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Advanced Language Arts Seminar

Academic Year Language Arts
Schedule in 2024-25
We're not currently offering any sections of this course. Fill out this course interest form to be notified if we open one!

Designed for advanced high school learners, this course focuses on close-reading and analysis paired with academic writing. Students learn rhetorical analysis: how to recognize the "tools" an author uses to create certain effects in their writing, and then how to explain and analyze what the author is doing in an essay.

In the first trimester, students learn and apply these skills by studying several short stories from The Best American Short Stories of the Century, coupled with a study of a critical reading guide (How to Read Literature Like a Professor) and a college writing textbook (They Say / I Say: The Moves that Matter in Academic Writing).

In the second trimester, students continue honing their rhetorical analysis skills by examining several challenging texts drawn from various sources, including the nonfiction essay anthology The Little Norton Reader.

In the final trimester, students turn the lens on themselves, using the analytical and writing skills they've been developing to write their own short memoirs while examining several published memoirs. Studying and crafting memoir gives students exposure to the kind of reflective writing they'll be expected to do in their college application essays.

What happens in class?

Each lesson is different, but all lessons are designed around the following components:

  • Close-reading and discussion of very challenging literary texts
  • Targeted study of professional, published writing and in-class practice of academic writing skills
  • Feedback on writing, including one-on-one conferencing with the teacher and group workshops
Homework

Throughout the year, students draft and revise several long-term writing projects both in class and at home. Students will work on these projects mostly in-class so they can get instant feedback from their teacher, but they will also be expected to complete some writing at home. At the end of the year, students will choose one of these projects to revise and polish.

In addition to writing, students will also complete short reading assignments at home that will be discussed in class. Students will also be expected to read independently throughout the year, selecting books from the Recommended Reading List for Grades 8 and Above.

Teacher Feedback

Since students will complete most of their writing in class, there will be many opportunities for the teacher to provide informal feedback face-to-face while students are working. The teacher will conference with students regularly during class, providing oral feedback and some informal written notes on their work. At the end of each multi-week project, students will submit their final draft and receive evaluative written feedback from their teacher.

Exams

Students take three in-class exams, one at the end of each trimester, weeks 12, 24, and 36. Exams will focus on the analysis and writing skills students are learning in class.

Course Texts
  • Trimester 1: Best American Short Stories of the Century; How to Read Literature Like a Professor
  • Trimester 2: They Say / I Say, 5th ed.
  • Trimester 3: Little Norton Reader

Note: To ensure students have the best experience, it is recommended that they do not read the course texts before class starts.

SYLLABUS

Our family regularly talks about AoPS. We try to think about how our life would be different without you all. What if my daughter hadn't learned to love math? What if she never experienced being pushed to her limits? Overcoming failure? She wouldn't be who she is. And she is AWESOME! A very proud mom here. We are so fortunate that we found AoPS Academy. I credit AoPS for much of her confidence.

Kelly B.,

AoPS Academy parent to 16-year-old engineering major at UW and future cancer researcher