Freshman English
Course Number: 0022
Level: College Prep
Department: English
Course Description
Prerequisite: None
Open to: Freshmen
Length: Year
Credit: 1
Summary: Freshman CP
English focuses on fundamental reading, writing (including grammar), and
thinking skills. Reading includes fiction, poetry, and non-fiction: the
understanding of the means of characterization, defining the implied
cause-and-effect in more sophisticated plot structure, the significance of
setting in storytelling, identifying common archetypes in human experience,
deciphering metaphors, and identifying main ideas and the reasoning supporting
them. Most importantly in all reading is learning how to formulate insightful
questions to aid comprehension. Writing experiences include personal
narratives, the work with inductive and deductive reasoning, the structuring of
comparison and contrast essays, and paraphrasing and summarizing. With respect
to research skills, students become familiar with the school library on-line
catalog , the organization of library shelving according to the Dewey Decimal
System, and several on-line databases.
Course Goals:
- Formulating
insightful questions to aid reading comprehension
- Improving vocabulary
by deciphering contextual clues and word formations
- Focusing a purpose in
writing and identifying the most advantageous organization of thought
- Identifying the basis
components of sentence structure and understanding how they dictate correct
usage and punctuation
- Accessing on-line
databases and evaluating their authority and quality
Textbooks and Materials:
Primary Texts for
Annotation: Macbeth and To Kill a Mockingbird
Other Required Texts:
The Odyssey and Night
Supplementary Texts:
Black Boy, Lovely Bones ,Curious Incident, Slaughter House Five, Monster, Color
of Water, Hiroshima
Assorted poems and essays
Course Outline
First Semester
Reading & Writing
Experiences:
Identifying means of
characterization; formulating insightful questions to aid reading comprehension;
understanding imagery and figurative language in poetry; deductive/ inductive
reasoning; defining the main idea of an expository or argumentative text and the
reasoning supporting its development; defining one’s purpose in writing and
identifying the organization of thought supporting it; writing a personal
narrative; creating a poem; paraphrasing and summarizing.
Two of the following
primary texts: Macbeth, To Kill a Mockingbird, The Odyssey, Night
Grammar: Understanding
basic sentence and clause structure and the correct punctuation thereof;
identifying parts of speech.
Orientation to school
library shelving; on-line school library catalog; several on-line databases
Major Assessments:
Reading exams, essay assignments, and assessment of grammar knowledge and
editing skills
Second Semester
Reading & Writing
Experiences:
Identifying means of
characterization; formulating insightful questions to aid reading comprehension;
understanding imagery and figurative language in poetry; defining the main idea
of an expository or argumentative text and the reasoning supporting its
development; defining tone in prose and poetry; defining one’s purpose in
writing and the organization and fuller development of thought; composing
comparison/contrast essays; paraphrasing and summarizing; interviewing.
Two of the primary texts
not read first semester: Macbeth, To Kill A Mockingbird, The Odyssey, Night
Grammar: Subject-Verb
Agreement, Varying sentence beginnings, pronoun case, pronoun and antecedent
agreement
Major Assessments:
Reading exams, essay assignments, and assessment of grammar knowledge and
editing skills
(Parents and students: please
consult individual teachers for grading policies, extra credit info, class
procedures, etc.)