Wednesday, March 18, 2020

10th (or 11th) Grade Reading List

10th (or 11th) Grade Reading List Summer reading is a great way to  maintain fluency and reading level. The right book can also encourage independent reading. But finding the elusive book your teen or students will enjoy can be tricky. While many teachers rely on the classics when choosing books there are many contemporary YA titles that are perfect for the classroom. Using contemporary YA novels can also help foster a love of reading in teens who may have trouble relating to the more adult themes and antiquated language in some classics. Many teachers have begun to incorporate novels aimed at their students age level into their lessons to great success. When assigning summer reading it can be a good idea to allow students to choose from a list of different titles. This allows the student to have some control over their assignment and the opportunity to pick a book they are truly interested in. These are a sampling of the titles that often appear on high-school reading lists for 10th (or 11th) grade. Regardless of your age or skill, the books on this list are great introductions to literature.   These are a sampling of the titles that often appear on high-school reading lists for 10th (or 11th) grade. Regardless of your age or skill, the books on this list are great introductions to literature.   Reading List Animal Farm - George OrwellBrave New World - Aldous HuxleyCanterbury Tales - Geoffrey ChaucerGullivers Travels - Jonathan SwiftHeart of Darkness - Joseph ConradJane Eyre - Charlotte BronteLord Jim - Joseph ConradHarry Potter and the Sorcerers Stone - J.K. Rowling  The Color Purple - Alice Walker1984 - George OrwellPride and Prejudice - Jane AustenReturn of the Native - Thomas HardyThe Martian - Andy WeirNever Let Me Go - Kazuo Ishiguro100 Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquà ©zSaint Joan - George Bernard ShawDune - Frank HerbertTheir Eyes Were Watching God - Zora Neale HurstonSilas Marner - George EliotInterpreter of Maladies - Jhumpa LahiriThe House on Mango Street - Sandra CisnerosTale of Two Cities - Charles DickensTurn of the Screw - Henry JamesTo the Lighthouse - Virginia WoolfWuthering Heights - Elizabeth BronteTo Kill a Mocking Bird - Harper LeeThings Fall Apart - Chinua AchebeThe Handmaids Tale - Margaret AtwoodThe Absolutely  True Diary of a Part-Time  Indian - S herman Alexie Lord of the Flies - William Golding  Persepolis - Marjane SatrapiSlaughter-House Five - Kurt VonnegutA Rasin in the Sun - Lorraine HansberryThe Book Thief - Mark ZusakFools Crow - James WelchThe Hunger Games - Suzanne CollinsThe Perks of Being a Wallflower - Stephen ChboskySpeak - Laurie Halse AndersonNative Son - Richard WrightThe Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy - Douglas AdamsThe Catcher in the Rye - J.D. SalingerLittle Brother - Cory DoctorowThe Bell Jar - Sylvia PlathThe Outsiders - S.E. HintonThe Fire Next Time - James BaldwinBeloved - Toni Morrison

Sunday, March 1, 2020

Artist vs. Artisan

Artist vs. Artisan Artist vs. Artisan Artist vs. Artisan By Mark Nichol What’s the difference between an artist and an artisan? This unnecessarily sensitive question is equivalent to the issue of what constitutes art and what is designated as craft. In both cases, the former word essentially refers to the making of tangible or intangible products as an expression of creativity and imagination for purely aesthetic reasons. An artisan, meanwhile, though spurred by the same impulses, produces crafts, which, though they may be acquired only for decoration, are designed to be practical. Therefore, though some tension between artist and artisan between producers of art and designers of crafts may exist because of a perceived differential in their relative cultural status, the technical definitions are just that: precise distinctions not in quality or artistic achievement but in function. The word for the creator of art is the gender-neutral term artist. (The French form of the word, artiste, came to apply more broadly to creative professionals, especially performers, though it also has a pejorative sense of â€Å"pretentious artist.†) By extension, one talented in any endeavor even a con artist may earn the term. By contrast, makers of crafts have gender-specific labels craftsman and craftswoman but though craftsperson is the natural neutral term, many such practitioners prefer to be called artisans. (The Latin ancestor of this term is artire, which means â€Å"to instruct in the arts.†) Other words that ultimately derive from the Latin word ars (â€Å"art†) include artifact, which comes from the Italian word artifatto and ultimately from the Latin terms arte and factum (meaning â€Å"thing made†), originally having primarily an archaeological sense but now referring to anything left behind or remaining, and artifice, which originally meant workmanship but, from a secondary sense of â€Å"cunning,† came to refer to deceit or trickery. (However, artificer remains a synonym for artisan, although it can also refer to one who contrives or makes things or ideas.) Artificial, the adjectival form of artifice, broadly refers to anything not produced in nature. Artful once referred exclusively to artistic skill but later primarily came to mean â€Å"dexterous, wily†; in that sense, the term is best known in the moniker of the Artful Dodger, an adroit young pickpocket in Charles Dickens’s novel Oliver Twist. The antonym, artless, likewise was originally a reference to a lack of talent but now usually refers to clumsiness in word or deed. Arty and artsy both describe artists, but the terms have developed a pejorative sense of pretension, and artsy is hyphenated in combination with craftsy and, worse, fartsy, to refer to someone with such airs, or a creation of theirs. Art is used in combination with other terms to denote subgenres with serious artistic ambitions (â€Å"art film,† â€Å"art rock†) as well as artistic movements, as in â€Å"art deco,† a truncation of the French phrase art dà ©coratif (â€Å"decorative art†), and art nouveau (â€Å"new art†); the first letter of each word in these phrases is often capitalized, especially when associated with other initial-capped designations. Another movement, named arts and crafts, is usually initial-capped to distinguish it from generic references. The liberal arts are the academic subjects also known as the humanities. The term liberal stems from the idea that knowledge of these subjects and the attendant skills are necessary for free people to know in order to be productive members of society. From the phrase â€Å"liberal arts† comes the designations for mastery of coursework known as the bachelor of arts and master of arts degrees (truncated, alternatively as â€Å"bachelor’s degree,† or bachelor’s, and â€Å"master’s degree,† or master’s). These terms have no specific relation to art itself, though study and/or practice of art may be a component of the coursework. Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Misused Words category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:30 Religious Terms You Should KnowRunning Amok or Running Amuck?10 Humorous, Derisive, or Slang Synonyms for â€Å"Leader† or â€Å"Official†