Week 110: College Reading and Writing Robert Hass and Jody Williams
Week 110: College
Reading and Writing
Robert Hass and Jody
Williams: Annotating, Summarizing, Analyzing, Imitating
to annotate: to make
notes on something to help you understand it better
to summarize: to put
something in your own words
to analyze: to consider
a question on the text, providing supporting examples from the text
to imitate: to create an
original piece of writing based on something you have read
We are doing the
twenty-third poem and response in the book today, starting on page 75.
Exercise: Read and annotate
1. Read the poem and
response out loud and underline any words you need to look up
2. Write any questions
you have in the margins or in your notebook
3. Put tricky parts into
your own words in notes in the margins or in your notebook
Exercise:
Questions for Comprehension of the poem
1. How does
the poem begin? And how does it end?
2. What does
the speaker imply when they say, “Because if killing large numbers of people/
with sophisticated weapons is a sign of sickness…” (Hass 75)?
3. What effects does the long listing in this poem
have on its tone?
Exercise:
Questions for Comprehension of the response
- What weapons has Williams been
around?
- How
are killer robots different to Williams than these other weapons?
- What
does Prometheus do in Williams’ version of the myth?
Homework Assignment: Summarize the Poem
Write a 7-9 sentence
paragraph summarizing the poem with quotations, in-text citation, and a Work
Cited Page.
example too-short summary, incorporating
quotation and in-text citation:
Robert Hass starts off his poem
“Dancing” with the line “[t]he radio clicks on—it’s poor swollen America…”
(Hass 75). The poem goes on to list instances relating to the history of gun
violence, including “The English /
us[ing] cannons and a siege gun at Calais…” and “…the young Winston Churchill
invent[ing] the new policy of ‘aerial policing…” (Hass 76-7). The poem concludes
where it started, with “[a] radio clicks on” (Hass 79).
Work Cited Page (for today’s poem)
Hass, Robert. “Dancing.” Bullets Into Bells: Poets
and Citizens Respond to Gun Violence. Ed. Brian Clements et al. Beacon
Press, 2017.
Homework Assignment: Summarize the Response
Write a 7-9 sentence paragraph
summarizing the response with quotations, in-text citation, and a Work Cited
Page.
Homework Assignment:
Analysis
Question for analysis: In her response, Williams
would like to rewrite the myth of Prometheus so that he steals “gunpowder,
nuclear weapons, and the makings of killer robots and bury them deep in a cave
on Mt. Olympus. To save human beings from ourselves” (80). Why do we need to be
saved from ourselves and how is this message also reflected in Hass’s poem? Use
examples from both the poem and the response to support your answer.
Homework Assignment: Imitation
Write a poem about
something you heard on the radio, or any form of media. Connect it back to your
life. Use a list in your poem.
Homework:
- Summary of Poem
- Summary of Response
- Analysis of Poem and Response
- Imitation of Poem
About this class:
In this class, you are
welcome to submit homework for a grade. If it’s not strong enough to
earn an A, I’ll give you some comments to help you revise it, and let you do it
over again. You have as many chances as you want to complete and perfect the
work in this class, and you are welcome to do more than one week’s worksheet
for homework at a time; ask me for sheets you’ve missed. Students
who complete 15 weeks of graded assignments and a longer paper can qualify for
college credit. When you get close to completing 15 weeks, I’ll help
you get started on your longer paper.
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