If you missed class on Friday.
Cover Page and Text Format Example #1
Cover Page Format Example #2
Format bullet points
Friday, May 29, 2015
Friday, April 3, 2015
Creative Writing Final Project Weekly Progress
Creative
Writing Final Project Weekly Progress
Week of…
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Classroom focus
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Goal for the week
(planning/writing/revising)
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Achieved that week
(planning/writing/revising/
reading/researching)
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Changes in your plan.
New possibilities.
Exciting breakthroughs.
Successes you're proud of.
Challenges to deal with.
|
3/30
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planning & writing week
(proposal letter due April 1)
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4/6
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writing week (progress check April
10)
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4/13
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workshop week
|
|
|
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April Vacation & week of 4/27
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writing week (progress check May
1)
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5/4
|
workshop week
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|||
5/11
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writing week (progress check May
15)
|
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5/18
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workshop week
|
|||
5/26
|
writing week (progress check May
29)
[Senior due date and coffeehouse
reading* TBA]
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|||
6/1
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workshop week
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|||
6/8
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writing week (progress check June
12)
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6/15
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workshop, editing, formatting,
writing (?) week
[Grades 9-11 due date and
coffeehouse reading* TBA]
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Monday, March 30, 2015
Writing for Publication Final Project Proposal Letter
Writing for Publication Final Project Proposal Letter
The proposal letter is due: April 1
The proposal letter must be typed and be written in the form of a letter.
Dear Mr. Cook:
First paragraph: Describe your project.
- What genre? Short stories? Micro-fiction? Poems? A poetic journal? A sonnet cycle? A novella? A TV, film, or play script? A Memoir? A series of non-fiction feature articles? A graphic novel? Something else?
- What length? How many stories? How many poems? How many pages?
- What unifying idea? Will the stories be linked by character or setting? Will the script or novella include a particular plot arc? Will the poems be linked by topic, theme, or type? (The writing can be unified by form or content or both?)
Second paragraph: Describe your plan for the remaining weeks.
3/30 planning & writing week (proposal letter due April 1)
4/6 writing week (first progress check April 10)
4/13 workshop week
April Vacation
4/27 writing week (second progress check May 1)
5/4 workshop week
5/11 writing week (third progress check May 15)
5/18 workshop week
5/26 writing week (fourth progress check May 29)
[Senior due date and coffeehouse reading* TBA]
6/1 workshop week
6/8 writing week (fifth progress check June 12)
6/15 workshop, editing, formatting, writing (?) week
[Grades 9-11 due dates and coffeehouse reading* TBA]
*At the final you will turn in your completed manuscript and will read a five minute piece of it. (Practice beforehand to make sure it’s five minutes and to make sure you can read it fluidly.) You will also eat treats and drink hot beverages.
Third paragraph: Describe what you will read as you complete your project
- Choose a published work (or works) to read. (Be as specific as you can be.) (For example if you are planning to write a fictionalized memoir you might read The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath. Or, if you are planning to write a screenplay you might read the screenplay to your favorite movie.)
- Explain how what you plan to read will help you with the project.
Sincerely,
Your Name
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
An Introduction to Writing Screenplays
An Introduction to Writing Screenplays
Due by the end of class Friday, March 27
Due by the end of class Friday, March 27
Friday, March 13, 2015
Creative Nonfiction Out Loud: This American Life & The Moth
Creating Your Own
Creative Nonfiction
Your task is to
create a five to ten minutes story in the style of This American Life or The
Moth.
Moth-style stories will be performed in class starting
Wednesday, March 18.
This American Life-style stories will be shared in class
starting Monday, March 23.
Option 1: This American Life
“This American Life is a weekly public radio show broadcast on more than 500
stations to about 2.1 million listeners. There's a theme to each episode, and a
variety of stories on that theme. It's mostly true stories of everyday people,
though not always. There's lots more to the show, but it's sort of hard to
describe.” [text from thisamericanlife.org]
- If you choose this option you will create a five to ten minutes nonfiction story on a topic of your choice.
- This story will be told in first person but will need to include at least two speakers other than yourself.
- The story should follow the advice that Ira Glass gives in his lecture on making radio better. Click here for Ira Glass's advice about This American Life-style creative nonfiction.
- The story can be submitted in the form of an audio file or script. (An example script is attached. If you choose a script you have to read it to the class.) Click here to see the format of a This American Life script. Click here for a resource to help create a This American Life style audio file.
- You may work with a partner (or two) on this story.
Option 2: The Moth
The Moth is an
acclaimed not-for-profit organization dedicated to the art and craft of
storytelling. It is a celebration of both the raconteur, who breathes fire into
true tales of ordinary life, and the storytelling novice, who has lived through
something extraordinary and yearns to share it. At the center of each
performance is, of course, the story – and The Moth’s directors work with each
storyteller to find, shape and present it. [text from themoth.org]
- If you choose this option you will create a five to ten minute nonfiction story on a topic of your choice.
- This story will be told in first person.
- This story should follow the storytelling tips on The Moth website. (The tips are here.)
- The story will be crafted, revised, and practiced ahead of time but delivered live in class. There a lots of examples at themoth.org.
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