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Homework!!!

  • Job for Monday, 4th May 2009:
  • Translate the new text in groups of 4!
  • Use an English, mi9nolingual dictionary! DO NOT USE LEO etc. ....
  • Type your version into a word -document to be saved under schuler_g/KLasse_11/11c .....
Try to create a good German text. Don't lose anthing, but neither add things that don't exist anything.
  • Make sure that the style of your version is similar tro that of the original!


The Hobbit

  • It's over ... we've finished it, and thanks to all those who have participated soweel. To all the others .... well, I don't care.
  • If you want to see the project and results .... Klick here!

Looking at Narrative Texts

Setting

Basically the setting of a novel/story is the time, place and background that the narrator creates. The setting influences the readers' expectations, especially at the beginning of novels / chapters, and it helps to create a certain atmosphere (adjectives, characters, symbols, connotations of words that are used also contribute to atmosphere)


Characterization

Vocabulary and How-to ....


Flat vs. round characters

E.M. Forster. Aspects of the Novel, Harmondsworth 1976 (11927), pp. 72 and 80

"We may divide characters into flat and round. Flat characters … are sometimes called types, and sometimes caricatures. In their purest form, they are constructed round a single idea or quality: when there is more than one factor in them, we get the beginning of the curve towards the round. The real flat character can be expressed in one sentence …. The test of a round character is whether it is capable of surprising in a convincing way. "


This clearly shows the differences between


Flat Character:

  • lack of a realistic personality
  • description might be detailed, but reveals no complex personality
  • "flat" is not negative, but simply says the character can be summed up in one sentence
  • shows little or no development.


Round character:

  • complex and realistic
  • represents a fully developed, complex personality
  • often shows good and bad traits, interior conflicts, may react unexpectedly
  • usually true for main characters
  • clear development throughout the story



To do list 11c 2008: What is English good for - what should we practise/know?

The pupils collected the following list:

What will you need or would you like to use your English for after and outside school?

  • English in everyday (German) language
  • for travelling
  • in the internet
  • on the job / for my application
  • necessary to speak it because it’s the world language.
  • communication/understanding between cultures.
  • movies/books in English.

What should you know / learn to do in English for the English Grundkurs, LK or Abitur in the next two years?

  • vocabulary
  • grammar
  • text comprehension
  • writing compositions / answer
  • give talks / speak freely
  • think in/ be fluent in English


Mr. T came up with these lists .... rather similar!

Programme English: 11c – 2009

1. What we will have to do … </span>

a) … for the Lk/Gk and the Abitur:

  • reading, understanding texts (fictional done and non-fictional)
  • describing and analyzing cartoons done
  • working with a dictionary at it!
  • characterization done
  • building up topical vocabulary + techniques
  • writing comments (paragraph, introduction, argument) at it ...!
  • explaining effect of rhetorical devices, point of view, plot done!
  • translating (general skills, special difficulties)at it!
  • presenting a short speech/talk in front of class done
  • listening comprehension

b) … due to the curriculum

  • read a complete novel done + a short story
  • read some poems
  • analyze some adverts

c) … due to school regulations:

  • 2 more tests (1 x fictional text → novel "The Hobbit")

(1 x translation E → G)

Possible Novels:

  • Tolkien: The Hobbit done
  • Hornby: About a boy
  • McCourt: Angela's Ashes
  • Orwell: 1984
  • Golding: Lord of the Flies
  • Lodge: Changing Places
  • Haddon: The curious incident of the dog in the night
  • Sachaar: Holes


US Politics


Speeches


Conditional Clauses