Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Explore English

Hello Explore land,

As we watch Into the Wild be sure to answer these questions:


  1. What is Christopher McCandless searching for or running from?
  2. How will you make a radical change in your life?
  3. Find a quote from the movie that is meaningful to you. Explain what it means or why it is significant. Why did you choose it or why did it make an impact in your thinking? 


Answer your questions in complete sentences and hand in for a total of 10 marks. In other words, give me a reason to give you three marks per question.

But the Math is wrong Mr. Miller

Extra mark:

What might be your ultimate challenge in life? Everest, skydiving, wrestling an alligator, etc...

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

Explore English

Writing Classifications

Exposition
Narration
Persuasion (or argument)
Description


Not all writing is exclusionary. Most essays are a combination of at least two.
For example, an expository essay on Zen Buddhism may include a description of a monastery, a narrative of the writer's visit to the monastery, and an argument may include the relevance of Zen to us.

A brief overview:

Expository

  • Seeks only to explain or to expose what's what
  • From the Latin exponere, "to put forth"
  • One might write, "how to grow an avacado"

Narration

  • Telling a story
  • Not just fictional (biography, autobiography)
  • Concerned with action with a swift pace

Persuasion

  • To win over or convince
  • To convince, we must persuade by presenting evidence and reasonable arguments
  • Present a thesis, but support with details


Description

  • Represents in words our sensory impressions caught in a moment of time
  • Visual imagery dominates
  • Patient observation of details
  • Finding exactly the right words
  • Chaos to organization (right to left, top to bottom, from general to particular or from near to far)

Notice this structure, from near to far, as Walt Whitman uses it in his poem, "A Farm Picture."

Through the ample open door of the peaceful country barn,
A sunlit pasture field with the cattle and horses feeding,
And haze and vista, and the far horizon fading away.

Your turn:

In one paragraph, describe what you see from your window. Choose a particular time of day and describe what you see (or might see) or otherwise sense within a moment or two. Move from either far to near or near to far. Think first. Use your mind's eye to see the view.


Great. Share your work with the person beside you.

Now…journaling. Journals deal with the fascination with the
  • Self
  • Emotions
  • The situation

"the senses, being the explorers of the world,
open the way to knowledge"
-Maria Montessori

Thought…

If the forest has the appearance of disorder, why do we feel so peaceful there? There is no order, no rows and is not created by humans.

Your turn:

Sit down in the middle of your Wild Mind. Let your thoughts flow through you. The best way to write is to lose control. Remember your rules of writing. Reread them.

Go to the computer lab in the library and write your first journal entry. Reflect about your first couple of weeks. Here are some guiding questions to help direct your writing:



What have you felt so far?
How do you feel about your situation?
Describe a situation that you have experienced. Where were you?
What did you feel?

 If you have trouble starting, start with this:

Thinking back to my first day, I feel…