Course Information
Summer Assignment: Research Skills
Students begin learning how to conduct academic
research. Students may attend the AP Summer Bridge program held in July to
familiarize themselves with the resources available to them. The students also
learn how to cite sources using the editorial style of the Modern Language
Association. They begin thinking about the topic they’d like to research, and
then narrowing their topic to specific subtopics or issues. Students are given
instructions on close reading and annotation, and are required to annotate a
non-fiction text that deals with their topic of choice. By the first day of
school, students will have journals, research logs, and sources with proper
documentation.
First Quarter: Focus on Argumentation and Research
The course teaches research skills, and
in particular, the ability to evaluate, use, and cite
primary and secondary sources. The students immediately pick up the work they
began in the summer by continuing to construct a researched argument paper that
asks the students to present an argument of their own that includes both the
analysis and synthesis of ideas from an array of sources.
Students will research the various sides (or
“conversations”) of the debate with an understanding of what the various
positions are, and why certain groups or persons advocate them. Giving each
position approximately equal attention, students will write summaries of the
identified conversations. Students may find that there are no clear-cut sides,
and that the issues are complex and difficult to categorize. Then
students will declare where they stand on the issue and why (to develop their
own argument).
Using Patterns for College Writing: A Rhetorical Reader and Guide, students examine various
controversial debates such as whether gay couples should be able to adopt,
whether or not US citizens should carry national identity cards, and if African
Americans should receive reparations for slavery. Students apply their
knowledge of argumentation to these debates in order to develop a deeper sense
of their own arguments in their research paper.
At each stage of the research, and in order to
become increasingly aware of themselves as writers and of the techniques
employed by the writers they read, students write journals to reflect on their
process: accumulating sources, and the construction of opinions and their
position. The research paper is taken through several stages and drafts with an
emphasis on revision aided by teacher and peers. Students will submit an
annotated bibliography of every source used in their research paper, including
MLA citations for each source, followed by a synopsis (2-3 sentences) of the
material used in that source.
In conjunction, students will focus on the terms
and practices of Stephen Toulmin’s method of making convincing arguments.
Students will learn about the importance of making strong claims, offering
pertinent data and strong reasons, and connecting claims and reasons with
suitable warrants. Appreciating these key elements of Toulmin’s argument will
help student writers better see how they might present evidence in support of a
particular stance.
Concurrently, students read the first three
chapters of Everyday Use: Rhetoric at Work in Reading and Writing
deepening their understanding and exploration of the term rhetoric. Students
will understand the five canons of rhetoric and apply them to their research
(e.g. the students find that they intuitively employed the strategies of the
canon of invention over the summer).
Second Quarter: Focus on Rhetorical Awareness
Students will understand how various effects are
achieved by writers’ linguistic and rhetorical choices. Using Patterns for
College Writing: A Rhetorical Reader and Guide students
analyze the patterns of arrangement. Throughout, students complete imitation
writings using each of the patterns. Students then write a paper in which they
combine more than one pattern in a piece of writing. The papers are taken
through several stages and drafts in conjunction with mini writing workshops
that focus on grammatical issues such as: the Use of Coordinating and
Subordinating Conjunction, Agreement with Indefinite Pronouns, Using Parallelism,
Avoiding Faulty Constructions, Unnecessary Shifts, Using Commas in a Series,
Avoiding Misplaced and Dangling Modifiers, and Avoiding Run–on Sentences.
In this quarter, students will also begin work on a
rhetorical journal which is due in the third quarter for use during their study
of the canon of Style.
Third Quarter: Focus on Style
Because style is a major component of writing
skill, students review the use of appositive phrases, participial phrases, and
absolute phrases to improve the quality and sophistication of their writing.
Initially, students complete sentence and paragraph imitation exercises; later,
they are expected to highlight their use of these phrases in their major
compositions.
Students will also receive instruction in how to recognize
and incorporate figures of rhetoric in a piece of writing, particularly schemes
and tropes. In this quarter, students will finish the rhetorical journal as
outlined in the previous quarter. Instruction will continue to build on the
previous quarter by implementing further mini workshops that focus on sentence
variety and type, diction, tone, and punctuation. Using sentences of varying
length and complexity broken into parts and written on index cards, students
will try to reconstruct sentences and pieces of punctuation in order to see how
punctuation reflects natural speech patterns, and how punctuation is a powerful
tool for a writer to use to convey meaning.
In addition to reading the autobiographical novel The
Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien, students will read letters from
Students will consider the documents associated
with the Peace Negotiations in
Throughout, students will be trained in the
Socratic seminar, which will be employed to discuss the assigned readings. This
method of teaching suggests that it is more important to enable students to
think for themselves than to merely fill their heads with “right” answers.
Fourth Quarter: Focus on Satire, Fallacies, and the Synthesis Question
At the beginning of the quarter, students will
discuss Horatian and Juvenalian satire, including burlesque, caricature, and
parody, exaggeration, bathos, and reductio ad absurdum. Students will construct
their own editorial cartoons which employ satiric techniques. Students will
also study logical fallacies and be able to identify them in various texts
(written and visual) encountered in the media. Students will write an
analytical letter to a company which uses a logical fallacy in an advertising
campaign (print or broadcast) for one of their products. Students will also
create their own satirical filmed skits.
Because students live in a visually constructed and
oriented world, they should be equipped with the critical analysis of the
visual media they encounter. This course teaches students to analyze how
graphics and visual images both relate to written texts and serve as
alternative forms of the texts themselves.
During the spring semester (third and fourth quarters) students will complete at least four timed essay questions from the posted AP English Language and Composition Exams of previous years. In the spring semester, students also begin to discuss and practice the multiple choice portion of the exam. Students will complete at least four timed multiple choice practice tests.