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 Teams 
 In-class writing: What defines your 
character? 
 Group Discussions 
 Choosing your prompt 
 Formulating a tentative thesis 
 Outlining your essay 
 Introductions: Writing a directed summary
1. For the rest of the quarter, we will use teams to 
earn participation points. Your teams can be made 
up of 3 or 4 people. 
1. The teams will remain the same through the 
discussion of material for one essay. 
2. You must change at least half of your team after 
each essay. 
3. You may never have a new team composed of 
more than 50% of any prior team.
The first team competition starts today. I 
will put you into your first teams. 
This group will last 
through two class 
discussions based on 
writing essay #1, 
practicing rhetorical 
strategies, and one 
class period dedicated 
to a library research 
activity: Class 8.
 Team 1 
 Danerys: Harim L 
 Danerys: Tala A 
 Ser Jorah: Ryan N 
 Khal Drogo: Travis W 
 Viserys: Valentin F 
 Team 2 
 Eddard: Joseph K 
 Catelyn: Andrew H 
 Robb: Cooper 
 Jon: Jonathan D 
 Theon Greyjoy: Tyler 
 Team 3 
 Sansa: Nicole 
 Arya: Angie 
 Bran: Hoang 
 Joffrey: Jhomel D 
• Team 4 
• Robert: Jacob B 
• Tyrion: Serena 
• Catelyn: Johanna C 
• Lyssa Tully: Maria 
• Eddard: Kawal 
• Team 5 
M/W Class 
• Tyrion: Joseph L 
• Jon: Soo Jung 
• Samwell: Tariq 
• Benjen Stark: Omar 
• Team 6 
• Sansa: Lizzie 
• Arya: David 
• Septa Mordane: 
Cristina M 
• Sandor Clegane: 
Amanda K 
• Team 7 
• Jaime: Favian 
• Cersei: Isabella 
• Bran Vinh 
• Petyr: Hellen O 
• Varys: John H
 Team 1 
 Danerys: Rajan 
 Danerys: Laurel 
 Ser Jorah: Rudy 
 Khal Drogo: Yoon Ho 
 Viserys: Paige 
 Team 2 
 Eddard: Andrew T 
 Robb: Chris O 
 Jon: Nick T 
 Theon Greyjoy: John L 
 Team 3 
 Eddard: Dhruvangi 
 Sansa: Tim Zheng 
 Arya: Alex W 
 Bran: Sunny 
• Team 4 
• Robert: Pi 
• Tyrion: Yuri 
• Catelyn: Arik 
• Lyssa Tully: Karina V 
• Team 5 
• Catelyn: Shishir 
• Jon: Chris D 
• Tyrion: Valerie 
• Bron: Kevin 
• Team 6 
• Sansa: Cassie 
• Arya: Nick S 
• Sandor Clegane: 
Ning Cao 
• Joffrey: Phillip 
T/Th Class 
• Team 7 
• Jaime: Brian 
• Cersei: Karen R 
• Bran: Frank 
• Petyr: Kacie 
• Varys: Areli
Sit with your 
team 
members in 
class to 
facilitate 
ease of 
group 
discussions
 Point accumulation 
starts today, so make 
sure one of your team 
members is tracking 
points. 
 Make sure your name 
(first name, last initial 
alphabetized) is on the 
team point sheet. 
 Total the points for your 
team and write the 
number at the top of 
the page.
 Points will be earned 
for correct answers to 
questions, meaningful 
contributions to the 
discussion , and 
provocative questions. 
Contributions to the 
discussion via the slide 
show also score one 
point. Each team will 
track their own points, 
but cheating leads to 
death (or loss of 25 
participation points). 
 Answers, comments, 
and questions must 
be posed in a manner 
that promotes 
learning. Those who 
speak out of turn or 
with maliciousness 
will not receive 
points for their 
teams.
How do others perceive 
your character? 
How does your character see 
him or herself? 
If there is a difference, what 
causes it?
What makes your character who he or she is? 
Write out brief answers that explain or defend 
his or her behavior and actions. Consider 
these influences: 
Culture 
Family history 
Personal history 
Class/Occupation/Ass 
ignment 
Gender/Sex 
Aspirations
 Write at least three questions that you would like to 
ask other characters in your group. For instance, you 
might ask why a character treats your character a 
certain way, or you might ask about the motivation for 
an action or behavior. 
 Choose questions that will shed light on their 
motivations and behavior. Try to make others question 
their characters’ integrity, ambition, or other 
motivation. 
These questions will be the fodder for 
your discussion today. 
Jot down any discoveries you make about 
your character.
In your groups, 
discuss your 
characters. Use 
the writing you 
have done so 
far—that we did 
in class today and 
whatever other 
writing you feel 
appropriate—to 
drive your 
discussion
 Is he or she a minor or major character? 
 Does your character grow during the 
novel? 
 Does your character reflect his or her 
culture in a significant way? 
 Does your character suffer internal or 
external challenges that reveal his or her 
ethics, morals, or nature. 
 Could your character be read as a tragic 
hero?
TOPIC 1: Not all supporting characters play 
an integral role in a story; however, 
sometimes a minor character is so important 
to the novel that the theme, plot, 
protagonist, or antagonist would be greatly 
changed if that character did not exist. From 
A Game of Thrones, analyze a minor 
character that plays a significant role. Write 
a well-developed essay in which you 
analyze the character and explain why he or 
she is a significant character in the work. Be 
sure to use specific examples and quotations 
to support your claims.
 TOPIC 2: A dynamic character is 
one who changes or grows 
emotionally or psychologically 
from the beginning of the novel 
until end. Many novels have 
multiple dynamic characters. 
Choose one character from A 
Game of Thrones and write a 
well-developed essay in which 
you prove that he or she is a 
dynamic character. Be sure to use 
specific examples and quotations 
to support your claims.
 TOPIC 3: Often a character 
reflects the culture of the 
country in which he or she 
lives, that is, he or she 
exemplifies the skills, arts, 
values, beliefs, and ideals of a 
certain people or country. From 
A Game of Thrones, choose a 
character that embodies the 
culture of the people he or she 
represents. In a well-developed 
essay, define the culture of one 
character and show how that 
character illustrates that culture.
 TOPIC 4: Analyze a character that 
reveals his or her personality, ethics, 
morals, and nature through the 
challenges he or she faces. Think about 
the different types of conflict that exist. 
Conflict can be external, such as person 
versus person, person versus nature, or 
person versus society. Conflict can also 
be internal, for example, person versus 
self. How does your chosen character 
experience conflict during the novel? 
Keep in mind how conflict causes a 
character to change throughout the 
course of the story.
 TOPIC 5: Aristotle's ideas about 
tragedy were recorded in his book 
of literary theory titled Poetics. In 
it, he has a great deal to say about 
the structure, purpose, and 
intended effect of tragedy. His 
ideas have been adopted, disputed, 
expanded, and discussed for 
several centuries now. In a well-written 
essay, analyze a character 
from Game of Thrones, arguing for 
or against his or her status as a 
“tragic hero.”
1. Analyze a minor character that plays a significant role. Write a well-developed 
essay in which you analyze the character and explain why 
he or she is a significant character in the work. 
2. Choose one character and write a well-developed essay in which 
you prove that he or she is a dynamic character. 
3. Choose a character that embodies the culture of the people he or she 
represents. Define the culture of one character and show how that 
character illustrates that culture. 
4. Analyze a character that reveals his or her personality, ethics, 
morals, and nature through the challenges he or she faces. How does 
your chosen character experience and manage conflict? 
5. In a well-written essay, analyze a character, arguing for or against 
his or her status as a “tragic hero.”
Testing your Choice
 Your thesis is a statement or theory that you put 
forward as a premise to be maintained or proved. 
 It is also a map for your essay; that is, it tells the reader 
what you are suggesting and why you believe your 
theory is true. 
 But your thesis does more than help the reader. A 
good, clear working thesis (one that may not yet be 
beautiful prose but that details your plan) can help you 
outline your essay.
 [Jon] is faced with a myriad of conflicts, both external 
and internal, which come from different sources: his 
heritage, his loyalty, and his aspirations –which tackle 
different aspects of his life. Jon Snow is the one 
character that is constantly challenged to pick sides, 
and, as a result, grows from these trials. These 
conflicts bring out Jon’s priorities and values and 
test his loyalty and result in the growing of Jon 
from a distressed kid into a likable and honorable 
man who appears to have found a place in this 
world.
 If you don’t yet know which prompt to address, responding 
to a couple of them by writing rough theses might help you 
choose. 
 Write out a rough thesis for at least one of the prompts: for 
example, if you chose topic 4, you might start with “Jon 
Snow reveals his personality, ethics, morals, and nature 
when he faces his life challenges. He struggles with both 
internal and external conflict: life at Winterfell, life as a 
bastard, life on the wall, and his struggle with honor, 
justice and duty. Jon changes as he confronts each of these 
issues, growing from an angry boy into an honorable man 
of the night’s watch.”
 Of course, this working thesis is in its simplest form. 
 You will likely change it significantly as you refine your 
thoughts and ideas about your character. 
 For example, instead of saying “Jon Snow reveals his 
ethics, morals, and nature when he faces his life 
challenges,” I would likely assert what kind of 
ethics, morals, and nature that he reveals. I might 
even limit my thesis to the two most fruitful 
categories.
 The more I understand about Jon and who he is based 
on how he confronts his conflicts, the more specific I 
would make my thesis. 
 For now, a working thesis and a simple outline can 
help you see which questions you can, or want to, 
answer. 
 They can also help you develop ideas about what you 
will write before you launch into your project.
 Intro 
 Thesis 
 Internal Conflict 
 Ethics 
 Justice/fairness 
 Morals 
 Struggle with duty on the 
wall 
 Nature 
 Mother/birth 
 Wanting to be a ranger 
 External Conflict 
 Ethics 
 Defending Samwell 
 Morals 
 Catelyn 
 Nature 
 Direwolves 
 Conclusion
 Once you have your thesis (or theses 
written), start sketching out a 
working outline. 
 Use your thesis to determine what 
you will write. 
 As you make your outline, briefly 
consider which textual examples you 
will use as support.
• A directed summary provides readers of your 
paper with the information they need to 
understand your argument and explanation. 
• State the title and author of the literary work 
near the beginning of the first paragraph, 
perhaps in the first sentence. This is essential 
so that the reader knows which work you are 
discussing.
• Hook the reader. In the first sentences, write 
what is particularly interesting about the 
work. This thought-provoking information 
must also be relevant to the topic you will 
discuss in your essay. 
• Assume that the reader is familiar with the 
work about which you are writing. Do not 
include too much plot summary in the 
introduction or in the rest of the essay. Do 
include the part of the story that will 
support your thesis. This might or might not 
include some aspect of your character 
description
Example of the Directed Summary 
Approach to the Introduction 
In A Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin, a series of obscure 
events in the kingdom’s capitol pulls Eddard Stark of Winterfell 
from his comfortable, although icy cold, zone and pits him against 
charlatans and a rising coup d’état that threatens the safety of his 
family. As this political time bomb ticks, the last surviving 
descendants from the previous royal family, the Targaryens, are 
scheming up a coup of their own. Amidst all this political 
controversy, a particular bastard boy under the name of Jon Snow is 
faced with obstacles of his own. Although Jon is the illegitimate son 
of Eddard Stark, the lord of Winterfell, he still faces the ruthless 
fate that his society’s status quo has chosen for people like him. The 
whole novel is rife with conflict; however, Jon Snow clearly 
becomes the epitome of conflict and self-reflection.
• Use transitions throughout the introduction. Because 
there are so many aspects of the work that have to be 
included, the introduction can end up fragmented 
and confusing. Make sure that it makes sense on its 
own as a paragraph. Clearly transition from your 
introduction into your thesis. 
• State the thesis near the end of the introduction 
(your introduction might be more than one 
paragraph). The thesis should clearly state what the 
essay will analyze/assert/argue and should be very 
specific.
[Jon] is faced with a myriad of conflicts, both 
external and internal, which come from 
different sources: his heritage, his loyalty, and 
his aspirations –which tackle different aspects 
of his life. Jon Snow is the one character that is 
constantly challenged to pick sides, and, as a 
result, grows from these trials. These 
conflicts bring out Jon’s priorities and 
values and test his loyalty and result in the 
growing of Jon from a distressed kid into a 
likable and honorable man who appears to 
have found a place in this world.
 Begin your directed summary. 
 Consider what details you must 
include to prepare the reader 
for your essay. 
 Try funneling your 
introduction, that is, narrowing 
your topic as you summarize 
the relevant parts of the story. 
The thesis will be the neck of 
the funnel and will direct the 
reader to your specific 
argument.
 Read A Game of Thrones through 
page 600 
Post #10 Post your working thesis 
and outline. Find evidence to 
support your points. Include exact 
quotations and citations in your 
outline. 
 Post #11 Directed summary 
 Study Vocabulary list #3: Test 
next class 
 There will be NO WORD BANK

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  • 1.
  • 2.  Teams  In-class writing: What defines your character?  Group Discussions  Choosing your prompt  Formulating a tentative thesis  Outlining your essay  Introductions: Writing a directed summary
  • 3. 1. For the rest of the quarter, we will use teams to earn participation points. Your teams can be made up of 3 or 4 people. 1. The teams will remain the same through the discussion of material for one essay. 2. You must change at least half of your team after each essay. 3. You may never have a new team composed of more than 50% of any prior team.
  • 4. The first team competition starts today. I will put you into your first teams. This group will last through two class discussions based on writing essay #1, practicing rhetorical strategies, and one class period dedicated to a library research activity: Class 8.
  • 5.  Team 1  Danerys: Harim L  Danerys: Tala A  Ser Jorah: Ryan N  Khal Drogo: Travis W  Viserys: Valentin F  Team 2  Eddard: Joseph K  Catelyn: Andrew H  Robb: Cooper  Jon: Jonathan D  Theon Greyjoy: Tyler  Team 3  Sansa: Nicole  Arya: Angie  Bran: Hoang  Joffrey: Jhomel D • Team 4 • Robert: Jacob B • Tyrion: Serena • Catelyn: Johanna C • Lyssa Tully: Maria • Eddard: Kawal • Team 5 M/W Class • Tyrion: Joseph L • Jon: Soo Jung • Samwell: Tariq • Benjen Stark: Omar • Team 6 • Sansa: Lizzie • Arya: David • Septa Mordane: Cristina M • Sandor Clegane: Amanda K • Team 7 • Jaime: Favian • Cersei: Isabella • Bran Vinh • Petyr: Hellen O • Varys: John H
  • 6.  Team 1  Danerys: Rajan  Danerys: Laurel  Ser Jorah: Rudy  Khal Drogo: Yoon Ho  Viserys: Paige  Team 2  Eddard: Andrew T  Robb: Chris O  Jon: Nick T  Theon Greyjoy: John L  Team 3  Eddard: Dhruvangi  Sansa: Tim Zheng  Arya: Alex W  Bran: Sunny • Team 4 • Robert: Pi • Tyrion: Yuri • Catelyn: Arik • Lyssa Tully: Karina V • Team 5 • Catelyn: Shishir • Jon: Chris D • Tyrion: Valerie • Bron: Kevin • Team 6 • Sansa: Cassie • Arya: Nick S • Sandor Clegane: Ning Cao • Joffrey: Phillip T/Th Class • Team 7 • Jaime: Brian • Cersei: Karen R • Bran: Frank • Petyr: Kacie • Varys: Areli
  • 7. Sit with your team members in class to facilitate ease of group discussions
  • 8.  Point accumulation starts today, so make sure one of your team members is tracking points.  Make sure your name (first name, last initial alphabetized) is on the team point sheet.  Total the points for your team and write the number at the top of the page.
  • 9.  Points will be earned for correct answers to questions, meaningful contributions to the discussion , and provocative questions. Contributions to the discussion via the slide show also score one point. Each team will track their own points, but cheating leads to death (or loss of 25 participation points).  Answers, comments, and questions must be posed in a manner that promotes learning. Those who speak out of turn or with maliciousness will not receive points for their teams.
  • 10.
  • 11. How do others perceive your character? How does your character see him or herself? If there is a difference, what causes it?
  • 12. What makes your character who he or she is? Write out brief answers that explain or defend his or her behavior and actions. Consider these influences: Culture Family history Personal history Class/Occupation/Ass ignment Gender/Sex Aspirations
  • 13.  Write at least three questions that you would like to ask other characters in your group. For instance, you might ask why a character treats your character a certain way, or you might ask about the motivation for an action or behavior.  Choose questions that will shed light on their motivations and behavior. Try to make others question their characters’ integrity, ambition, or other motivation. These questions will be the fodder for your discussion today. Jot down any discoveries you make about your character.
  • 14. In your groups, discuss your characters. Use the writing you have done so far—that we did in class today and whatever other writing you feel appropriate—to drive your discussion
  • 15.
  • 16.
  • 17.  Is he or she a minor or major character?  Does your character grow during the novel?  Does your character reflect his or her culture in a significant way?  Does your character suffer internal or external challenges that reveal his or her ethics, morals, or nature.  Could your character be read as a tragic hero?
  • 18.
  • 19. TOPIC 1: Not all supporting characters play an integral role in a story; however, sometimes a minor character is so important to the novel that the theme, plot, protagonist, or antagonist would be greatly changed if that character did not exist. From A Game of Thrones, analyze a minor character that plays a significant role. Write a well-developed essay in which you analyze the character and explain why he or she is a significant character in the work. Be sure to use specific examples and quotations to support your claims.
  • 20.  TOPIC 2: A dynamic character is one who changes or grows emotionally or psychologically from the beginning of the novel until end. Many novels have multiple dynamic characters. Choose one character from A Game of Thrones and write a well-developed essay in which you prove that he or she is a dynamic character. Be sure to use specific examples and quotations to support your claims.
  • 21.  TOPIC 3: Often a character reflects the culture of the country in which he or she lives, that is, he or she exemplifies the skills, arts, values, beliefs, and ideals of a certain people or country. From A Game of Thrones, choose a character that embodies the culture of the people he or she represents. In a well-developed essay, define the culture of one character and show how that character illustrates that culture.
  • 22.  TOPIC 4: Analyze a character that reveals his or her personality, ethics, morals, and nature through the challenges he or she faces. Think about the different types of conflict that exist. Conflict can be external, such as person versus person, person versus nature, or person versus society. Conflict can also be internal, for example, person versus self. How does your chosen character experience conflict during the novel? Keep in mind how conflict causes a character to change throughout the course of the story.
  • 23.  TOPIC 5: Aristotle's ideas about tragedy were recorded in his book of literary theory titled Poetics. In it, he has a great deal to say about the structure, purpose, and intended effect of tragedy. His ideas have been adopted, disputed, expanded, and discussed for several centuries now. In a well-written essay, analyze a character from Game of Thrones, arguing for or against his or her status as a “tragic hero.”
  • 24.
  • 25. 1. Analyze a minor character that plays a significant role. Write a well-developed essay in which you analyze the character and explain why he or she is a significant character in the work. 2. Choose one character and write a well-developed essay in which you prove that he or she is a dynamic character. 3. Choose a character that embodies the culture of the people he or she represents. Define the culture of one character and show how that character illustrates that culture. 4. Analyze a character that reveals his or her personality, ethics, morals, and nature through the challenges he or she faces. How does your chosen character experience and manage conflict? 5. In a well-written essay, analyze a character, arguing for or against his or her status as a “tragic hero.”
  • 27.  Your thesis is a statement or theory that you put forward as a premise to be maintained or proved.  It is also a map for your essay; that is, it tells the reader what you are suggesting and why you believe your theory is true.  But your thesis does more than help the reader. A good, clear working thesis (one that may not yet be beautiful prose but that details your plan) can help you outline your essay.
  • 28.  [Jon] is faced with a myriad of conflicts, both external and internal, which come from different sources: his heritage, his loyalty, and his aspirations –which tackle different aspects of his life. Jon Snow is the one character that is constantly challenged to pick sides, and, as a result, grows from these trials. These conflicts bring out Jon’s priorities and values and test his loyalty and result in the growing of Jon from a distressed kid into a likable and honorable man who appears to have found a place in this world.
  • 29.  If you don’t yet know which prompt to address, responding to a couple of them by writing rough theses might help you choose.  Write out a rough thesis for at least one of the prompts: for example, if you chose topic 4, you might start with “Jon Snow reveals his personality, ethics, morals, and nature when he faces his life challenges. He struggles with both internal and external conflict: life at Winterfell, life as a bastard, life on the wall, and his struggle with honor, justice and duty. Jon changes as he confronts each of these issues, growing from an angry boy into an honorable man of the night’s watch.”
  • 30.  Of course, this working thesis is in its simplest form.  You will likely change it significantly as you refine your thoughts and ideas about your character.  For example, instead of saying “Jon Snow reveals his ethics, morals, and nature when he faces his life challenges,” I would likely assert what kind of ethics, morals, and nature that he reveals. I might even limit my thesis to the two most fruitful categories.
  • 31.  The more I understand about Jon and who he is based on how he confronts his conflicts, the more specific I would make my thesis.  For now, a working thesis and a simple outline can help you see which questions you can, or want to, answer.  They can also help you develop ideas about what you will write before you launch into your project.
  • 32.
  • 33.  Intro  Thesis  Internal Conflict  Ethics  Justice/fairness  Morals  Struggle with duty on the wall  Nature  Mother/birth  Wanting to be a ranger  External Conflict  Ethics  Defending Samwell  Morals  Catelyn  Nature  Direwolves  Conclusion
  • 34.  Once you have your thesis (or theses written), start sketching out a working outline.  Use your thesis to determine what you will write.  As you make your outline, briefly consider which textual examples you will use as support.
  • 35.
  • 36. • A directed summary provides readers of your paper with the information they need to understand your argument and explanation. • State the title and author of the literary work near the beginning of the first paragraph, perhaps in the first sentence. This is essential so that the reader knows which work you are discussing.
  • 37. • Hook the reader. In the first sentences, write what is particularly interesting about the work. This thought-provoking information must also be relevant to the topic you will discuss in your essay. • Assume that the reader is familiar with the work about which you are writing. Do not include too much plot summary in the introduction or in the rest of the essay. Do include the part of the story that will support your thesis. This might or might not include some aspect of your character description
  • 38. Example of the Directed Summary Approach to the Introduction In A Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin, a series of obscure events in the kingdom’s capitol pulls Eddard Stark of Winterfell from his comfortable, although icy cold, zone and pits him against charlatans and a rising coup d’état that threatens the safety of his family. As this political time bomb ticks, the last surviving descendants from the previous royal family, the Targaryens, are scheming up a coup of their own. Amidst all this political controversy, a particular bastard boy under the name of Jon Snow is faced with obstacles of his own. Although Jon is the illegitimate son of Eddard Stark, the lord of Winterfell, he still faces the ruthless fate that his society’s status quo has chosen for people like him. The whole novel is rife with conflict; however, Jon Snow clearly becomes the epitome of conflict and self-reflection.
  • 39. • Use transitions throughout the introduction. Because there are so many aspects of the work that have to be included, the introduction can end up fragmented and confusing. Make sure that it makes sense on its own as a paragraph. Clearly transition from your introduction into your thesis. • State the thesis near the end of the introduction (your introduction might be more than one paragraph). The thesis should clearly state what the essay will analyze/assert/argue and should be very specific.
  • 40. [Jon] is faced with a myriad of conflicts, both external and internal, which come from different sources: his heritage, his loyalty, and his aspirations –which tackle different aspects of his life. Jon Snow is the one character that is constantly challenged to pick sides, and, as a result, grows from these trials. These conflicts bring out Jon’s priorities and values and test his loyalty and result in the growing of Jon from a distressed kid into a likable and honorable man who appears to have found a place in this world.
  • 41.  Begin your directed summary.  Consider what details you must include to prepare the reader for your essay.  Try funneling your introduction, that is, narrowing your topic as you summarize the relevant parts of the story. The thesis will be the neck of the funnel and will direct the reader to your specific argument.
  • 42.  Read A Game of Thrones through page 600 Post #10 Post your working thesis and outline. Find evidence to support your points. Include exact quotations and citations in your outline.  Post #11 Directed summary  Study Vocabulary list #3: Test next class  There will be NO WORD BANK