History Lessons from Poetry Assessment Comparative poetry is defined as the evaluation and analysis of two poems for similarities and differences in their perspectives and poetic
History Lessons from Poetry Assessment
Comparative poetry is defined as the evaluation and analysis of two poems for similarities and differences in their perspectives and poetic approaches to a similar topic. You may select one of the following sets of paired poetry:
· "A Dream" by Edgar Allan Poe and "We dream – it is good we are dreaming" by Emily Dickinson
· "Dulce et Decorum Est" by Wilfred Owen and "I Have a Rendezvous with Death" by Alan Seeger
· "We Wear the Mask" by Paul Laurence Dunbar and "Heritage" by Gwendolyn Bennett
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Poem #1 |
Poem #2 |
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Poem Title |
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Poem Topic |
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Author's Tone/Perspective (complete |
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Evidence from the Poem to Support (including |
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Theme of Poem (complete |
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Comparative Poetry Paragraph |
In a well-written paragraph
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History Lessons from Poetry Rubric
(60 points possible)
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On Target |
Almost There |
Needs Improvement |
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Author's Tone/Perspective (10 points) |
10-8 points · |
7-6 points · There |
5-0 points · |
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Evidence to Support Authors' (15 points) |
15-12 points · The |
11-9 points · |
8-0 points · The
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Theme (15 points) |
15-12 points · The |
11-9 points · The |
8-0 points · |
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Comparative Poetry Paragraph (20 points) |
20-16 points · ·
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15-12 points · ·
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11-0 points · ·
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