Wednesday, April 27, 2011

What Song Would Make Hamlet Perk Up And Say, "That's My Jam!"





What would Jay Gatsby have on his iPod?

What song would make Hamlet perk up and say, "That's my jam!"

According to FlavorWire.com, "
If you’'ve ever wondered what your favorite literary characters might be listening to while they save the world/contemplate existence/get into trouble, or hallucinated a soundtrack to go along with your favorite novels, well, us too. But wonder no more! Here, we sneak a look at the hypothetical iPods of some of literature’s most interesting characters. What would be on the personal playlists of Holden Caulfield or Elizabeth Bennett, Huck Finn or Harry Potter, Tintin or Humbert Humbert? Something revealing, we bet. Or at least something danceable.

The bi-weekly "Literary Mixtape" feature has already tackled characters like Veruca Salt, Ophelia, Sherlock Holmes, Jay Gatsby, and, of course, Hamlet.

The Cranky Language Lady: Wednesday Grammar Quiz for Grownups


The Cranky Language Lady: Wednesday Grammar Quiz for Grownups comes from CrankyLanguageLady.com. To find out more about the Cranky Language Lady, view sample pages from her new book, peruse her blog, or visit the website.


Grammar Quiz #23




Four times in the selection below, the author has chosen the wrong word. Can you spot the errors and correct them?


Eliza looked at the handsome man in the produce section of the supermarket and tried to tell herself that his looks were having no affect on her. Yes, he was more handsome then anyone she had ever seen, accept maybe George Clooney, but that didn't matter. "I'm a married woman," she thought. "I'm not interested, of course."


Still, she fluffed her hair and sucked in her stomach as she walked passed him, smiling.




View answer.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Tuesday Trivia



  1. Which scientific author who caused quite a stir with the church had originally intended to become a priest?
  2. Which author had had a pet scorpion which he used to keep on his desk for inspiration?
  3. Which country has the largest number of libraries and books in the world?
  4. Which poet had a pony named Fanny that pulled his wife along in a wheelchair?
  5. Which British author was expelled from school for being caught smoking?


Last Week's Answers


How old was Mary Shelly when she penned Frankenstein?

19 years old



What percentage of Americans believe that Sherlock Holmes was a real person?


25%



Which poet had an unpublished book of his works buried with his wife but decided 7 years later to open the grave and publish the poems?


Rosetti


Which Shakespeare play tells the story of a shipwreck off the coast of Bohemia — a region that has never had a coastline?


The Winter’s Tale


Which author rarely took a bath and suffered from boils most of his life?


Karl Marx



How many known specimens of Shakespeare’s signature exist today?


There are only seven known specimens in the entire world.



Monday, April 25, 2011

Don’t blame Shaw, but please, let’s put “language” back into English language arts!


by Douglas Grudzina



ghoti

You probably already know this “phonetic spelling” of fish. You probably believe it was devised by playwright, satirist, and language reformer George Bernard Shaw. (It wasn’t, but that’s an irrelevant detail.)

If you haven’t yet met ghoti and wonder how it could possibly spell fish, here’s the rationale:



f = gh as in enough
i = o as in women

sh = ti as in fiction



Now, with all due respect to “language reformers,” here’s why the creator of ghoti is wrong—possibly even disingenuous (don’t you hate it when people with an obvious agenda manipulate facts and posit half-truths to lull the unsuspecting into tacit agreement?).

Granted, there are plenty of words in which the letter combination gh represents an f sound—enough, laugh, cough, rough, tough—but am I the only one to notice that every one of these words ends with the combination in question?

So, whatever sound gh originally represented (probably that German guttural that we really don’t have in English but still shows itself in words like daughter and slaughter), it seems that that sound devolved into an f only when it occurred at the end of the word!


So gh = f is most likely not so much an idiosyncrasy of the English language as it is the institutionalization of someone’s pronunciation error.

I cannot think of or find another word in the English language in which the letter o represents an i sound like in women. So, does the pronunciation of this particular word reflect a vagary of the language or, again, some early mispronunciation that somehow became standard?



ti is not really a letter combination commonly pronounced sh; tion is a letter combination commonly pronounced shun. There is a difference. And let’s not ignore the apparent fact that this tion-shun, like gh-f, occurs only at the end of the word.



Again, what we have here is not a flaw or inconsistency in the language; we have a language shaped largely by the standardization of the non-standard.



Now, I’m not being a snob here, and I’m not bashing the characteristics that make English a rich and expressive language. Our ability to adopt and adapt words and expressions, to recycle old words and phrases with new connotations, and our openness to metaphoric and figurative uses are strengths, not weakness.



They help us, I believe, to understand more deeply and to communicate more fully what we understand. They help us to interact with each other on a more rich and meaningful level.



But what I am ranting on is this:



Despite its occasional inconsistency and caprice, the English language is governed by a number of knowable and predictable conventions. Even the “vagaries” noted above can be interpreted as conventions of a sort:



gh, when it appears at the end of a word, tends to be pronounced like an f;

tion, when it appears at the end of a word, tends to be pronounced like shun.



And these conventions are no more mysterious, or challenging to teach or to learn than the conventions that explain pronunciations of consonant blends like sh and th or diphthongs like ou and ei.



And therein lies my point: The Conventions of English are thoroughly knowable and teachable. Yet, how many of us really know them, and how many of us really teach them. I mean really teach...not simply assign a chapter in a grammar text, provide a few worksheets, and write the occasional frag and awk on student essays.



I mean really teach.



Why is the awk awk? What’s wrong with a frag?



And forget about spoken English!



No one questions the importance of thesis, support, logic, and all of the other elements of good content. None of us wants a class of students who use language beautifully but say nothing (we have enough of them in Washington and our state capitals, right?). If you’ve been in education long enough, you can probably say, “been there, done that” because that was pretty much the state of English instruction before, say, 1980.



We have, however, created almost the opposite—a generation and a half of students who have wonderful ideas but not the skill to communicate them. These are the students (and former students) who flood your inbox with all of those posts that mockingly ask: “Why do we park on a driveway and drive on a parkway?” (The implication is, of course, that since neither the sender nor the receiver knows the answer, there must not be a satisfactory answer.)



For most questions like that there are satisfactory answers. We only need to learn them and to teach them.



When people want to criticize the English language as incomprehensible because it allows words like ghoti to occur...well, words like ghoti don’t occur, and the reason is that they do not conform to knowable and predictable conventions about consonant blends, diphthongs, and the ending syllables of certain words.



Why aren’t we teaching these language conventions in our English language arts classrooms?



Shaw’s concerns about language weren’t limited to only spelling. Read (or reread) his Preface to Pygmalion:



The English [insert “Americans”] have no respect for their language, and will not teach their children to speak it. ... Finally, and for the encouragement of people troubled with accents [insert “language difficulties”] that cut them off from all high employment [emphasis mine], I may add that the change wrought by Professor Higgins in the flower girl is neither impossible nor uncommon.



English is such a hot topic these days—“official” language, “only” language, however you want to couch the debate—that those of us who claim to teach English language arts should really stop hiding behind our literature anthologies and wringing our hands in despair about how our language is abused by those with or without agendas.



Instead, we should start to teach to teach the subject matter we’re charged with teaching.


Image courtesy of http://www.idea-sandbox.com



Wednesday, April 20, 2011

The Cranky Language Lady: Wednesday Grammar Quiz for Grownups


The Cranky Language Lady: Wednesday Grammar Quiz for Grownups comes from CrankyLanguageLady.com. To find out more about the Cranky Language Lady, view sample pages from her new book, peruse her blog, or visit the website.


Grammar Quiz #18 — Run-On Sentences


The item below is an example of poor writing. Do you know why? Can you fix what is wrong?

The new class, “Dating after a Divorce,” will include the following:

  • what not to talk about on your first date
  • a positive attitude
  • children and dating
  • there are many dangers to watch out for in on-line dating
  • running into your ex-spouse when he or she is on a date and you are wearing sweatpants and haven’t showered


View answer.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Tuesday Trivia



  1. How old was Mary Shelly when she wrote Frankenstein?
  2. What percentage of Americans believe that Sherlock Holmes was a real person?
  3. Which poet had an unpublished book of his works buried with his wife but decided 7 years later to open the grave and publish the poems?
  4. Which Shakespeare play tells the story of a shipwreck off the coast of Bohemia — a region that has never had a coastline?
  5. Which author rarely took a bath and suffered from boils most of his life?
Last Week's Answers
Which author said, “The true artist will let his wife starve, his children go barefoot, his mother drudge for his living at seventy, sooner than work at anything but his art”?


G.B. Shaw



Which famous American author ran for mayor of New York City in 1969 using the campaign slogan “No More BS”?


Norman Mailer



Having obtained a medical degree in 1884, which Russian writer considered himself a doctor, rather than an author, saying, "Medicine is my lawful wife and literature is my mistress."


Chekov



Upon his death, which author bequeathed his birthday (November 13) to a young girl he knew because she often complained that her December 25th birthday left her with little reason to celebrate at any other time of the year?


Robert Louis Stevenson



Which Russian author learned to ride a bicycle at age 67?


Leo Tolstoy



Wednesday, April 13, 2011

The Cranky Language Lady: Wednesday Grammar Quiz for Grownups


The Cranky Language Lady: Wednesday Grammar Quiz for Grownups comes from CrankyLanguageLady.com. To find out more about the Cranky Language Lady, view sample pages from her new book, peruse her blog, or visit the website.


Grammar Quiz #21 — How Are You at Handling Pronouns?


Correct the following:


“Just between you and I, my husband and myself give quite generous donations each year to the symphony and the theater guild,” said Alicia.
“Just between you and I, my husband and me give quite generous donations each year to Safeway, our landlord, and our local Texaco station,” answered Gwen.


View answer.

The Cranky Language Lady: Wednesday Grammar Quiz for Grownups


The Cranky Language Lady: Wednesday Grammar Quiz for Grownups comes from CrankyLanguageLady.com. To find out more about the Cranky Language Lady, view sample pages from her new book, peruse her blog, or visit the website.


Grammar Quiz #20 — Run-On Sentences



The story below has only three errors. One of them is a word Cranky Language Lady sees misspelled more than nearly any other. Can you find that word and the two other very subtle errors?

“Perhaps seven cats are a tad too many,” suggested Alan tentatively, scooting Fluffy over as he tried to put his arm around Natalie.

Fluffy bit him.

Alan glared.

“Come here, Fluffikens,” Natalie said, “Did mean old Alan hurt your feelings”?

Alan sighed and tried again. “Your cats are interfering with our relationship,” he said, “and I think we need to discuss this.”

“Discuss what?” she asked, smiling as Snuggles and Snowball joined Fluffy in her lap.

“Cats!” exclaimed Alan. “Cats!”

“Yes, I definately love them,” she smiled.

Alan finally started to face the fact that his relationship with Natalie was doomed.



View answer.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Tuesday Trivia


  1. Which author said, “The true artist will let his wife starve, his children go barefoot, his mother drudge for his living at seventy, sooner than work at anything but his art”?
  2. Which famous American author ran for mayor of New York City in 1969 using the campaign slogan “No More BS”?
  3. Having obtained a medical degree in 1884, which Russian writer considered himself a doctor, rather than an author, saying, "Medicine is my lawful wife and literature is my mistress."
  4. Upon his death, which author bequeathed his birthday (November 13) to a young girl he knew because she often complained that her December 25th birthday left her with little reason to celebrate at any other time of the year?
  5. Which Russian author learned to ride a bicycle at age 67?



Last Week's Answers




Which author suffered the death of his daughter and her husband in a drowning accident and the institutionalization of another daughter for madness?


Victor Hugo



Chekhov, Robert Louis Stevenson, Ernest Dowson and Novalis all suffered from which affliction?

Tuberculosis



Which author lost his father at an early age, ran off to sea, and was captured by a tribe of cannibals?

Herman Melville



Which poet was born with a clubfoot?


Lord Byron



Which journalist requested that his ashes be fired from a cannon while Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man" played at his funeral?


Hunter S. Thompson



Monday, April 11, 2011

FREE Preparation for the State Reading Assessment Sampler for Facebook Fans!



As a thank you to all of the teachers who show their support as our Facebook fans, we are offering a FREE sampler of our Preparation for the State Reading Assessment series!







To claim your FREE Preparation for the State Reading Assessment sampler with 6 full-length nonfiction passages and corresponding multiple choice questions, visit the Prestwick House Fan Page on Facebook today!


Lost Stories by Dr. Seuss to Be Published in September

According to AOL news:


Fans of iconic children's author Theodor Seuss Geisel, otherwise known as Dr. Seuss, have reason to celebrate. In September, Random House will release "The Bippolo Seed and Other Lost Stories," a collection of seven virtually unknown stories that the author wrote in the 1950s.



Random House says the new Seuss stories are the "literary equivalent of buried treasure," and how they were unearthed is in and of itself an interesting tale.



Ten years ago, Dr. Seuss' art director Cathy Goldsmith was on eBay when she came across some tear sheets from 1950s magazines. The tear sheets contained stories that the seller claimed to be by the late Dr. Seuss.

Goldsmith purchased the tear sheets from the seller, Dr. Charles Cohen, a Massachusetts dentist whom she quickly learned possessed an encyclopedic knowledge of Dr. Seuss -- and had a collection of Seuss memorabilia to match.



Goldsmith, along with Random House vice president and publisher Kate Klimo, paid a visit to Cohen's home shortly after the purchase.



"His house was literally bursting at the seams with Seussania: plush, toys, beer trays, puzzles and a wide range of ephemera," Klimo told The Guardian. "Not only that, Dr. Cohen was a fount of Seuss information, history and theories about Ted's artistic process."



Klimo immediately contracted Cohen to write a book about the author. Published in 2003, Cohen's book, "The Seuss, the Whole Seuss and Nothing but the Seuss," is a comprehensive look at Seuss' career as a children's author and illustrator.



"But through it all," Klimo says, "Charles always wanted to compile the Seuss stories he had found in various magazines."



When "The Bippolo Seed and Other Lost Stories" comes out in September, 10 years after Goldsmith discovered the magazine tear sheets on eBay, Cohen will finally get his wish.



"In these stories, we'll meet new characters," Susan Brandt, president of Dr. Seuss Enterprises in LaJolla, Calif., told Fox News. "So you're going to meet the twins Todd and Tadd, you'll meet Gustav the Goldfish and a small boy name Henry McBride, as well as the other characters Dr. Seuss is known for."



The new book will include an introduction by Cohen, which will explain the significance of the stories in Dr. Seuss' career. They were written in the 1950s, a time that many consider Seuss' most productive creative period -- when he wrote both "The Cat in the Hat" and "The Grinch."



"The stories are as good as anything in the already-published canon," Klimo says. "And readers of all ages are in for a treat."


Wednesday, April 6, 2011

The Cranky Language Lady: Wednesday Grammar Quiz for Grownups



The Cranky Language Lady: Wednesday Grammar Quiz for Grownups comes from CrankyLanguageLady.com. To find out more about the Cranky Language Lady, view sample pages from her new book, peruse her blog, or visit the website.


Grammar Quiz #20 — Picky, Picky


The story below has only three errors. One of them is a word Cranky Language Lady sees misspelled more than nearly any other. Can you find that word and the two other very subtle errors?



“Perhaps seven cats are a tad too many,” suggested Alan tentatively, scooting Fluffy over as he tried to put his arm around Natalie.



Fluffy bit him.



Alan glared.



“Come here, Fluffikens,” Natalie said, “Did mean old Alan hurt your feelings”?



Alan sighed and tried again. “Your cats are interfering with our relationship,” he said, “and I think we need to discuss this.”



“Discuss what?” she asked, smiling as Snuggles and Snowball joined Fluffy in her lap.



“Cats!” exclaimed Alan. “Cats!”



“Yes, I definately love them,” she smiled.



Alan finally started to face the fact that his relationship with Natalie was doomed.




View answer.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Tuesday Trivia



  1. Which author suffered the death of his daughter and her husband in a drowning accident and the institutionalization of another daughter for madness?
  2. Chekhov, Robert Louis Stevenson, Ernest Dowson and Novalis all suffered from which affliction?
  3. Which author lost his father at an early age, ran off to sea, and was captured by a tribe of cannibals?
  4. Which poet was born with a clubfoot?
  5. Which journalist requested that his ashes be fired from a cannon while Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man" played at his funeral?





Last Week's Answers





Which author was sent a rejection letter that read "I regret the American public is not interested in anything on China"?




Pearl S. Buck, author of "The Good Earth"



Which U.S. President was a Finalist for the National Book Award?





John F. Kennedy was a nonfiction finalist in 1957 for Profiles in Courage.



What does the “K” stand for in J.K. Rowling’s name?





Joanne Kathleen Rowling does not have a middle name, but chose to take her paternal grandmother's name, Kathleen.



What was Judy Blume's maiden name?





Sussman



Friday, April 1, 2011

Prestwick House Introduces New Product Line that Will Raise the Bar for Pre-Schoolers





April 1, 2011 Smyrna, DE — This week, Prestwick House is proud to announce their newest product line, Prestwick House Pre-K AP, a series of young readers’ literature aimed at preparing students aged three to six years old for eventual success on the Advanced Placement in English Literature and Composition Exam.

The brainchild of adjunct-under-assistant Secretary of Education, Penelope Rychek, the Pre-K AP program has undergone strict testing in pre-schools across the country. Although students involved in the study have not yet actually taken the AP test due to a minimum age requirement of 12 years, critical indicators suggest that these products are in fact advancing pre-schoolers’ cognitive and test-taking abilities.




Click on the image above to view sample pages from Tommy and Tammy's Ocean Adventure, Book I in the Prestwick House Pre-K AP series.



“With this program, we’re hoping to raise the bar for preschoolers,” says Prestwick House New Product Development Specialist, Douglas Grudzina. “Over the past decade, studies have shown that preparing students for the AP exam at an earlier age provides many benefits. Recent evidence from the Education Institute of American strongly suggests that the time wasted coddling preschoolers and kindergartners with color names and counting on fingers could be better spent exploring the nuances of literature.”

Prestwick House Pre-K AP, the development of which has been the best-kept secret since the Manhattan Project, has been funded and supervised by such notable partner organizations as the National Association of Education (NAE), the American Higher Education Collaboration (AHEC), and the Children’s Literature Association of Southern States (CLASS).


“The books themselves are very child-friendly, exploring the lives of characters like Tammy and Tommy Turtle,” says Grudzina. “Students will explore concepts such as anthropomorphism, rhyme scheme, alliteration, and even interdisciplinary issues like learning biology and oceanography while reading quality, age-appropriate fiction. Delightful illustrations by artist Larry Knox will reinforce lessons and help students excel in elementary and high school, the Advanced Placement Exam, and beyond.”


To find out more about this innovative new program, visit PrestwickHouse.com or call (800)-932-4593.