Sept. 12, 2011

English 11

Aristotle’s Combative Rhetoric Vs. the Socratic Quest for Truth
           
            The Aristotelian approach to the teaching of rhetoric assumes that some skill in self

defense, and in defense of one’s community, is a virtue. As Christians, understanding that we

must cope with real conditions in a fallen world, bla bla bla…..



Tuesday 8 30 Notes and Assignments


Ouch. Oh well. Hope you had a good day today, in spite of the little--or big--frustrations.

I, personally, didn't enjoy school much today. That always makes me ask myself, again, Why are we here? Are the teachers really thinking about how much it costs the students to spend all day in school, then do homework and study? Are we trying to make sure that what we're teaching is what they need to learn?

And are the students making the effort that has to come from their side of the equation? Are they
appreciating how hard it is to teach well, and trying to benefit from what's being offered? Are they really trying to learn something, or just doing what they have to to pass the tests?


10th
Read 101-105 in Am Lit text
Answer question 3 on 105
Be ready for a reading quiz (i.e. be awake when you read).

11/12
Discuss: what was Herbert trying to accomplish in his essay? What is your response?

8th
Typed paragraphs due tomorrow.

9th
No Homework. 

RHETORIC
We discussed the 'slave boy' episode in Meno, when Socrates first shows the slave boy that he doesn't know how to draw a square with twice the area of another square, then shows him how to do it.


Socrates points out that the boy thought he could answer the question, but gave wrong answers, and could only begin to understand the correct answer once he had realized he was ignorant.

Aristotle saw debate as a battle in which we need skills and weapons--rhetorical techniques--to overcome our opponents. Socrates saw debate as a philosophical situation, a cooperative search for truth.

Aristotle viewed rhetoric--the art of persuasion--as the necessary and virtuous art of winning debates.
Socrates viewed rhetoric as a kind of deception--the art of making weak ideas seem strong and ignorance seem like knowledge.

ASSIGNMENT: Write a minimum 2 page typed critique of the Socratic and Aristotelian views of rhetoric. Compare their views, and offer your own evaluative discussion. Due dates for outline, draft, and final version to be announced--but get to work NOW.

Monday, August 29, 2011

Monday 8 29 Notes and Assignments

Some of you looked like this this morning:


I've heard of conserving your energy but this is too much!


10th: Class discussion was about structure in your essays, and about linking one idea to another, one sentence or paragraph to the next.

Good job getting your essays in. No homework for tonight.

11/12: Read the handout--make notes--then answer briefly: What is the structure of the essay, 'The Fire in the Basement'? In other words, what steps does the author make to lead you from his introduction to his conclusion?

8th: Edit and type 'pet peeves' paragraphs. Due Wednesday.

9th: We workshopped some of your draft essays, talking about overall structure and linking ideas together effectively to lead the reader from intro to conclusion.

Homework: Vocab 1B and 1C; finish your essays due tomorrow.

Rhetoric: No homework, but don't FORGET everything we've been working on, okay?

SEE YA TOMORROW.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Thursday 8 25 Notes and Homework


What do you mean, you think it's complicated? (I think this is pretty cool. It's like a quilt, a wiring diagram, a medieval illuminated manuscript, an aerial photo, and the inside of a giant digital Rolex watch all at once.)


TO KNOW WHAT YOU'RE DOING, KNOW WHY YOU'RE DOING IT!
Think about your sense of purpose in life.
A life lived to fulfill the desires of your body and your emotional self is a truly purposeless life--all of your 'happiness' and 'accomplishments' will perish.
A life lived in trying to fulfill other people's ideas and opinions is a truly purposeless life--scripture says 'don't be judged by another man's conscience' and 'only the spirit of a man knows the things that are proper to him'.
A life lived according to a merely human understanding of scripture is also a truly purposeless life--scripture itself says 'the natural man does not receive the things of God, for they are foolishness to him; nor can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned'.
Only a life lived by the guidance of an inner connection with God has real purpose. Only a life lived in communication with the Holy Spirit has real purpose.

Just as you have to have a sense of purpose to live a truly worthwhile life, so you need a sense of purpose in your writing.
Think about what effect you want to have on your reader. What do you want him or her to think, feel, believe, or do in response to what you write?
In many cases, you should conclude your essays with a call to action, either a statement of what you yourself plan to do, or an exhortation encouraging your reader to do something specific.


Class notes and homework:

10th

Types of world view we’ll need to recognize as we study the development of literature in America:

Traditional
Modern
Postmodern

Many of us think of the Pilgrims/Puritans who founded the Massachusetts and Plymouth colonies as having a ‘traditional’ type of world view, but in fact they had many of the traits of a modern world view: commercialism, revolutionary social attitudes, and a quest for ideological purity.

The stages of American Modernism include:
Religiosity (Puritan church structures, persecution of Indians and Quakers, Salem witch trials, complaints before 1700 about the decay of values under the influence of materialsm)
Rationalism (Jefferson and Franklin; emphasis on ‘Natural Law’, governments are established by men not God, solving problems through technology not prayer, hypocrisy about the problem of slavery)
Romanticism (importance of imagination and feeling, love of mystery, inflation of the ego, tendency to transcendentalist ideas about 'oneness with nature' and a 'world soul')
Realism (skepticism about religion and patriotism, prevalence of social criticism and satire, emphasis on gritty aspects of life)

Homework: Vocab 1D; work on your edited drafts of the ‘American Dream’ essay.


11/12

Work on first drafts of personal narrative essays.


8th

No homework. Enjoy! (But be ready to work hard tomorrow!!)


9th

Revised Deadline Alert!

No homework—most of you have been working hard all week so far, and have lots of work in other classes. I’ll return your drafts tomorrow, final edited draft now due next Tuesday.

I’m happy to say that almost everyone would have completed the assignment by Friday as originally assigned. Good job staying ahead of the deadline. Do well in your other classes.


Rhetoric

In-class writing assignment for today (Thursday) was to outline and draft an answer to the following question:

Discuss and evaluate Aristotle’s views about 'the art of persuasion'—rhetoric.
 

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Wed 8 24 notes and assignments



I might have had too much coffee:


TYPING. You should be able to type at least 25 - 30 words per minute (wpm) without looking at the letters as you type. If you are a slow typist, please speak to me or Mrs. Golaway about how you can increase your typing speed!

TIMEWASTERS:
People used to think this guy (Jerry Lewis) was funny (not sure why):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gWJBfvWjlk0&feature=related.
It's a version of the tune 'The Typewriter' by Leroy Anderson.
Here's a version with a real typewriter! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3GCBJPDCUF0&feature=related
And, just for fun, here's one more concert performance: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2LJ1i7222c.


Now get to work on your HOMEWORK:

10th Typed draft of 'American Dream' essay due tomorrow.

If you're feeling up against the deadline, it's probably because you procrastinated or made poor time choices. You've had time in class to work on this as well as homework time to devote to it, and you should already have either a handwritten draft or most of a typed draft.

11/12

We discussed types of narrative, one which aims to produce an experience of insight in the reader, and one which is more explicitly analytical/evaluative/synthetic and concludes with some sort of 'call to action'.

We also discussed the idea of audience, and the fact that, in this class, you are writing as if for a general academic audience, not a specifically Christian audience.

We also discussed voice (or the tone and style of writing) and the fact that you are striving, in the present assignment, for a 'relaxed academic' voice. Not thoroughly formal, but not casual; no 'you', no contractions, no colloquial phrasing, etc.

8th

1. Turn your 'My Place' idea tree into an outline.
2. Draft one paragraph of your descriptive essay.

9th

Typed draft is due tomorrow for your essay about a Christ-centered world view. Remember, a first draft will almost always have lots of room for improvement. Try to use good sentence structure, spelling and so on, but don't sweat it too much. We'll work on editing in class tomorrow.

Also, try to learn any lessons you need to about time management. You've already had enough time in class to draft most or all of a 250 word essay by hand. If you've used the time allotted in an efficient way, you shouldn't need to do any more than type what you've already written.  250 words at 30 wpm = less than 10 minutes to type and spell check.

Once again, anyone who needs more practice to increase typing speed please speak to me or Mrs. Golaway.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Tuesday 8 23 notes and assignments

Oops.
Here’s something that happened back in July. I was working on my driveway with a small tractor (a ‘mini-excavator’) when a soft section of the road gave way and the tractor started sliding off the hillside.That's a fairly steep drop of about seventy feet on the downhill side.



I had to get a wrecker to hook a cable to hold the tractor so it wouldn't slide off the hillside, then get back on the tractor and turn it until it was facing downhill and I could back it back up on the road. It was hairy-scary.

I told the wrecker driver that I HAD been feeling pretty smart that morning, until I almost drove the tractor off the side of the mountain.

HOMEWORK and class notes:

10th

Work on essay about 'the real American Dream'; typed draft due THURS.

11/12

Work on Personal Narrative Essay; typed draft due Friday

8th

1. Vocab 1B
2. Organize your ‘My Place’ brainstorming into an IDEA TREE.

9th

Work on ‘Christian World View’ essay; draft at least one paragraph (body, intro or conclusion) for tomorrow. Remember, the typed first draft is due THURSDAY.


Rhetoric

No homework. Review class notes.

Yesterday we discussed two important aspects of Aristotle’s view of rhetoric:

1) He believed that if ideas are allowed to compete, the best ideas would eventually be recognized and accepted. He believed that in a public debate truth would tend to prevail over falsehood, wisdom over folly. In modern terms we can say that this attitude shows faith in the ‘marketplace of ideas’. Just as the theory of free economic markets holds that letting services, products and companies compete for customers will bring the best products and services to market at the best prices, this theory of competitive debate holds that the best ideas will tend to win, that ‘truth will out’ if we allow different points of view to compete freely.
            This belief in the power of true ideas to defeat false ones is the basis of the scientific method, which functions on the premise that free debate, using reasoning based on evidence, will tend to eliminate false ideas and elevate true ones.
            We can look at the health problems caused by tobacco and fast foods, however, and wonder if free competition always produces the best result. The fact that most tobacco advertising is now outlawed seems to challenge the ‘free marketplace’ concept.
            And if we look at the influence of ideas and media in our society, do the best ideas always come out on top?
            The Aristotelian idea that free debate produces truth only applies if the debate is reasonable. Since Aristotle also taught his students how to manipulate the emotions of their audiences, and how to put on an appearance of virtue and likeability, we can ask whether reason is really the most important criterion people apply when making judgments, or whether they commonly let emotion and false appearances sway their opinions?

2) A second key concept of Aristotle’s thinking about rhetoric is that he saw it as a necessary tool of self-defense. He said that, just as a man should train to defend himself and his nation in physical combat, so he should also train to defend himself, and the best interests of his family and community, in verbal combat.

Some things to think about: How do we reconcile the idea of rhetoric as verbal combat where the strongest and most skilled (the slickest talker with the most money) often wins, with the idea that in debate the truth will become clear? Does the influence of emotion and pretended good character sometimes override the influence of reason in public debate? What about in advertising?

Does the pervasive influence of television, TV commercials, and other types of emotion-manipulating media make us more or less susceptible to manipulative persuasion?

Why is it important that Aristotle wrote that debaters would have to use enthymemes, or arguments that appear more logical than they actually are, to persuade audiences that don’t have the knowledge, intelligence or attention span to understand the real reasoning for a complex choice?



Monday, August 22, 2011

Monday Assignments

Good Monday! Hope you had a good weekend. Here's a picture of part of my weekend. It's a speed output sensor on a 42RE transmission on a 1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee 'WJ' model:


By the way, those aren't my fingers.

Ever feel like you don't know whether you're coming or going? A print by M. C. Escher:



Today's homework: English Assignments 8 22 11

10th
1. Vocab Exercise 1A
2. Essay outline (see essay assignment and due dates below)

Essay Assignment for English 10:
There seem to be two versions of the ‘American dream’, one focused on material prosperity, and one on spiritual well being.
Write a 200-300 word essay answering the question, ‘What is the real American Dream?’

Due dates:
  • Outline Tuesday 8.23
  • Typed draft  Thurs. 8.25
  • Final, edited draft Mon. 8.29


11/12th

Working on the Personal Narrative Essay assignment (write a personal narrative about an experience you’ve had that has a ‘social justice’ aspect).

Due Tuesday:
  • Prewriting—outline and 1 para summary
  • Draft of an intro para.
  • Permission to use in workshops—yes or no?

We’ll set due dates for the rest of this project tomorrow or Thursday.


8th
1. Vocab lesson 1 Exercise A.
2. Choose a place you're familiar with and write a BIG list of words and phrases you could use to describe that place.


9th
1. Vocab Exercise 1A
2. Essay outline (see assignment below)

English 9 Essay Assignment: Discuss ‘Christ-Centered World View’

We’re going to write a short essay, 200-300 words, three or more paragraphs, on this topic:

We often hear about the idea of a biblical world view, a Christian world view, or a Christ-centered/Christocentric world view.

In your opinion, what is a Christ-centered world view, and what are the most important differences between a Christ-centered world view and other world views?

Important things to try to accomplish in this assignment:

1. Good organization of ideas, both in the overall structure of the essay, and within paragraphs.

2. Good sentence structure and word choice, so that your ideas and information are communicated clearly and effectively.

3. Good mechanics of spelling, punctuation and grammar, so that your essay is neat and authoritative in presentation.

Due Dates:

  • Outline is due Tuesday. 10% of final grade, late excused only with parent’s note or a GOOD explanation.
  • A typed draft is due Thursday. 10% of final grade, same deadline conditions.
  • Your final, beautifully edited draft is due by the end of school on Friday.

This is not a particularly difficult assignment to get done—you talk 200-300 words in five or ten minutes, so you can write that many between now and Friday.


That's all for now. Mr. D.




Friday: Have a Great Weekend


Posting a little late because of time pressure on Friday--so hope you HAD a great weekend.

There was no homework in English classes on Friday.

Rhetoric had an in-class writing assignment that looked something like this-- 
Aristotle believed that the ability to use rhetorical techniques to persuade others was valuable, but he also recognized that rhetoric could be used to accomplish bad things.  Discuss, in three paragraphs, three examples of the misuse of rhetoric.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Thursday's School Stuff



Your homework assignments are somewhere down the page. Then there's a joke or two.


8 18  CLASS NOTES AND ASSIGNMENTS

I. What Makes Good School Writing?

What is FODREP? Steps of the writing process:
FINDING ideas and information
ORGANIZING ideas and information
DRAFTING sentences and paragraphs
REVISING sentences and paragraphs
EDITING to fix mistakes
PUBLISHING to get your writing to its intended audience

What is FAES? Different levels of thinking, and of knowledge.
Writing about FACTS: description, narrative, reporting.
ANALYZING facts: explanation, comparison, looking for causes and effects, understanding how things function.
EVALUATING analytical knowledge: applying values to facts and analysis.
SYNTHESIZING knowledge about facts, functions, and values into a plan of action.
          The Bible offers us knowledge and wisdom at all of these levels; it tells us what is, how it got that way, where a sense of righteousness points us, and how we can become righteous.

 Good writing is a matter of:
1) Quantity. In most cases, the more you write, the more you learn, and the better your grade will be.
            BUT just putting a lot of words on paper isn’t enough.
 2) QUALITY is more important than quantity. High quality writing has:
            A) Variety of ideas—shows thoughtfulness, exploration and research
            B) Organization of ideas, including
                        i) Main idea and development of that idea (tree trunk and branches)
                        ii) Levels and layers of complexity—a hierarchical system of thinking
                        iii) Parts fit together to make a whole
                        iv) Good vocabulary (effective word choice) and sentence flow
                        v) Mechanics—correct grammar, punctuation and formatting.


II. Rhetoric Notes, August 17, 2011   THE ARISTOTELIAN MODEL OF RHETORIC

We will in this course consider two basic views of rhetoric, each with its roots in ancient Greek philosophy—the Aristotelian and the Socratic.

Aristotle saw the art of rhetoric as a necessary tool of civilized citizenship. His approach to rhetoric is the one most commonly applied in modern rhetorical practice. In Aristotle’s view, in order to defend oneself in the courts, to prevail in political disputes, or to teach, a person needs to be skilled in the uses of rhetoric. Aristotle recognized three basic kinds of rhetorical appeal, to which he applied the terms ethos, logos, and pathos.

The substance of the appeal to ethos is to convince the audience that you are virtuous, knowledgeable, sincere, or otherwise worthy of a hearing, and that your arguments are grounded in values shared by your audience. Ethos is, at root, about establishing a favorable identity in the minds of your listeners.

Appeals to ethos are made through posture and body language, clothing and appearance, references to one’s family, statements about one’s education, military and public service, etc. An example of the appeal to ethos is trying to look serious by wearing a dark suit with a red tie. Another is casting slurs on your opponent’s character.

The pathos-based appeal tries to sway the audience by stirring their passions—the Greek word pathos is related to the Latin passio, from which we derive our word passion. An example of the appeal to is showing happy, good-looking people enjoying the product you want to sell.

The appeal to logos uses reasoning—or the appearance of reasoning—to persuade the audience.

Appeals to logos are, in appearance at least, based on evidence and logic. An example of an appeal to reason would be the attempt to argue that the federal government actually made a profit from the bailouts of GM and Chrysler in 2009—that a million jobs were saved at no ultimate cost to the taxpayer—and that hostility to the bailouts is therefore unwarranted.

Remember that Aristotle’s categories are not absolute, but are a useful analytical tool or ‘schema’. Not all rhetorical appeals can be neatly assigned to one of the three categories. For instance, wearing a U.S. flag lapel pin is an appeal to ethos, saying ‘I love my country, you can trust me.’ But it’s also an appeal to emotion.

Another example of this sort of ‘mixed appeal’ can occur when an apparent appeal to reason actually contains emotionally loaded terms or misleading statements, and is actually calculated to stir emotions as well as (or instead of) persuading through rational argument. We could call this an ‘emotionally loaded’ argument.

Aristotle (who wrote a text on logic, and formulated many of the ideas about syllogisms, logical fallacies, etc., that are still taught today) believed that the appeal to reason should be the primary one. He also recognized, however, that there are situations where reasoning alone will not persuade an audience. He said that, in these situations, a rhetor (the person making the appeal) would need to use arguments that appeared logical but in fact were not. He called this kind of argument an enthymeme.

Aristotle also devoted a substantial portion of his text on the practice of rhetoric (titled, appropriately, Rhetoric) to discussions of various emotions and how a speaker could arouse them and use them to sway his audience, and on how to appear virtuous and sincere. Thus, though Aristotle claimed that rhetoric was a virtuous skill, he actually taught students of his methods of rhetoric how to manipulate people through their emotions and through the appearance of virtue.


HOMEWORK 8.18.11

10th grade
1. Brainstorm (in writing) about ‘the American dream’ and/or ‘the American way of life’—what does that mean to you, your family, different people?
2. Draft a paragraph based on your brainstorming.

11/12
1. If needed, expand your brainstorming about a ‘fallen world/social injustice’ topic.
2. Experiment with organizing some of your ideas about the topic into an idea web, idea tree, or outline format. Start thinking in terms of subtopics, hierarchy of ideas, etc.

8th grade
1. Define ‘pet peeve’ in your own words.
2. Write a paragraph about pet peeves.

9th grade
Brainstorm (in writing): What are some of the characteristics of a Christ-centered world view?
            What do Christians believe?
            What makes us different from others?
            How do Christ-centered people act?
           
Rhetoric
Read the handout. Identify important terms and main ideas. Be prepared for a modest reading quiz tomorrow.


JOKES

A midget fortune-teller escaped from jail. The next day the headline read ‘Little Medium at Large’.

What did the dyslexic agnostic insomniac do?
Stayed up all night wondering if there was a dog.


Wednesday, August 17, 2011

FIRST DAY ASSIGNMENTS


 It looks like we survived.

8th Grade: No homework today.

9th Homework: Review FODREP.

10th Grade: Homework: Review FODREP and FAES.

11/12th Grade: Homework: Brainstorm ‘fallen world’; what are some examples of injustice or unrighteousness that affect your life, what causes them, and how can Christians best respond to them?

RHETORIC: Write a list of several examples each of the use of the art of persuasion for good, bad and questionable purposes.
Then choose one example from each category and write a paragraph-length discussion of each, analyzing
            a) How it works
            b) What about it is good, bad or ?!?

I have to rush off and fix a car. See you Thursday.

D.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

New School Year

Greetings. Whether you're happy to be back at school, or whether (like me) you wish the summer would last a few weeks longer, HERE WE GO.

I will be posting information, assignments, etc., here on a more or less daily basis. I will try to post homework, reading assignments, and sometimes lecture notes every day, so if you're absent you can still keep up with what's going on.

As always, the more attention you pay in class, and the harder you work, the more you learn.

God loves you.