Thursday, October 15, 2009

Friday, October 9, 2009

Genres

Some links about different genres:

A quick YouTube Intro (not scientific...)

Sunday, August 23, 2009

English 10 Short Stories

  1. Ray Bradbury - "The Pedestrian"
  2. Albert Camus - "The Guest"
  3. Katherine Mansfield - "The Garden Party"
  4. William Faulkner - "A Rose for Emily"
  5. Eudora Welty - "A Worn Path"
  6. Alice Walker - "Everyday Use"
  7. Kate Chopin - "Desiree's Baby"
  8. Kate Chopin - "The Story of an Hour"
  9. Joseph Conrad - "The Lagoon"
  10. Truman Capote - "A Christmas Memory"
  11. Edgar Allan Poe - "The Black Cat"
  12. Edgar Allan Poe - "The Cask of Amontillado"
  13. James Baldwin - "Sonny's Blues"
  14. Richard Connell - "The Most Dangerous Game"
  15. Roald Dahl - "The Man from the South"
  16. John Cheever - "The Swimmer"
  17. Nathaniel Hawthorne - "Young Goodman Brown"
  18. Charlotte Perkins Gilman - "The Yellow Wallpaper"
  19. O. Henry - "The Gift of the Magi"
  20. Rudyard Kipling - "The Man Who Would Be King"
  21. Katherine Mansfield - "The Stranger"
  22. Katherine Mansfield - "Miss Brill"
  23. Catherine Ann Porter - "The Jilting of Granny Weatherall"
  24. Zora Neale Hurston - "Story in Harlem Slang"
  25. James Thurber - "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty"
  26. Ernest Hemingway - "Hills Like White Elephants"
  27. Ernest Hemingway - "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place"
  28. John Steinbeck - "The Chrysanthemums"
  29. John Cheever - "The Enormous Radio"
  30. Shirley Jackson - "The Lottery"
  31. Kurt Vonnegut - "Harrison Burgeron"
  32. Doris Lessing - "Through the Tunnel" (also in textbook)
  33. Shirley Jackson - "The Possibility of Evil" (look in textbook)
  34. Louise Erdrich - "The Leap" (also in textbook)
  35. Judith Ortiz Cofer - "Catch the Moon" (also in textbook)
  36. Selma Lagerlof - "The Rat Trap" (also in textbook)
  37. Lan Samantha Chang - "Housepainting" (look in textbook)
  38. Catherine Lim - "Ah Bah's Money"
  39. Lisa Fugard - "Night Calls" (also in textbook)
  40. Garbriel Garcia-Marquez - "A Very Old Man With Enormous Wings" (also in textbook)
  41. Sandra Cisneros - "Geraldo No Last Name"
  42. Sandra Cisneros - "My Lucy Friend Who Smells Like Corn" (also in textbook)
  43. Tim O'Brien - "Where Have You Gone, Charming Billy?" (also in textbook)
  44. Jack Finney - "Contents of the Dead Man's Pocket" (also in textbook)
  45. Ray Bradbury - "The Pedestrian" (also in textbook)
  46. John Cheever - "The Opportunity" (look in textbook)
  47. Amy Tan - "Two Kinds" (look in textbook)
  48. Tobias Wolff - "Powder" (also in textbook)
  49. Stephen Vincent Benet - "By the Waters of Babylon" (also in textbook) - note: this story is in two parts on the online page.
  50. Saki - "The Storyteller" (also in textbook)
  51. Tom Godwin - "The Cold Equations" (also in textbook)
There are so many more, but this is a good start from some of the masters!

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Survey Link

Click on this link:

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=ObMdjNEr5xYdYMIHDQ1_2b1A_3d_3d


to access the English wants survey (and to receive credit for your homework). Sorry in advance about the scrolling up and down that you'll have to do to log some answers.


Hopefully this survey will help me design activities this year that tap into your interests, although if you are in an IB course, much of what we will be doing is already set by the IB.

Enjoy!

Mr. Carter

Sunday, May 17, 2009

This Tangled Web

Here are some resources for understanding how to evaluate information on the web.
  1. "Internet Site Evaluation Worksheet" from Jim Burke's excellent teaching website. This file is a .PDF so you must have Adobe Acrobat to open it.
  2. "A Student's Guide to Research on the World Wide Web" from Saint Louis University (found here on the Texas Tech University website). A valuable resource with lots of links to other sites.
  3. "Criteria for Evaluating Resources" from Keith Stanger of Easter Michigan University. This web page is a list of criteria to help you evaluate the validity of information found on the internet.
  4. "Evaluating Internet Resources: Site Examples" from Keith Stanger of Eastern Michigan University. This website provides a huge list of internet pages that are of varying levels of dubiousness.
  5. "Evaluating Internet Research Sources" by Robert Harris, a professor at the University of Southern California. This article is off of the website Virtual Salt, and I recommend the article highly.
  6. "Evaluation of Information Sources" is a site from New Zealand, a compilation of links to many, many sites offering articles, tips, and pages dedicated to the thoughtful evaluation of information on the web (and other sources). It's quite comprehensive.
  7. "Applying Writing Guidelines to Web Pages" from Jakob Nielson's website www.useit.com, dedicated to "usability" guidelines on the internet. These criteria distinguish writing for the web from other types of writing, establishing web content as a kind of genre in its own right.