English 10a
OverviewStudents will read and analyze world literature using Jungian archetypes to see human universals and the development of culture. Students will write in narrative, expository, and persuasive modes, using primary and secondary sources to support assertions. Students will give a persuasive speech, following a speech-writing process, and use PowerPoint as an organizational tool and visual aid. Instruction will provide preparation for State testing in reading and writing, which will occur in the spring. Course Goals Identify and analyze human universals in literature through archetypes expressed in cross-culture myths. Identify and analyze socio-politic formations through literature. Recognize individual choice and ethics working towards a personal recognition of morality and ethics. Understand and analyze trends in the development of Western civilization from Sumerian to modern era. Develop the ability to read for deeper meaning through high order thinking skills, response writing, narrative, expository, and persuasive essays, persuasive speeches, projects and presentations, and discussion. Analyze texts for similarities and differences in the manifestation of archetypes (e.g. physical hero versus mental hero versus spiritual hero). Core CurriculumElliott, George P. et al . Themes in World Literature . Houghton Mifflin Company: Boston . 1989. Gilgamesh Antigone Animal Farm Classical Greco-Roman Mythology: Perseus, Theseus, Hercules, and other selections |