Natter 58: Let's call Venezuela!
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
A friend of mine with a Chinese Mother and an American Father says that the great lettuce cooking debate was a recurring theme in her childhood.
Yeah, I dunno. Is lettuce even eaten in China? I don't mind cabbage or bok choy or spinach, but plain lettuce? Just seems wrong to me.
Kat, do you mean specifically at my current school, or in general?
I meant in general. I've also seen a mix of Brit Lit with World Lit added on. I also know that some 12th English is Senior Composition and not a lit class at all. I was just trying to get a handle on it. Interestingly, the standards don't address what texts to focus on. But it does say what type of analysis to do (socio-political analysis rather than historical).
Barack Obama just robo-called me. It's so weird for NC to be actually in play.
Barack Obama just robo-called me.
I'm still voting for him, but this makes me really glad I don't have a real (=listed, landline) phone number. Likewise, I reliably vote for our (congressional) House rep, have met him multiple times, blather at him about every damned lefty issue in email, but every robo-call I ever got when I had a landline, I was like, Dave, Dude, DON'T FUCKING CALL ME WITH YOUR CREEPY RECORDED MESSAGE.
It's so weird for NC to be actually in play.
I know?! There were some Pennsylvania ladies on the NPR this morning who were all "I know the DNC says this needs to end, but nobody's ever given a shit about our vote before" and I so got that.
Oooh, good luck with the interview, Kat!
Even my roomba is being stupid today. Kept going to the same spot and getting stuck.
(Of course, there is the question of who truly was stupider: me or the machine? I should've blocked the spot off the first time it got stuck, not to mention the fourth...)
All I remember from 12th grade english was getting the hysterical giggles over
As I Lay Dying
in class. And then during the AP exam, I had to use it for an essay and I got the giggles AGAIN. Everyone in the room knew exactly why and THEY started laughing. After the test, they were all "So you wrote about AILD, huh?" It was bad. I don't even remember what passage exactly triggered the giggles.
I took electives for 12th grade English -- writing and speech.
Good luck, Kat!
Technology is making me cry.
I had British lit in eleventh grade, then AP English in twelfth. It wasn't until a few years later that I realized we hadn't read a single book by a female author during AP English. (At least, none that I could remember. We had a bunch of Greek stuff, then Shakespeare, then a mix of other stuff, but I couldn't remember anything written by a woman. Can't remember everything else we read -- some Hemingway, some Falkner, Heart of Darkness, Turn of the Screw, Mourning Become Elektra, The Stranger, and I can't remember what else.)
Just don't cry ON the technology, Jesse! That might result in rending of garments.
AH! I just used LJ for good and not evil and bitched and moaned there. Thank god.
We had Brit Lit in 11th grade. And then AP lit where we read all over and all things. I remember arguing with teacher that I would never ever use Twain during the AP exam (she contended any question could be answered with Twain). And lo, during the exam, I used Charlotte Bronte instead. TAKE THAT, SISTER MARY CATHERINE!
Ahem.
I know, though, that things have changed in the 18 years since I was high school (yowch!) and the APs work differently now.
I used Hamlet on the AP exam. I can't remember what the essay was about, though. But our teacher had had us memorize most of the important and quotable passages, so that we'd be able to quote stuff on the essays on the exam. (He'd started that a few years earlier, when a class of his had done way better than average on the exam, and he asked some of them about it, and they pretty much all said that they'd answered the essay question with Midsummer Night's Dream, which had been the drama club production that year, and since most of them were in drama club, they were able to quote it to back up their arguments.)