Your semester portfolio will take place of your final exam in Performance Word and Text. It will be worth 25% of your grade in the class. Please take it seriously.
Remember: You may use work done in both classes for your portfolio. You want to exhibit the best work you have completed thus far.
1. Choose
§ One way to make an abstract concept (like love or death or pain or sadness) concrete is by creating a metaphor or simile. (Ex. Love is a blind dove fluttering at your window)• Poetry: Choose 3-5 poems that you think are most successful, creative, or show off your talent or progress as a writer.
• Fiction: Choose 1-3 stories that you think are most successful, creative, or show off your talent or progress as a writer.
• Script: Choose 1 script that you think is most successful, creative, or shows off your talent or progress as a writer.
• Other: Personal, Creative Writing, or English projects: Choose 1-3 projects you did for this semester for yourself, an English class, or for Creative Writing class.
2. Revise
• Nouns: Nouns should be specific and concrete; avoid blatant abstract or vague nouns always in your writing.
§ If you can’t hold it in your hand, touch it, smell it, taste it, hear it, then it’s not concrete. If you can’t see it or touch it, it’s not specific.
• Verbs: Verbs should be active.
§ Avoid excessive use of the verb TO BE. Instead, use strong active verbs
§ Do not shift tense. Make sure all your verbs are either in the past or present.
• Modifiers: Adjectives, prepositions, adverbs, conjunctions, interjections. These parts of speech help describe your characters, settings, and plot events.
§ Make sure your stories and poems describe the images you expect the reader to see. Don’t forget about WHERE your characters are or WHAT they are doing while they are talking or acting.
§ Adverbs should be used sparingly.
§ Try to avoid overusing conjunctions. This is a sure sign of a run-on sentence.
• Plot, character, setting, conflict, theme, dialogue, form: Find places in your stories and poems to expand your ideas. Complicate your plots, make them longer, more character driven, more descriptive. Use dialogue to develop your characters histories and backgrounds. Choose your words with care. Try to make a point. Remember your reader!
• Spell check and proofread your work! Reading your work out loud can help!
• It is sometimes helpful to get feedback from friends, teacher, or enemies about your writing.
Remember: this is a writing portfolio (and you have taken Grammar and Style), so you should check and correct any grammar or formatting errors in your work.
3. After you compile your portfolio, you need to write a 2-5 page typed reflection essay about your progress this far in your creative writing courses. In your essay, you should:
§ Talk about your strengths and weaknesses as a writer.
§ Talk about the reading we did and your skill at being a reader. What pieces did you most enjoy/which pieces were difficult for you? Why?
§ Talk about specific writing problems you have faced (and overcome.)
§ Talk about our classes– what parts did you most enjoy, which parts did you least enjoy? What might we be able to do to provide a better learning environment for you?
Hint: do not complain, but actively examine what you felt you did and learned in these classes. Complain to your family and friends, not your self-evaluation.
§ Make a goal. What would you like to work on in the next semester?
4. Finally, please grade yourself. What grade would you give YOURSELF as a writer this semester? Why? Defend your answer.
§ Talk about the work you include in your portfolio
What pieces did you most enjoy, which were difficult for you and why? Which pieces show off your talent? What did writing these pieces help you understand in writing§ The thing to remember about modifiers is that they are not necessary. Overusing them is a great mistake in writing! Be concise! § Do not write in the passive voice – let your subject do the action.
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