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Warm-Up: What 3 time periods have we focused on? What 2 types of writing have we focused on? SWBAT: Get an A on the mid term exam by completing an exam review. HW: 1. Vocab. quiz tomorrow.

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Warm-Up:. What 3 time periods have we focused on? What 2 types of writing have we focused on?. SWBAT: Get an A on the mid term exam by completing an exam review. HW: 1. Vocab. quiz tomorrow. Activity:. With a partner, complete the mid term exam review. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Warm-Up:

Warm-Up:

• What 3 time periods have we focused on?

• What 2 types of writing have we focused on?

SWBAT:Get an A on the mid term

exam by completing an exam review.

HW:1. Vocab. quiz tomorrow.

Page 2: Warm-Up:

Activity:

• With a partner, complete the mid term exam review.

• You will have all of class to work on this

• You will receive extra credit on the mid term based on your effort and completion of this review.

• I will collect this at the end of class.

Page 3: Warm-Up:

AGENDA:

1. Review answers on mid term review sheet

HW:Study for mid terms and

have a great weekend!

Page 4: Warm-Up:

Why did the Puritans come to America?

They wanted to separate/purify from the Church of England because they thought it was

corrupt.

Page 5: Warm-Up:

Why was The Crucible written?

In response to McCarthyism.

Page 6: Warm-Up:

How does Edwards present God in “Sinners in the Hands…”?

As a being that is angry and vengeful.

Page 7: Warm-Up:

Plain Style? And why do the Puritans use it?

It mirrored their style of worship. Plain, simple, direct.

Page 8: Warm-Up:

What is Rationalism?

A belief based in logic and reason.

Page 9: Warm-Up:

Franklin’s purpose for writing The Autobiography?

A explain how to reach moral perfection through study.

Page 10: Warm-Up:

What is an aphorism?

A short, witty statement that teaches a moral or lesson.

Page 11: Warm-Up:

Henry’s purpose in his Speech to the Virginia Convention?

To persuade his fellow delegates to fight against the British.

Page 12: Warm-Up:

How does Paine end The Crisis?

He points out the strengths of the Colonial army.

Page 13: Warm-Up:

Main idea in The Declaration of independence?

H.

Page 14: Warm-Up:

Rationalist Writers?

T. PaineP. Henry

B. FranklinT. Jefferson

Page 15: Warm-Up:

Colonial Writers?

Jonathan EdwardsAnne BradstreetWilliam Bradford

Page 16: Warm-Up:

Native American Writing?

Oral tradition, informal/diverse language; revered relationship to nature.

Page 17: Warm-Up:

Colonial Literature?

Journals/sermons/prayers, simple language

Page 18: Warm-Up:

Revolutionary Literature?

Journals/Speeches/pamphlets/essays

Page 19: Warm-Up:

Logos?

Appeals to logic.

Page 20: Warm-Up:

Ethos?

Appeals to the credibility or reputation of the speaker.

Page 21: Warm-Up:

Pathos?

Appeals to the emotions of the listener/reader

Page 22: Warm-Up:

Simile?

A comparison using like or as.

Page 23: Warm-Up:

Metaphor?

A comparison between to thing not using like or as.

Page 24: Warm-Up:

Personification?

Giving inanimate objects human characteristics or traits.

Page 25: Warm-Up:

Hyperbole?

An exaggeration.

Page 26: Warm-Up:

Allusion?

A reference to someone or something not there.LiteraryBiblical

Historical

Page 27: Warm-Up:

Repetition?

The same word at the beginning of successive clauses

Page 28: Warm-Up:

Rhetorical Questions?

A question that does not need to be answered and causes the reader to reflect on the issue

being discussed.

Page 29: Warm-Up:

Tone?

The author’s attitude toward the subject he/she is writing about.

Page 30: Warm-Up:

Attention Grabber?

• A question• A quote

• A bold statement• A fact/statistic

Page 31: Warm-Up:

3 parts of an effective introduction?

• Attention grabber• Background information on the topic

• Claim/thesis

Page 32: Warm-Up:

Body paragraphs?

• Transition that connects to your claim• Example that proves your claim

• Explanation of how that example proves your claim

Page 33: Warm-Up:

Conclusion?

• Restate your claim• Summarize your main points

• Leave your reader with a final impression (why they should change their view/why the topic is

important/what they should do next)

Page 34: Warm-Up:

Will a strong argument demolish counterclaims?

YES

Page 35: Warm-Up:

A summery should NEVER include…

Your opinion!