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==Latest Homework==
 
[[Bild:notes1.jpg]]
 
  
==Older Homework==
 
There is a Garden in her Face:
 
  
There is a garden in her face
 
Where roses and white lilies grow;
 
A heav'nly paradise is that place
 
Wherein all pleasant fruits do flow.
 
There cherries grow which none may buy,
 
Till "Cherry ripe" themselves do cry.<br>
 
Those cherries fairly do enclose
 
Of orient pearl a double row,
 
Which when her lovely laughter shows,
 
They look like rose-buds fill'd with snow;
 
Yet them nor peer nor prince can buy,
 
Till "Cherry ripe" themselves do cry.<br>
 
Her eyes like angels watch them still,
 
Her brows like bended bows do stand,
 
Threat'ning with piercing frowns to kill
 
All that attempt with eye or hand
 
Those sacred cherries to come nigh,
 
Till "Cherry ripe" themselves do cry.
 
  
Questions:
 
  
# What is the rhyme scheme?
+
='''Latest Homework '''=
# What parts of the poem are there?
+
# Who is the speaker talking about and what is his “message”?
+
# What images are used and what do they imply?
+
  
 +
* Describe and analyze '''[http://media.caglecartoons.com/media/cartoons/6/2007/07/12/39909_600.jpg this cartoon]'''!
  
  
  
Essay Writing:
 
  
# Write out the introduction for one of the quotes on your worksheet! Define, rephrase etc. the quote ...!
+
='''Recent Homework'''=
Write down notes for your essay ==> arguments (min. 4) + supporting points + examples
+
  
  
 +
1. "Man is the measure of all things."
  
 +
What is your opinion on this statement that Krauthammer bases his argument upon?
  
* Answer (write it down, preferably into your wiki page) questions two and three on the worksheet on Madonna's "American Life"
+
2. Protecting the environment while maximizing profits - an insolvable conflict?
* It may help to listen to the song ...
+
:{{#ev:youtube |STWNeiwygHs|180}}
+
  
 +
'''If your first name begins with A -  K ==><BR>'''
  
 +
The pell-mell pursuit of profits by businesses has long been a major source of pollution. But could such greed be used instead to help preserve the environment? A growing number of politicians and economists think so, and they have come up with the idea of allowing companies to buy and sell the "right" to pollute as part of a plan to encourage them to clean up their operations.
  
 +
Ultimately, there could be a national or even global market that would treat pollution permits like stocks and bonds. The strategy is not so strange as it sounds; the Environmental Protection Agency used it in the 1970s to curb pollution in selected cities. President George Bush  made  trading pollution rights the centerpiece of his plan to combat acid rain across the U.S., with his proposal attracting an ideologically diverse band of supporters, from conservative economists, who despised standard types of Government regulations, to environment-minded legislators, who were ready for a fresh approach to pollution control.
  
  
 +
'''If your first name begins with L -  Z ==><BR>'''
  
 +
Under Bush's plan, the Government would set a national limit on emissions of sulfur dioxide, a prime cause of acid rain. But, instead of dictating how to meet the target, the Government would let the marketplace determine the cheapest, most efficient way to get the job done. Each company would be allotted an acceptable level of SO2 production, amounting to its fair share of the national limit. If a company managed to pollute less than its share, it could receive permits representing the shortfall, which it could sell to firms that could not meet their target. That is where the power of greed comes in: companies would have an enormous incentive to cut their emissions so they could profit from peddling their surplus permits.
 +
 +
Even the most enthusiastic advocates admitted right from the start that a market in pollution rights presented an immense challenge, mainly due to the difficulty of  making sure companies had enough legal permits to cover all their pollution.
  
  
* Download  [[Media:american dream.mm| this mindmap]]!
+
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,969366-2,00.html
* Read page 2 of your worksheet on "The American Dream" and try to do question 2 ==> include your findings into the mindmap. To do so (open the mindmap) you need to download [http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/freemind/FreeMind-Windows-Installer-0.8.1-max.exe?download "Fremind" here!] and install it.
+
* In case you can't install freemind - just make a neat list of all your findings!
+
  
  
  
* Finish (if necessary) and prepare to present your team's definition of and presentation of "Received Pronunciation"  or "Estuary English"
 
  
  
Learn the summary and look at the vocabulary ....!
 
* [[LK Englisch/Thelenberg 2009 11/Class and Responsibility| Vocabulary and Summary for text from Monday, 23rd November]]
 
  
  
 +
'''Translation:'''
  
* Finish analysis of 4 introductions: type of introduction, elements (question, ...), structure, What mistakes ???
 
* Write introduction to Essay! ==> Essay Topic: Every child growing up in poverty is a ticking social timebomb!
 
* Write out 1st argument of essay
 
  
 +
The war in Iraq is the direct result of the work of US city-planners in the mid-1920s and it was inevitable - not because of weapons of mass destruction, as claimed by the political right, nor because of western imperialism, as claimed by the left. The undeniable cause of this war and  the ones to follow it, is America’s love affair with cars.
  
 +
In the early 19th century buses replaced trams, and then cars replaced buses, while General Motors bought up the last tramways to close them down.
  
'''Essay Topic: Every child growing up in poverty is a ticking social timebomb!'''
+
Cars offered an escape from dirty, crowded cities to leafy garden-suburbs, with the freeways serving as escape routes. So America turned itself into a nation of home-owners living in vast suburbs spread so widely that servicing them economically with public transport has become impossible.
  
 +
Today the US transportation sector is almost totally dependent on oil, and supplies are running out. America needs oil and Saddam Hussein has been sitting on it – the second largest supply in the world.
 +
 +
<small>Ian Roberts, The Guardian,  Saturday January 18, 2003 (adapted)</small>
  
'''Translate''' [http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/obamas-nobel-peace-prize-high-honor-heavy-burden/story?id=8798679 Surprise Peace Prize Award Sets a Higher Bar for the President] until "''made the clear the prize was intended to encourage Obama to greatness rather than celebrate any achievement''."!
 
  
  
 +
----
  
'''Translate''' the paragraph from "The United States Court of Appeals"  to "is not an individual right." from [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/18/opinion/18tue2.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=editorial+and+guns&st=nyt this article]! (It's the third paragraph!)
 
  
 +
Answer the following questions on "What Place for God in Europe?"
  
 +
#Why has religion become a difficult topic in Europe according to the first section of the article? (Paris)
 +
#Why does the question of the role of religion divide the USA and Europe according to part 2 (Enlightenment divergence) a nd 4 Philosophical Diffrences)?
 +
#What is the author's position? How does this become clear?
  
'''Create a short entry  in your own user page in this wiki. Use the following  formats/forms'''
 
  
* bold and italic text
+
----
* green or red text
+
* a short numbered  list of your thoughts on the election in Germany this weekend
+
* at least 4 headlines
+
  
Finally find at least 2 good English articles/webpages on '''what the Americans expected/hoped for from Obama''' and if (they think) he fulfills these hopes and expectations.
 
  
Create a numbered and annotated link collection like this for these two (or more) articles you have found.
+
'''If your first name begins with A -  K ==><BR>'''
  
It could look like this (if the topic was "bananas"):
+
* Read [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3658172.stm Religion and politics in America]!
  
:# [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banana Banana] Wikipedia entry on bananas, good basic information and nice pictures
+
* Write down 8 questions and formulate the 8 answers to be asked and answered from this article, that express the basics about religion an politics!
:# [http://www.bananas.org/ http://www.bananas.org/] Everything about sorts of, growing, cooking with and selling bananas. Good forums.
+
 
 +
 
 +
----
 +
 
 +
 
 +
'''If your first name begins with L -  Z ==><BR>'''
 +
 
 +
* Read [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article5050685.ece Religion remains fundamental to US politics]!
 +
* Write down 8 questions and formulate the 8 answers to be asked and answered from this article, that express the basics about religion an politics!
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
* Group 1: Letters on pp. 119-120  and pp. 122 (Hilary to Philip)
 +
* Group 2: Letter(s) on pp. 120-122
 +
* Group 3: Letter(s) on pp. 122-124
 +
* Group 4: Letter(s) on pp. 124-128
 +
* Group 5: Letter(s) on pp. 128-130
 +
* Group 6: Letter(s) on pp. 131-133
 +
 
 +
Look at:
 +
* Funny passages - How are they created by the narrator?
 +
* Dramatic irony - Who knows what - who doesn't? Does reader feel pity or superiority?
 +
* language that helps to characterize the writer?
 +
* basic information in letter?
 +
 
 +
 
 +
PLUS:
 +
 
 +
1. '''Groups 1, 2, 3: pp. 134-137:'''
 +
::How do the Zapps (Desire and Morris) see Philip?
 +
 
 +
2. '''Groups 4, 5, 6: pp. 137-141:'''
 +
::How do the Swallows (Philip and Hilary) see Morris?
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
----
 +
 
 +
='''Questions on Changing Places (for Thursday - TODAY!)'''=
 +
* Read fom page 210 on!
 +
* Answer the questions in complete, written sentences!
 +
* Finish these questions as our homework for Monday!
 +
 
 +
# pp. 210 - 211: What does Morris feel about Rummidge and university life there?
 +
# pp. 211-212 Why does Morris love the paternoster elevator?
 +
# pp. 214 ("Jane Austen mumbled ...") - 215 ("the internal telephone rang") What parts of Zapp's character as a teacher/academic become visible here?
 +
# pp. 216 ("the telephone rang") - 218 ("God forbid") How does Zapp's relation with Hilary develop and what is his opinion of her wish to study again?
 +
# pp. 220("Ah Zapp") -  223 ("The VC broke off")? Explain Zapp's arguments and motives for suppporting Philip's career!
 +
# pp. 223 ("I'm sorry Vice Chncellor")  - 227 ("top of the shaft") Try to sum up this passage in about 5 - 7 sentences.
 +
# pp. 227 ("Hilary wore a") - 230 ("Let's go upstairs") Why does Hilary react so strangely at first and why does she change her mind again ...?
 +
# Finish this chapter and sum up the perspectives for Morris in England! Do you think he will stay?
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
----
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
* [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/NationalStereotypes National stereotypes] See those on Britain and the USA.
 +
* [http://www.tobsy.de/?p=30 10 Stereotypes about Americans]
 +
* [http://enduringamericajr.blogspot.com/2008/12/stereotyped-america.html Stereotyped America] See original article!
 +
 
 +
 
 +
----
 +
 
 +
 
 +
'''Prepare a short presentation (about 5 minutes) of one of these novels!'''
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
:Angela's Ashes
 +
:The Catcher in the Rye
 +
:Nineteen Eighty-Four
 +
:Brave New World
 +
:Changing Places
 +
:The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
 +
:About a Boy
 +
:Fight Club
 +
:The Virgin Suicides
 +
 
 +
 
 +
'''Include:'''
 +
 
 +
* title, author, year of publication
 +
* theme/basic plot, narrator/point of view
 +
* personal judgement (should we read it or not?)
 +
 
 +
="Old" Homework 2009/2010=
 +
 
 +
 
 +
[[LK Englisch/Thelenberg 2009 11/homework_k12| Homework K12]]

Aktuelle Version vom 14. März 2011, 15:06 Uhr



Inhaltsverzeichnis

Latest Homework



Recent Homework

1. "Man is the measure of all things."

What is your opinion on this statement that Krauthammer bases his argument upon?

2. Protecting the environment while maximizing profits - an insolvable conflict?

If your first name begins with A - K ==>

The pell-mell pursuit of profits by businesses has long been a major source of pollution. But could such greed be used instead to help preserve the environment? A growing number of politicians and economists think so, and they have come up with the idea of allowing companies to buy and sell the "right" to pollute as part of a plan to encourage them to clean up their operations.

Ultimately, there could be a national or even global market that would treat pollution permits like stocks and bonds. The strategy is not so strange as it sounds; the Environmental Protection Agency used it in the 1970s to curb pollution in selected cities. President George Bush made trading pollution rights the centerpiece of his plan to combat acid rain across the U.S., with his proposal attracting an ideologically diverse band of supporters, from conservative economists, who despised standard types of Government regulations, to environment-minded legislators, who were ready for a fresh approach to pollution control.


If your first name begins with L - Z ==>

Under Bush's plan, the Government would set a national limit on emissions of sulfur dioxide, a prime cause of acid rain. But, instead of dictating how to meet the target, the Government would let the marketplace determine the cheapest, most efficient way to get the job done. Each company would be allotted an acceptable level of SO2 production, amounting to its fair share of the national limit. If a company managed to pollute less than its share, it could receive permits representing the shortfall, which it could sell to firms that could not meet their target. That is where the power of greed comes in: companies would have an enormous incentive to cut their emissions so they could profit from peddling their surplus permits.

Even the most enthusiastic advocates admitted right from the start that a market in pollution rights presented an immense challenge, mainly due to the difficulty of making sure companies had enough legal permits to cover all their pollution.


http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,969366-2,00.html




Translation:


The war in Iraq is the direct result of the work of US city-planners in the mid-1920s and it was inevitable - not because of weapons of mass destruction, as claimed by the political right, nor because of western imperialism, as claimed by the left. The undeniable cause of this war and the ones to follow it, is America’s love affair with cars.

In the early 19th century buses replaced trams, and then cars replaced buses, while General Motors bought up the last tramways to close them down.

Cars offered an escape from dirty, crowded cities to leafy garden-suburbs, with the freeways serving as escape routes. So America turned itself into a nation of home-owners living in vast suburbs spread so widely that servicing them economically with public transport has become impossible.

Today the US transportation sector is almost totally dependent on oil, and supplies are running out. America needs oil and Saddam Hussein has been sitting on it – the second largest supply in the world.

Ian Roberts, The Guardian, Saturday January 18, 2003 (adapted)




Answer the following questions on "What Place for God in Europe?"

  1. Why has religion become a difficult topic in Europe according to the first section of the article? (Paris)
  2. Why does the question of the role of religion divide the USA and Europe according to part 2 (Enlightenment divergence) a nd 4 Philosophical Diffrences)?
  3. What is the author's position? How does this become clear?




If your first name begins with A - K ==>

  • Write down 8 questions and formulate the 8 answers to be asked and answered from this article, that express the basics about religion an politics!




If your first name begins with L - Z ==>




  • Group 1: Letters on pp. 119-120 and pp. 122 (Hilary to Philip)
  • Group 2: Letter(s) on pp. 120-122
  • Group 3: Letter(s) on pp. 122-124
  • Group 4: Letter(s) on pp. 124-128
  • Group 5: Letter(s) on pp. 128-130
  • Group 6: Letter(s) on pp. 131-133

Look at:

  • Funny passages - How are they created by the narrator?
  • Dramatic irony - Who knows what - who doesn't? Does reader feel pity or superiority?
  • language that helps to characterize the writer?
  • basic information in letter?


PLUS:

1. Groups 1, 2, 3: pp. 134-137:

How do the Zapps (Desire and Morris) see Philip?

2. Groups 4, 5, 6: pp. 137-141:

How do the Swallows (Philip and Hilary) see Morris?




Questions on Changing Places (for Thursday - TODAY!)

  • Read fom page 210 on!
  • Answer the questions in complete, written sentences!
  • Finish these questions as our homework for Monday!
  1. pp. 210 - 211: What does Morris feel about Rummidge and university life there?
  2. pp. 211-212 Why does Morris love the paternoster elevator?
  3. pp. 214 ("Jane Austen mumbled ...") - 215 ("the internal telephone rang") What parts of Zapp's character as a teacher/academic become visible here?
  4. pp. 216 ("the telephone rang") - 218 ("God forbid") How does Zapp's relation with Hilary develop and what is his opinion of her wish to study again?
  5. pp. 220("Ah Zapp") - 223 ("The VC broke off")? Explain Zapp's arguments and motives for suppporting Philip's career!
  6. pp. 223 ("I'm sorry Vice Chncellor") - 227 ("top of the shaft") Try to sum up this passage in about 5 - 7 sentences.
  7. pp. 227 ("Hilary wore a") - 230 ("Let's go upstairs") Why does Hilary react so strangely at first and why does she change her mind again ...?
  8. Finish this chapter and sum up the perspectives for Morris in England! Do you think he will stay?










Prepare a short presentation (about 5 minutes) of one of these novels!


Angela's Ashes
The Catcher in the Rye
Nineteen Eighty-Four
Brave New World
Changing Places
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
About a Boy
Fight Club
The Virgin Suicides


Include:

  • title, author, year of publication
  • theme/basic plot, narrator/point of view
  • personal judgement (should we read it or not?)

"Old" Homework 2009/2010

Homework K12