English
English 9
Grade: 9
Prereq: None Credit: 1
English 9 is a full year course involving the study
of major literary genres, including short story, poetry, the novel,
drama and nonfiction. The course also includes an extensive treatment of
all areas of grammar, spelling and vocabulary and the writing process.
From sentence structure to the composition and research paper, intensive
practice in writing is stressed. Student speeches are also required.
English 10
Grade: 10
Prereq: English 9 Credit: 1
English 10 is a full year course involving the study
of Western Civilization through literature. Readings from the Ancient
world, the Classical world, the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, the
Neoclassical period, the Romantic period, the Realistic period, and the
Modern world will be covered. English skill development will include a
research paper, vocabulary expansion, essays, grammar and composition
diagnosis.
English 10 Honors 10
Grade: 10
Prereq: English 9, Teacher Recommendation Credit: 1
The students in this section will read and study
some of the same material in Western Civilization that is included in
the general English course. In addition, they will read the entire works
of several excerpts in their anthology and other supplemental novels,
books of nonfiction, plays and epic poems. The students will be taught
new concepts and analytical skills to encourage critical reading and
effective writing.
English 11
Grade: 11
Prereq: English 10 Credit: 1
English 11 consists of the study of American
literature and its chronological changes and development through various
genres such as the novel, drama, short story, essay, biography and
poetry. The course will enable students to understand and appreciate our
literary heritage and its influence on people and times by focusing on
major literary periods and writers. Students will be exposed to
vocabulary development and testing integrated with all literature units,
a continuous review of proper grammatical usage, and the practice of
effective essay techniques through extensive expository writing. These
activities will promote competence on the New York State Regents
Examination.
English 11 Honors/with Advanced Placement
American History
Grade:11
Prereq: Global Studies 10, English 10 & Teacher Recommendation Credit: 2
This course will combine the study of American
history with American literature and will be team taught by a social
studies and an English teacher. These teachers will integrate American
literature with American historical periods using a chronological
approach. This course will provide students with the analytical skills
and factual knowledge necessary to deal critically with the problems and
materials in American history. It will prepare students for intermediate
and advanced college courses by making demands upon them equivalent to
college course work.
Students will learn to assess historical materials,
their relevance to a given interpretive problem, their reliability and
their importance, and to weigh the evidence and interpretations in
historical scholarship. This honors level course helps students to
develop the skills necessary to arrive at conclusions on the basis of an
informed judgement and to present ideas clearly and persuasively in
essay format.
A non-refundable fee is required for the AP American
History Examination given in May. Successful scores can be submitted to
college for possible credit and/or advanced placement.
The English portion of the course will emphasize the
study of American literature and its chronological changes and
development through various genres such as the novel, drama, short
story, essay, biography and poetry. This course will enable students to
understand and appreciate our literary/historical heritage and its
influence on people and times by focusing on major literary/historical
periods and writers. Students will be exposed to vocabulary development
and testing integrated with all literature units, a continuous review of
proper grammatical usage, and the practice of effective essay techniques
through extensive expository writing. These activities will promote
competence on the Comprehensive English Regents Examination.
Advanced Placement English Literature and
Composition
Grade:12
Prereq: English 11 Teacher Recommendation Credit: 1
This course is intended to prepare students to take
Advanced Placement Examination in English Literature and Composition.
Students will be involved in both the study of literature and the study
and practice of writing. Through speaking, listening, reading and
writing, they will become more aware of the resources of the language:
connotation, metaphor, irony, syntax and tone. Writing assignments will
focus on the critical analysis of literature and will include essays in
exposition and argument; personal narrative and the writing of stories,
poems or plays will also be appropriate.
Through careful reading of literary works, students
will develop critical standards for independent appreciation, and they
will increase their sensitivity to literature as shared experience. To
achieve these goals, students will study the individual work, its
language, characters, action and themes. They will consider its
structure, meaning and value, and its relationship to contemporary
experience as well as to the times in which it was written. A
non-refundable fee is required for the AP exam given in May. Successful
scores can be submitted to college for possible credit and/or advanced
placement.
African-American Literature
This course surveys representative literary texts
from the margins and boundaries of the American experience. It
concentrates on familiarizing students with issues, questions and motifs
that recur in works which diagnose ongoing conflicts in the American
temper. Readings are drawn from early slave narratives, as well as 19th
and 20th Century texts.
Senior Writing
In this writing course, students will hone their
writing skills and expand themselves intellectually by selecting a
project or topic of interest to them and developing it over the course
of the term into a long essay for a general audience. Projects will
involve research and multiple revisions. Completion of the Senior Thesis
is course requirement. ALL SENIORS MUST COMPLETE SENIOR WRITING IN ORDER
TO GRADUATE.
Creative Writing
An introduction to the writing of fiction and poetry
for students with an interest in these genres. Class time is divided
between discussions of literary technique, workshop consideration of
student writing, and examination of work of several contemporary poets,
dramatists, and fiction writers. Students are asked to complete several
writing assignments, to keep a journal, and to draft and revise a final
project.
Digital Storytelling 1
Acquaints students with the various aspects of the
digital storytelling process through the use of storyboarding and
digital editing software. This course gives students an understanding of
the kinds of decisions filmmakers encounter and the kinds of techniques
they employ. Activities include preparing detailed shooting scripts,
experiments with photography, light, color, motion, sound, and editing,
and manipulating both live action and animated materials. Individually
or in small groups, students will produce a 10-15 minute film.
Digital Storytelling 2
Advances the skills learned in Digital Storytelling
1 by focusing on composition, scene structure, and script writing.
Students will work alone or in small groups to write, direct, and
produce a longer film (15-20 minutes) that seeks to refine the ideas
presented in both digital storytelling 1 and 2. Students will
participate in workshops, write blogs, and present their film to a
larger audience at the end of the quarter. While Digital Storytelling 1
is not a prerequisite for the course, a working knowledge of iMovie and
film technique is required. (Digital Graphics is suggested as a
replacement for Dig. Stylng. 1)
Survey of Drama
A survey of both modern American drama and early
dramatic forms. The primary focus will be on representative works by
20th century playwrights as well as on major theatrical movements in
this country, but will include the study of one Shakespearean play.
Works such as Death of a Salesman and Fences will be studied.
Film and Literature
Intro to film as an art form focuses on film
interpretation by emphasizing elements such as light, sound,
composition, camera movement, acting, and direction. Initiates students
into developments in film history, film genre, and film theory. This
interdisciplinary seminar examines the ways that two different art
forms-literature and film-represent America. Are their stories the same,
or can the distinctive characteristics of each create a unique vision of
the nation? Both long and short written film analyses are required.
Media Analysis
Surveys various media, stressing their historical
evolution and the technological and socio-cultural forces that shape
them. Includes newspapers, magazines, film, radio, and television. Using
interdisciplinary approaches, it focuses upon themes which explore myths
about identity through analyzing meanings in media and social/cultural
texts; how these originate in and across history, to become part of
everyday ‘common sense’ discourse. An advertising simulation project
serves as the final project for the course.
Public Speaking
Develops basic speaking principles and provides
extensive practice in speaking skills necessary for successful
college-level performance. Covers adapting topics to purpose and
audience; using substantial support for each point; logically developing
concepts; speaking with a clear, consistent tone; developing good
listening skills; and preparing oral presentations in a variety of
settings.
Modern Short Story
Examines the short story form by reading and
analyzing short fiction from the twentieth century. Students will be
asked to read a variety of short works, keep a journal, write short
response pieces, and prepare and edit a full length analysis of a short
story.
[Back to high school guidance page]
|