Tuesday 29 January 2013

Year 8 Exam Prep

Reading Paper

Persuasive Techniques - A FOREST

Alliteration
Facts
Orders - or imperative eg 'Phone now...'
Rhetorical questions - Repetition
Emotive language
Second person - direct address ie 'you'  eg 'Could you help the life of a child...?'
Triplets - the grouping together of three ideas, words to impact on the reader eg Give more.  Give now.  Give hope

Don't forget to point, evidence and explain!

Remember to think about the pictures and headlines together!

Writing Paper

Writing to engage, entertain using descriptive writing

Colours
Adjectives
Sentence variety
Senses - sight, sound, smell, touch and taste
Imagery - metaphors, similes, alliteration, personification, onomatopoeia, pathetic fallacy

Don't forget your spelling, punctuation and grammar!

paragraphing:

Change of:
  • topic
  • time
  • place
  • character
new speaker, new line, 66" and 99"

Monday 14 January 2013

Year 7 Poetry Unit


Poetic techniques
 
For you assessment, you must be able to identify poetic techniques with confidence AND be able to explain their effect on the reader (you)
 
You must remember your PEE paragraphs at all times
 
 

In your next lesson (not your LSC lesson) you will be given a test to see if you can remember how to spell each of the following terms AND to see if you can explain them in your own words.  You will also be asked to provide your own example of each. This is not your assessment.  This is to ensure that you are building your knowledge and confidence.

Alliteration  Where two or more words close together start with the same letter or sound

  • It was a dark and dreary December morning.


Personification  Where something that is not human does a human action

  • The leaves danced in the wind.
  • Lights were blinking in the distance.


Pathetic fallacy  Where the weather in a story/poem helps to create a feeling

  • Rain creates a sad feeling
  • Sun creates a happy feeling
  • Thunder creates a scary feeling


Simile  Where something is compared to something else using like (or as…..as) 

  • The frost on the trees sparkled like diamonds.


Metaphor  A comparison like simile, but doesn’t use like

  • The fog was a thick white blanket covering the town.


Onomatopoeia  A sound word

  • The tree crashed to the ground.
  • I jumped into the pool with a big splash.