Debbie Minor, M.Ed,Director

Shanan Barthold, BA, Assistant Director

3821 Lorna Road, Suite 118 & 120

Hoover, AL 35244

205-989-8333

dhminor@bellsouth.net

cahabaschool@bellsouth.net

 

 

 

 

 

 

RESOURCES

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CAHABA SCHOOL & EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES

 

 Literature Links  

American Writers & Their Works

17th Century

 

American Writers & Their Works

18th Century 1850-1900

 

American Writers & Their Works

20th Century

 

American Authors:   

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Timeline of American authors

literary movements, American 

literature sites and bibliographies.

 

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1850   1860   1870   1880   1890

1900   1920   Search

 

British Literature

 

HOOVER PUBLIC LIBRARY audio books

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E Book Library  

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Famous Quotes

 

      

 

Elements of the Novel

 Plot:  sequence of events in a literary work.  It involves both characters and a central conflict.

                The plot can be explained using Freytag's Pyramid, which is made up of exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution. 

A)  Exposition-  the part of the work that introduces the characters, the setting, and the basic situation. the part of the work that introduces the characters, the setting, and the basic situation.

B)  Rising Action- the events leading up to the climax  

C)  Climax- the high point of interest or suspense he high point of interest or suspense he high point of interest or suspense he high point of interest or suspense he high point of interest or suspense

D)  Falling Action- the events following the climax

E)  Resolution- the end of the central conflict he end of the central conflict he end of the central conflict he end of the central conflict he end of the central conflict

Theme:  a central message or insight into life revealed through a literary work.  The theme may be stated or implied.

Setting:  the time and place of a literary work.  Time can include not only the historical period- past, present, or future- but also a specific year, a season, or time of day.  Place may involve not only the geographical place- a region, country, state, or town- but also the social, economic, or cultural environment. 

Conflict:  a struggle between two opposing forces.  A story may have more than one conflict.   Conflict may in external or internal.

     external-a character struggles with an outside force

      internal-a character struggles with himself or herself ( man v/s man; man v/s self;                   man v/s nature)

Narrator: the speaker or character that tells a story.  The narrator may be either a character in the story or an outside observer.  The writer's choice of the narrator determines the point of view.

Point of View:  The two most common are 1st person and 3rd person.

    1st person point of view occurs when a character in the story narrates the story.  The reader sees only what this character sees. The 1st person narrator may or may not be reliable.

    3rd person point of view occurs when a voice outside the story narrates the story.  The two approaches to 3rd person point of view are omniscient and limited.  Omniscient-  means "all knowing."  This type of narrator can tell readers what any character thinks and feels. Limited-  This type of narrator can see the world through one character's eyes and reveals only that character's thoughts and feelings.

Characterization- the act of creating and developing a character.  Character:  the person or animal who takes part in the action in a literary work.    There are four types of characters:

                round-the reader sees many different traits (faults and virtues)  in the character

                flat-the reader sees only one trait (only seen one way) in the character

                dynamic-the character develops and grows throughout the literary work the character develops and grows throughout the literary work

                static- the character does not change throughout the literary work the character does not change throughout the literary work

               *Antagonist-a character or force in conflict with a main character

                *Protagonist-the main character

Personification:  The act of giving a nonhuman subject human characteristics.

Tone:  The writer's attitude toward his or her subject and audience.  Ex)  formal, informal, serious, playful, bitter, sarcastic, etc  

 

 

 

 

   Student Assignment Page

Assignments are posted weekly, but students must daily check assignment board at school for updates.

 

 

 
 MONTHLY ASSIGNMENTS  

See assignments listed by month below. In many cases the books and/or stories are available by clicking on the link. If a link is not available, use your library card! Know the following elements of each novel: Plot, theme, setting, narrator (point of view), characters & descriptions, tone, conflict (see elements of novel on the left column)

 

AUGUST: AUTHOR PROFILES 

   SEPTEMBER  
10 Booker T. Washington   Up From Slavery: An Autobiography  
11 The Night by Elie Wiesel 
12 Wuthering Heights by Emily  Bronte  
 
   OCTOBER  
10 THE MURDERS IN THE RUE  MORGUE  by Edgar A. Poe  "The Raven"    Ghost Stories 
11 Eric Hermannson's Soul  by Willa Cather   Robert Frost      Ghost Stories 
12 Frankenstein by Mary Shelley          Robert Browning, Lord Byron    Ghost Stories 
 
   NOVEMBER  
10 The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain            Walking  Henry David Thoreau
11 Main Street by Sinclair Lewis
12 Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Lewis Stevenson

 

   DECEMBER  
10 Uncle Tom's Cabin by Stowe      Ralph Waldo Emerson   Conduct of Life (1860)  Behavior
11 The Color Purple by Alice Walker                 Carl Sandburg 
12 The Man Who Would Be King by Kipling      "How the Camel Got Its Hump" by Kipling   

SEMESTER EXAM

 
  JANUARY  
10 "Bartleby, the Scrivener" by Herman Melville   "I Hear American Singing"  & I Sit and Look Out by Walt Whitman
11 William Faulkner    As I Lay Dying      Martin Luther King Letter from Birmingham Jail 
12 The Adventures of Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie    Alfred, Lord Tennyson. Charge of the Light Brigade  

 

  FEBRUARY  
10 Man Without a Country Edward Everett Hale      Emily Dickinson   Complete Poems
11 F. Scott Fitzgerald  The Great Gatsby  
12 The Time Machine by H.G. Wells    

WRITING ASSIGNMENT: A Ritural

  MARCH  
10

 

 

 

The Call of the Wild by Jack London                      
11  Silent Spring by Rachel Carson (Background information)

Silent Spring- (Summary of chapters & analysis)

12

 

 

 

 

 

 ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND   by Lewis Carroll

 

  APRIL  
10 Research Paper
11 Research Paper
12 Research Paper
 
  MAY  
10 Washington Irving Rip Van Winkle & The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
 

11

 

 

 

 

The Jungle by Upton Sinclair 

12

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shakespeare Romeo and Juliet  
Act 1. Prologue
Act 1. Scene I
Act 1. Scene II
Act 1. Scene III
Act 1. Scene IV
Act 1. Scene V

Act 2. Prologue
Act 2. Scene I
Act 2. Scene II
Act 2. Scene III
Act 2. Scene IV
Act 2. Scene V
Act 2. Scene VI

Act 3. Scene I
Act 3. Scene II
Act 3. Scene III
Act 3. Scene IV
Act 3. Scene V

Act 4. Scene 1
Act 4. Scene 2
Act 4. Scene 3
Act 4. Scene 4
Act 4. Scene 5

 



Act 5. Scene I
Act 5. Scene II
Act 5. Scene III

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SEMESTER EXAM

 
   

 

 

 

 

 

SUMMER READING LISTS

 Choose one book from your grade level for the fall. The movie is mandatory. Tests will be given the first week of fall semester. Take notes on each chapter as part of grade.

10th GRADE

Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave by Frederick Douglass

 The Scarlet Letter  by Nathaniel Hawthorn 

Movie:  Little Women by Louisa May Alcott

 

 

 

11th GRADE

The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway

Of Mice & Men by John Steinbeck

Movie: Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller

 

 

12thGRADE

Jane Austin  Pride and Prejudice  

A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens

Movie: Phantom of the Opera by Andrew Lloyd Webber

 

10th Grade Authors

Benjamin Franklin

Washington Irving

Frances Scott Key

William Cullen Bryant

James Fenimore Cooper

Edgar Allen Poe

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Nathaniel Hawthorne

Henry David Thoreau

Frederick Douglas

Herman Melville

Harriet Beecher Stowe

Henry Longfellow

Oliver Wendell Holmes

Rebecca Harding Davis

Louisa May Alcott

Edward Everett Hale

Abraham Lincoln

Mark Twain

Walt Whitman

Bret Hart

Henry James

Joel Chandler Harris

Helen Hunt Jackson

Emily Dickinson

Ida Tarbell

Stephen Crane

Kate Chopin

Charlotte Perkins Gilman  

 

11th Grade Authors

Ida Tarbell

Henry James

W.E.B. Dubois

Jack London

Mary Austin

Edith Wharton

Mark Twain

Upton Sinclair

Gertrude Stein

Jane Addams

Theodore Dreiser

Robert Frost

Rachel Lindsay

Sinclair Lewis

T.S. Eliot

Willa Cather

Edgar Lee Masters

Carl Sandburg

Edna St. Vincent Millay,

F. Scott Fitzgerald

Ezra Pound

Eugene O’Neill

James Joyce

Ernest Hemingway

Edna Ferber

William Faulkner

Langston Hughes

Martin Luther King  

 

12th Grade Authors

William Shakespeare

John Milton

Henry Fielding

Charles Lamb

William Wordsworth

Percy Shelley

Richard Brinsley Sheridan

Charles Dickens

Jane Austin

Robert Browning

D. H. Lawrence

Lewis Carroll

Lord Byron

Agatha Christie

Robert Lewis Stevenson

William Thackery

H. G. Wells

John Keats

Daphne Du Maurier

Charlotte Bronte

Mary Shelley

J. R. R. Tolkien