Advanced Placement Language and Composition |
Dear AP Student: Thank you for enrolling in our AP Language and Composition course. This challenging course will prepare you for college level work as you become a skilled reader of prose written in a variety of periods, disciplines and rhetorical contexts. By composing for different purposes and audiences, you will also become a skilled writer. The course will prepare you for the AP Language and Composition Examination, as well. We will be reading the following novels or plays and you will want to get a copy of these as soon as possible, so that your progress in the course is not delayed. Module 4: The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara
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Pre-Course Reading Assignment In order to prepare for this advanced level of study, you must complete the following three pre-course reading assignments and submit them as your first assignment within the first month of being active in the course. These assignments will determine in part whether you are prepared for an Advanced Placement course. Please obtain a copy of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby. It is preferable that you obtain your own copy, so you can highlight significant passages and write your own notes in the margin as your read and react to the story. Part I: Rhetorical Devices |
Part I: Rhetorical Devices |
| Throughout the AP English Language and Composition™ Course, you will be learning how to analyze a writer's style. For this purpose, you will need to know the most commonly used strategies. We will focus on 16 rhetorical or stylistic techniques that have appeared frequently on past AP exams. In the chart below, you will see these devices organized as synonyms. For example, the terms phrasing, sentence structure, and syntax have similar meanings and can be interchanged within a sentence. The devices will be divided throughout six modules of study. A preview of tone, attitude, diction, figurative language, and detail can be found here on the Basic Rhetorical Devices page. |
| Module 2 |
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| Module 3 |
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| Module 4 |
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| Module 5 |
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| Module 6 |
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| Module 7 |
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You will memorize these terms by using a mnemonic device - a memory tool. By placing the first letter of each term as a word in an original sentence, you will be able to recall all of the devices. To further help you remember, form a mental picture of the scene! |
Here is an example to help you memorize the names of the terms listed above: Tony And Lulu Forgave Derek For Interrupting Dinner, Putting Pickled Nasty Frogs On Separate Shiny Plates. |
| Your Turn! |
Create your own sentence using the 16 rhetorical devices in order. After reviewing this page, titled Rhetorical Devices in Detail , you will submit your original sentence to the instructor. Print out a copy for yourself and keep it visible in your work area. |
Part II: Rhetorical Devices in The Great Gatsby |
| Find and explain an example of the following rhetorical devices in the novel The Great Gatsby. Quote the passage and provide chapter and page number where these devices occur. Give the name of the publisher for your particular copy of the novel. |
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Part III: Journal, Essay and Images of Success |
| JOURNAL |
A. One of the main themes in The Great Gatsby is the realization of the "American Dream."
Include these quotation selections, labeled under Part A, Journal in your 1.11 submission. |
| ESSAY |
B. While the American Dream and the concept of success inherently differ from individual to individual, some goals remain constant. In a well-organized essay of no less than 500 words, discuss both Gatsby's and Carraway's perspective of the goals towards success. Use one adage for each character as evidence. Getting started Follow the conventions and formatting for an academic essay. View Some General Advice on Academic Essay-Writing for assistance with general tips on writing the essay. Essay requirements
Writing the essay body
Polishing your writing Include your finished, polished essay labeled under Part B, Essay in your 1.11 submission. |
| IMAGES OF SUCCESS |
C. Browse through the images on Arizona State University's Create a Postcard page for ideas on what success would look like to Jay Gatsby and Nick Carraway.
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