2011-12 Syllabus: WDS1 English
Teacher: Shaun Kehowski
Courses: 3 & 4
Email: skehowski@cmsec.org
The goals in the English classroom are:
1. To
understand the elements and structure of different genres of literature while learning the necessary reading skills and strategies,
literary concepts and vocabulary that will enable students to comprehend diverse reading materials.
2. To gain an understanding of the writing process,
practice using it, and to begin incorporating it into all daily classroom activities.
The student will begin creating and maintaining a writing portfolio, which will become a tool for charting progress
focusing on various aspects of writing.
3. To gain confidence with
writing, to appreciate and increase knowledge of literature, and to become better prepared to pass the MCAS.
4. To improve the understanding
of oral and written language vocabulary, and the structure of language.
Composition:
There will be three
kinds of writing assignments: extended compositions, short open-response questions, and informal reflective writing. Writing
is the key component in the English classroom, and will be practiced in some form on most days throughout the school year.
Language:
Text: Basic English. 2000 Globe Fearon,
Inc.
A few weeks of the
school year will be dedicated to reviewing the eight parts of speech, sentence and paragraph structure, and punctuation found
in the English Language.
Literature:
Texts: Holt Elements
of Literature (courses 3 & 4) 2009 Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, Inc
Throughout the school year students will
be actively engaged in a variety of reading across the genres of Fiction (short stories/novel), Nonfiction (biography/autobiography/essay),
Drama, and Poetry.
Media:
We live in a technology-driven society,
and the Virtual English Classroom can be accessed at wds1english.tripod.com. There you will find every selected piece of literature, document, writing prompt, assigned task, and
important news presented daily in the classroom.
The grade will be based on five (5) parts: Test, Quiz, Folders, Performance, and Homework.
Based on 100% equaling (=) A+
Test
= 40%
Quiz
= 30%
Folders
= 10%
Performance
= 10%
Homework = 10%
Total
= 100%
Tests:
There will be tests on classroom notes
and selected pieces of literature, and a quarter final at the end of each marking period. Completed final drafts of every
extended composition will also be graded as a test.
Quizzes:
For every selected piece of literature,
students will complete open-book quizzes highlighting the key literary concepts discussed in the classroom, as well as other
quizzes presented in various learning styles.
Folders:
Students will complete a daily informal
writing assignment in response to a selected prompt. Every completed entry will be graded as 100%; every missing response
will be graded as 0%.
Performance:
Each day the student
is given a grade that reflects their performance in the classroom ranging from 3 to 0.
The grade is based on teacher observations, and it reflects the three A’s: Attendance, Attitude, and Academic Achievement.
Homework:
There will be homework most days, some
in the written form, and some consisting of studying. Short-answer homework assignments
will be graded as 100% or 0%. The homework must be on time, and the student must
at least attain minimal effort to receive 100%. Anything else will receive 0%.
Homework open-response writing assignments will be graded using a 2-point rubric: 2= above average effort, 1= average effort,
0= poor effort. Part of the homework assignment is the responsibility to bring
the homework back and when it is due. No early or late homework assignments will
be accepted. When the homework assignment is to study for a quiz or test, the
student will receive a homework grade that equals their test or quiz score. For instance if a student gets 100% on a quiz,
they will receive a 100 for their homework grade. If a student receives 40%, reflecting poor studying which is the homework
assignment, the student will receive a 40 for their homework grade.