11th Grade Syllabus

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Jonesboro High School

11th Grade English Literature and Composition


Course Syllabus

Teacher(s): Mrs. Kelleigh Flagg Email: [email protected]

Room Number: 205 Main Office: (770)473-2855


Semester: Fall/Spring 2019-20 Tutorials: Tuesday, 3:15-4:00pm
Textbook: Georgia Collections 11 Houghton Tutorial Location: Room 205
Mifflin Harcourt

School Mission Statement: The mission of Jonesboro High School is to be accountable for
providing a globally competitive education that empowers students to achieve academic and
personal goals and to become productive, responsible citizens.

Course Description: The Georgia Standards of Excellence for grades 9 through 12 are organized into
grade bands comprised of 9-10 and 11-12 due to the flexibility of English Language Arts course
offerings at the high school level. The 9-12 Standards define what students should understand and be
able to do by the end of each grade band. As students advance toward the successful culmination of
their high school careers, they will consolidate and internalize all of the skills instilled through the
full progression of the GSE.

The literary and informational texts that students will read in the course reflect the following 3 key
shifts:
• Complexity: The standards require regular practice with complex text and its academic
language.
• Evidence: The standards emphasize reading and writing grounded in evidence from text, both
literary and informational.
• Knowledge: The standards require building knowledge through content rich non-fiction.

High school students will employ strong, thorough, and explicit textual evidence in their literary
analyses and technical research. They will understand the development of multiple ideas through
details and structure, and track the development of complex characters and advanced elements of
plot such as frame narratives and parallel storylines. Student writing will reflect the ability to argue
effectively, employing the structure, evidence, and rhetoric necessary in the composition of effective,
persuasive texts. Students will be able to construct college-ready research papers of significant length
in accordance with the guidelines of standard format styles such as MLA. Students in high school
will have built strong and varied vocabularies across multiple content areas, including technical
subjects. They will skillfully employ rhetoric and figurative language, purposefully construct tone
and mood, and identify lapses in reason or ambiguities in texts. Students will recognize nuances of
meaning imparted by mode of presentation, whether it is live drama, spoken word, digital media,
film, dance, or fine art. Students will complete the course with the fully developed ability to
communicate in multiple modes of discourse demonstrating a strong command of the rules of
Standard English.

Course Outline:
Unit 1: Coming to America/Building a Democracy
 “from of Plymouth Plantation” by William Bradford
 “Balboa” by Sabina Murray

Unit 2: The Individual and Society


 The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne
 “from Song of Myself” by Walt Whitman

Unit 3: A New Birth of Freedom/An Age of Realism


 Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston
 “Second Inaugural Address” by Abraham Lincoln

Unit 4: The Modern/Postmodern World


 “Winter Dreams” by F. Scott Fitzgerald
 “Poems of the Harlem Renaissance” by various authors

* The teacher reserves the right to alter or change any part of this course syllabus to better suit the need of the
students.

Major Course Requirements:


Culminating Tasks

 Unit 1
o End of Unit Performance Task – Argumentative Essay
o 2 Quad D Learning Tasks
 Unit 2
o End of Unit Performance Task – Informative/Expository Essay
o 2 Quad D Learning Tasks
 Unit 3
o End of Unit Performance Task – Argumentative Essay
o 2 Quad D Learning Tasks
 Unit 4
o End of Unit Performance Task – Informative/Expository Essay
o 2 Quad D Learning Tasks

Course Evaluation Categories:


Classwork - 25% - (Participation 10%)
Tests - 20%
Quizzes - 10%
Projects - 10%
Homework - 15%
Final Exam/EOCT - 20%

Required Materials
3 Ring Binder (Students will be required to have a separate binder that is for English only)
Writing utensils
Google Drive credentials

Websites, Programs and Remediation Tools


Study Island, USA Test Prep, Edmodo, Teacher Websites, Microsoft Office Suite
 Students will have to create an account on Edmodo, Edublogs, Wix, and Glogster. The
school will provide accounts for students on Study Island and USA Test Prep.
 The online version of the literacy textbook is provided at www.myhrw.com
 Teacher website: http://www.elateachertaylor.weebly.com
o Resources Page

Late Assignments
Each student is expected to complete all assignments in the allotted time. Late assignments are
penalized, minus (10) points, each day the assignment is late.
Make-up Policy
IT IS THE STUDENT’S RESPONSIBILITY TO OBTAIN AND COMPLETE MAKE-UP
WORK. If you have an excused absence, you will be allowed the same number of days as your
absence in order to make up work missed. Make-up work must be done after or before school,
NOT during valuable class time.
Resubmitting Work
If a student turns in an assignment that receives a failing mark, the student has the opportunity to
redo the assignment. The following exclusions apply: multiple-choice test and other assignments
as decided at the discretion of the instructor. The assignment must be completed and returned
within one week after a student-teacher conference. Once the redo assignment is completed and
corrected, it will be averaged with the original grade. It is the student’s responsibility to take
advantage of the redo policy. At the end of a specified time or grading period, the student no
longer has the option to redo assignments
Classroom Behavior Expectations
We can readily assume you have been exposed to classroom rules since the age of
preschool and may be tempted to skip this section; but let us take a fresh viewpoint on
these expectations.

1. Get started immediately upon arrival. Grab your composition book, read
today’s agenda, and attempt the task. Please do not wait for the teacher to have a
personal conference to encourage you to begin working.
2. Take responsibility for your behavior. The only person you can control is
yourself. Therefore, no one can make you late, fail, or even upset without you
choosing to do so.
3. Use positive communication. It is perfectly acceptable to have a contrasting
opinion. However, it is unacceptable to make fun of or tease another classmate
because of his color, race, language, religion, etc.)
4. Demonstrate advanced social skills. Here are a few examples:

 Asking permission to leave the room, as opposed to walking out.


 Waiting to speak while another student or teacher is speaking.
 Remaining seated during presentations.
Never use that as an opportunity to talk to your teacher or peers.
 Raising your hand and waiting to be called.

5. Give yourself the opportunity to be the best. This means complaining is not
allowed! It’s been said that complaining is refusing to accept what is going to
happen anyway. It causes your brain to stop developing solutions.

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