Task: Now that you have read the first four chapters, what is Crew's style based on what various kinds of figurative language evident in Linda Crew's Children of the River?
Guidelines:
-cite the pages and provide quotations to support your answer
-respond in eight to sixteen sentences
Friday, February 12, 2010
What style of figurative language does Betty Smith use in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn?
Task: Now that you have read the first three chapters, what is Smith's style based on what various kinds of figurative language evident in Betty Smith's A Tree Grows in Brooklyn?
Guidelines:
-cite the pages and provide quotations to support your answer
-respond in eight to sixteen sentences
Guidelines:
-cite the pages and provide quotations to support your answer
-respond in eight to sixteen sentences
What style of figurative language does Sue Monk Kidd use in Secret Life of Bees?
Task: Now that you have read the first chapters of Secret Life of Bees, what is Sue Monk Kidd's writing style based on the various kinds of figurative language styles?
Guidelines:
-cite the pages and provide quotations to support your answer
-respond in eight to sixteen sentences
Guidelines:
-cite the pages and provide quotations to support your answer
-respond in eight to sixteen sentences
What types of figurative language is used in Ernesto Quinonez' Bodega Dreams?
Task: Now that you have read the first four chapters, what is Quinonez' style based on the various kinds of figurative language that is evident in Quinonez' Bodega Dreams?
Guidelines:
-cite the pages and provide quotations to support your answer
-respond in eight to sixteen sentences
Guidelines:
-cite the pages and provide quotations to support your answer
-respond in eight to sixteen sentences
What types of figurative language is used in Charles Dickens' Great Expectations?
Task: Now that you have read the first four chapters, what is Dickens' style based on what various kinds of figurative language are evident in Dickens' Great Expectations?
Guidelines:
-cite the pages and provide quotations to support your answer
-respond in eight to sixteen sentences
Guidelines:
-cite the pages and provide quotations to support your answer
-respond in eight to sixteen sentences
Thursday, February 4, 2010
What does figurative language look like when we use it in our writing?
Teenagers across America typically use colorful language when interacting with their peers, potential sweetheart interests, teachers, parents, and get this, even in class! Their language is filled with the exuberance only found in the nature of an adolescents mind. How fascinating it must be to have a collection of idioms, synecdoches, metonymy's, personified concepts, paradoxes, metaphors and more floating around in one's head just waiting to burst out into the world?
Well, here is the first opportunity to spill ideas out into an open forum that is ready and waiting for the lexical, phonological, orthographic, and syntactic figurative styles of speeches. All you have to do is eloquently respond to the writing prompt and, if you feel adventurous, one person's blog response.
Here's the writing prompt:
The streets of New York are clogged with the odoriferous scents of millions of people during rush hour in the mornings, afternoons, and evenings. Yet instead of adults recognizing that there are far too many people lurking in the midst of the chaos who bump, scream, annoy, or disrupt the daily flow of the unsuspecting teenager; adults force teens to become a part of the melee.
What unique experience have you endured, or witnessed, that would provide a sound argument for allowing young adult students the opportunity to create their own school schedule?
Guidelines:
1. Remember to use at least one type of figure of speech, such as onomatopoeia, simile, metaphor, etc.
2. Use appropriate language and grammatically correct sentences.
3. Respond to the writing prompt
4. Proofread your work before publishing it.
5. Happy writing!
Well, here is the first opportunity to spill ideas out into an open forum that is ready and waiting for the lexical, phonological, orthographic, and syntactic figurative styles of speeches. All you have to do is eloquently respond to the writing prompt and, if you feel adventurous, one person's blog response.
Here's the writing prompt:
The streets of New York are clogged with the odoriferous scents of millions of people during rush hour in the mornings, afternoons, and evenings. Yet instead of adults recognizing that there are far too many people lurking in the midst of the chaos who bump, scream, annoy, or disrupt the daily flow of the unsuspecting teenager; adults force teens to become a part of the melee.
What unique experience have you endured, or witnessed, that would provide a sound argument for allowing young adult students the opportunity to create their own school schedule?
Guidelines:
1. Remember to use at least one type of figure of speech, such as onomatopoeia, simile, metaphor, etc.
2. Use appropriate language and grammatically correct sentences.
3. Respond to the writing prompt
4. Proofread your work before publishing it.
5. Happy writing!
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