Master of arts In Teaching - Essays in Professionalism and Commercial Teachers College Who Is A Teacher Do you want a teaching credential or you are just a master teacher with a dream to be the master of arts in teaching? I want to be a teacher or i am a teacher are some of the words echoed by my friends unlike any types of physicians, John, a sped teacher, Ethan the physics teacher and Grace one referred to as the best teacher at was at first afraid of taking the risk to be a teacher at our teachers college and institute of management. But the big mystery still remains: who exactly is a teacher? Teachers and Titles Associated As A Professional And Counselor A teacher, sometimes referred to according to the profession and professionalism such as the best teacher, the physics teacher, elementary teacher, early childhood teacher, high school teacher, elementary school teacher, master teacher, sped teacher, teaching fellow, preschool teacher, best teacher, counselors, or with a long...
Poetry is a compact language that expresses complex feelings. To understand the multiple meanings of a poem, readers must examine its words and phrasing from the perspectives of rhythm, sound, images, obvious meaning, and implied meaning. Readers then need to organize responses to the verse into a logical, point-by-point explanation. A good beginning involves asking questions that apply to most poetry.
When studying poetry, it is
useful first of all to consider the theme and the overall development
of the theme in the poem. Obviously, the sort of development that takes place
depends to a considerable extent on the type of poem one is dealing with. It is
useful to keep two general distinctions in mind (for more detailed definitions
consult Abrams 1999 and Preminger et al 1993): lyric poetry and narrative
poetry.
Lyric Poetry
A lyric
poem is a comparatively short, non-narrative poem in which a single
speaker presents a state of mind or an emotional state. Lyric poetry retains
some of the elements of song which is said to be its origin: For Greek writers
the lyric was a song accompanied by the lyre. Subcategories of the lyric are,
for example elegy, ode, sonnet and dramatic monologue and most occasional
poetry: In modern usage, elegy is a formal
lament for the death of a particular person (for example Tennyson’s In
Memoriam A.H.H.).
More broadly defined, the term elegy is also used for solemn meditations, often on questions of death, such as Gray's Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard. An ode is a long lyric poem with a serious subject written in an elevated style. Famous examples are Wordsworth’s Hymn to Duty or Keats’ Ode to a Grecian Urn. The sonnet was originally a love poem which dealt with the lover’s sufferings and hopes. It originated in Italy and became popular in England in the Renaissance, when Thomas Wyatt and the Earl of Surrey translated and imitated the sonnets written by Petrarch (Petrarchan sonnet). From the seventeenth century onwards the sonnet was also used for other topics than love, for instance for religious experience (by Donne and Milton), reflections on art (by Keats or Shelley) or even the war experience (by Brooke or Owen).
More broadly defined, the term elegy is also used for solemn meditations, often on questions of death, such as Gray's Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard. An ode is a long lyric poem with a serious subject written in an elevated style. Famous examples are Wordsworth’s Hymn to Duty or Keats’ Ode to a Grecian Urn. The sonnet was originally a love poem which dealt with the lover’s sufferings and hopes. It originated in Italy and became popular in England in the Renaissance, when Thomas Wyatt and the Earl of Surrey translated and imitated the sonnets written by Petrarch (Petrarchan sonnet). From the seventeenth century onwards the sonnet was also used for other topics than love, for instance for religious experience (by Donne and Milton), reflections on art (by Keats or Shelley) or even the war experience (by Brooke or Owen).
Cont.
The sonnet uses a single stanza of (usually) fourteen lines and a complex rhyme pattern. Many poets wrote a series of sonnets linked by the same theme, so-called sonnet cycles (for instance Petrarch, Spenser, Shakespeare, Drayton, Barret-Browning, Meredith) which depict the various stages of a love relationship. In a dramatic monologue a speaker, who is explicitly someone other than the author, makes a speech to a silent auditor in a specific situation and at a critical moment. Without intending to do so, the speaker reveals aspects of his temperament and character. In Browning's My Last Duchess for instance, the Duke shows the picture of his last wife to the emissary from his prospective new wife and reveals his excessive pride in his position and his jealous temperament. Occasional poetry is written for a specific occasion: a wedding (then it is called an epithalamion, for instance Spenser’s Epithalamion), the return of a king from exile (for instance Dryden’s Annus Mirabilis) or a death (for example Milton’s Lycidas), etc.Narrative Poetry
Narrative poetry gives a verbal representation, in verse, of a sequence of connected events; it propels characters through a plot. It is always told by a narrator. Narrative poems might tell of a love story (like Tennyson's Maud), the story of a father and son (like Wordsworth's Michael) or the deeds of a hero or heroine (like Walter Scott's Lay of the Last Minstrel).Sub-categories of narrative poetry:
Epics
usually operate on a large scale, both in length and topic, such as the
founding of a nation the beginning of world
history (Milton's Paradise Lost), they tend to use an elevated style
of language and supernatural beings take part in the action.
The mock-epic
makes use of epic conventions, like the elevated style and the assumption that
the topic is of great importance, to deal with completely insignificant
occurrences. A famous example is Pope's The Rape of the Lock, which
tells the story of a young beauty whose suitor secretly cuts off a lock of her
hair. A ballad is a song, originally
transmitted orally, which tells a story. It is an important form of folk poetry
which was adapted for literary uses from the sixteenth century onwards. The
ballad stanza is usually a four-line stanza, alternating tetrameter and trimester.
Descriptive and Didactic Poetry
Both
lyric and narrative poetry can contain lengthy and detailed descriptions (descriptive
poetry) or scenes in direct speech (dramatic poetry).
The purpose of
a didactic poem is primarily to teach something. This can take
the form of very specific instructions, such as how to catch a fish, as in James
Thomson’s The Seasons (Spring 379-442) or how to write good
poetry as in Alexander Pope’s Essay on Criticism. But it can also be
meant as instructive in a general way. Until the twentieth
century all literature was expected to have a didactic purpose in a general
sense, that is, to impart moral, theoretical or even practical knowledge; Horace
famously demanded that poetry should combine prodesse
(learning) and delectare (pleasure). The twentieth century was
more reluctant to proclaim literature openly as a teaching tool.
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