Senior English 243: Shakespeare

ASSIGNMENT: Every weekend throughout the year—except during designated Homework-Free weekends and vacations—students will be expected to (a) read at least twenty-five minutes in an independent reading book and (b) also provide page details of their reading. Three things to do after reading: (1) integrate a quotation in a comment about the reading’s critical or personal significance; (2) continued personal, or philosophical, response to the reading section overall (approx. 75-100 words); (3) include two recently-studied vocabulary words into your response.

A full-credit homework grade is given if the assignment shows full effort—that is, all components, regardless of their correctness, are earnestly completed.

Feel free to read your 25 minutes during the school week also. And feel free to read for more than 25 minutes, too; I hope you will.

a.  Read 25 minutes (at least) of weekend independent reading

b.  Heading that gives details of your reading.

o  Your Name

o  Date entry is turned in

o  Book title

o  Page numbers read since the last entry (during the week or weekend), with total number of pages in parentheses

1.  Integrated Quotation. Write two or three sentences in which you integrate a meaningful quotation—or a small section from the quotation, or just a phrase—from your reading with a comment about either its significance to your reading or your personal response to it.

2.  Continued Response. Provide a short personal or philosophical response to the reading (75-100 words). This can be an expanded discussion of your response to the specific quotation. How does the reading touch your own experience or thinking? How is it important to you? Briefly explore a meaningful connection.

3.  Vocabulary Application. Write two sentences with two vocabulary of the three or four words that are related to your reading. Any loose connection is fine; the goal is make meaningful use of the recently-learned vocabulary words.

INTENSIVE (HONORS) STUDENTS

In addition to (or instead of) a choice outside reading book to be completed for each term, honors students must read one additional play by Shakespeare.

o  Term 1—histories: any one of the plays from the Henriad: Richard II; Henry IV, Part 2; or Henry V

o  Term 2—comedies: As You Like It, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, or another comedy not read before

o  Term 3—tragedies: Macbeth, Othello, or another tragedy not read before

o  Term 4—no weekend reading requirement

Term 1

1.  T 9/8—nothing due

2.  T 9/15 (Rosh Hashanah—M 9/14)—have an independent reading book chosen by the end of the week

3.  Due M 9/21 (W 9/23—Yom Kippur)—Henry IV, Pt. 1—Vocab: AUSPCIOUS, BESMIRCH, DAUNTLESS (Choose any two words.)

4.  Due M 9/28—Henry IV, Pt. 1—Vocab: EQUIVOCAL/UNEQUIVOCAL, HOBNOB, PEDANTIC

5.  Due M 10/5—Henry IV, Pt. 1—Vocab: SANCTIMONIOUS, TRENCHANT, DISCOMFITING

6.  T 10/13 (Mon—Columbus Day)—Henry IV, Pt. 1—NOTHING DUE—HW-Free Weekend

7.  Due M 10/19—Henry IV, Pt. 1—Vocab: MALEVOLENT, SUPERFLUOUS, BELIE

8.  Due M 10/26—Henry IV, Pt. 1—Vocab: BOMBASTIC, CORPULENT, WANTON

9.  Due M 11/2—Sonnets—Vocab: CAPITULATE, IMPUDENT, INTRACTABLE

10.  Due M 11/9 (Veterans Day—Th 11/11)—Sonnets—Special Weekend Reading—“The Things They Carried”

·  Vocab: PELL-MELL, ASSAY, PERNICIOUS

Term 2

11.  Due M 11/16—Much Ado About Nothing—Vocab: FLOUT, OBSTINATE, MORTIFIED

12.  Due M 11/23 (Thanksgiving)—Much Ado About Nothing—Vocab: MIRTH, BLITHE, OSTENTATIOUS

13.  M 11/30—Much Ado About Nothing —NOTHING DUE—HW-Free Weekend

14.  Due M 12/7—Twelfth Night—Vocab: MITIGATE, MALEFACTOR, FETTER

15.  Due M 12/14—Twelfth Night—Vocab: DISSEMBLE, ENIGMA, SURFEIT

16.  Due M 12/21—Much Ado/Twelfth Night—Vocab: PRATTLE, PRODIGAL, ABJURE

[12/24-31—DECEMBER RECESS]

17.  M 1/4—NOTHING DUE Heintzelman creative writing

18.  Due M 1/11—Hamlet—Vocab: NONPAREIL, PEEVISH, CHURLISH

19.  Due T 1/19 (MLK Day)— Hamlet—Special Weekend Reading—MLK’s Letter from Birmingham Jail

·  Vocab: MELLIFLUOUS, USURP, HARROW

Term 3

20.  Due M 1/25—Hamlet—Vocab: AVOUCH, EMULATE, PORTENTOUS

21.  Due M 2/1—Hamlet—Vocab: HARBINGER, IMPOTENT, FILIAL

22.  Due M 2/8—Hamlet—Vocab: PERSEVER, IMPIOUS, RETROGRAD

[2/15-19—WINTER VACATION (HW-Free)]

23.  M 2/22—Hamlet —NOTHING DUE—HW-Free Vacation

24.  Due M 2/29—King Lear—Vocab: JOCUND, TRUNCHEON, WAX/WANE, IMPORTUNE

25.  Due M 3/7—King Lear (including Taoist poems)—Vocab: LIBERTINE, BEHOOVE, BEGUILE, PITEOUS

26.  Due M 3/14—King Lear—Vocab: DISTEMPERED, APOPLEXED, EXTOL, DEARTH

27.  Due M 3/21 (MCAS ELA testing; Good Friday)—King Lear—Vocab: AUGURY, FELICITY, OPULENT, DERIDE

28.  Due M 3/28—King Lear—Vocab: CHOLERIC, MALEDICTION, CREDULOUS, CHIDE

29.  Due M 4/4— King Lear—Vocab: INSOLENT, EPICURE, PENURY, ENMITY

Term 4: NO WEEKEND READING REQUIREMENT

WEEKLY INDEPENDENT READING WEEKEND ASSIGNMENT (EXAMPLE)

Alan Reinstein

9/10/12

The Other Wes Moore

Pages Read—85-107 (22 pages)

1.  Integrated Quotation. The day after Wes returns to the military school after trying to run away, he notices and appreciates the respect the younger cadets give to their nineteen-year-old Cadet Captain, Ty Hill. Wes writes that he “had never seen a man, a peer, demand that much respect from his people” (96) and continues that this “was real respect, the kind you can’t beat or scare out of people” (96). Here is the moment that Wes seems to decide that he wants to be this kind of person, which reveals the importance of a role model not only in Wes’s life, but in anyone’s.

2.  Continued Response. It does make me think of just how important it is to have role models of integrity and decency in one’s life, and I’m thinking now of the people who have guided me in my own life. These role models can come from anywhere—from literature, art, history, as well as from personal acquaintance. I’m thinking of how much I’ve learned from characters in books, for instance. Sometimes I imagine how Lao Tzu, the poet and originator of Taoism, would respond to a certain problem I might have, what advice he would likely give me.

3.  Vocabulary: AUSPICIOUS, DAUNTLESS

a.  Prisoner Wes’s early struggles began inauspiciously with the absence of a father.

b.  Author Wes’s dauntless leap from an airplane at two-thousand feet secured my admiration for him.