Curriculum Detail

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English

The English curriculum is designed to help students broaden their experiences through reading, writing, and presentation. Various levels of Advanced Placement (AP), International Baccalaureate (IB), Honors (H), and standard courses allow each student to be challenged at his or her own pace. All genres are offered in these disciplines, affording students the opportunity to experience the differences between fiction, non-fiction, novel, short story, drama, poetry, and essay. Process writing is used to encourage students to revise material, to refine their understanding of grammar and mechanics, and to place an emphasis on mastery. Classes are discussion based and assignments are often individually crafted, allowing students to express their own creativity and insights while honing their skills in critical analysis of literature.

  • Genre Studies: Contemporary Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature

    What can contemporary genre fiction teach us about life in the 21st century? In this course, students will examine their daily lives through the lens of current SF and fantasy literature. Themes will include self-representation in online environments, how we make and identify our friends when we never see them face to face, how we define happiness, and how we make choices about what to do with the power to which we have access. Over the course of the semester, students will analyze the texts we read through discussions and persuasive essays. The class will culminate in an independent short story writing project.
  • Genre Studies: Contemporary Women Writers

    What does it mean to be contemporary? What is the work of a writer in the 21st century? What is your own project as a writer of this period? As a reader? These are some of the questions that will guide students’ progress through this course. Reading the work of contemporary women writers in a variety of genres and producing their own creative pieces simultaneously, students will begin to articulate for themselves what they value in writing that is of their time. The format of the class will be evenly split between literary discussion and writing workshop. Readings may include material from current literary magazines and from collections published within the last decade. Assessments will involve creative work, analytical writing, oral expression, and collaboration. 
  • Genre Studies: The Beat Goes On...

    Literature, art, film, and music are outlets for society to express how they feel about current events. As a reader, listener, or viewer, we may turn to these mediums to escape the world. As the creator, we may find relief in producing a poem or song that candidly describes how we feel about the world we live in. Senior and postgraduate students in “The Beat Goes On” will uncover how young people reacted to significant world events to leave an enduring message that still resonates with individuals today. The preservation of their voice, both literally and figuratively, will be an important point of class discussion throughout our semester of study in this one term elective. Engaging in interdisciplinary learning, students will develop a comprehensive understanding of the origins of the Beatniks in the United States and why this group developed as an important voice in America. As we chronologically read and listen to the poetry and novels of such prominent figures as Jack Kerouac, Joyce Johnson, Allen Ginsberg, LeRoi Jones (Amiri Baraka), Tom Wolfe, and Ken Kesey, we will simultaneously listen to the emerging jazz music and bebop of this era (Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie) and draw connections between song lyrics, text, and the art of the 1950s-1970s. We will record our own reactions to these texts and songs through free writes, also working to write our own creative piece as a reaction to current events. By completing this course, students will understand how literature captures the response of society to particular historical events. Students will see that we can further our understanding of how people felt during a specific time period by listening to their voices as preserved in music and literature.
  • IB Theory of Knowledge Year Two

    This course is an interdisciplinary requirement for IB Diploma Candidates intended to stimulate critical reflection on knowledge and experience gained outside the classroom.
  • World Literature & Composition

    As a culmination of a student's experience in the classroom while at New Hampton School, World Literature and Composition offers students the opportunity to demonstrate and hone their critical thinking and analytical processing skills. Students use literature from around the world as a foundation for discussion and writing prompts that seek to prepare students for college-level discourse.  Throughout the course of both semesters, students will pursue an intensive study of the writing process, addressing the four rhetorical modes of discourse: description, narration, exposition, and argument. Literary analysis skills are developed in conjunction with close, focused reading of multiple texts. Attention will also be given to the college essay and SAT/ACT preparation. Assignments will work to reinforce appropriate use of structure, syntax, audience, tone, personal voice, and point of view.

Faculty

  • Photo of Luke Tobin
    Luke Tobin
    English Department Chair
    603-677-3519
    State University of New York at Potsdam - MA
    St. Lawrence University
    Bio
  • Photo of Austin Arkell
    Austin Arkell
    English Faculty
    Bio
  • Photo of Meghan Aronson
    Meghan Aronson
    Director of the Writing Center, English Faculty
    Dartmouth College - MALS
    Gettysburg College - BA
    Bio
  • Photo of Jamie Bavaro
    Jamie Bavaro
    Assistant Director of Athletics & Co-Curriculars, English Faculty
    Niagara University - BA
    National University of Ireland Maynooth - MA
    Bio
  • Photo of Kevin Driscoll
    Kevin Driscoll
    English Faculty
    603-677-3512
    Plymouth State University - BS
    Bio
  • Photo of Michael Landino
    Michael Landino
    English Faculty
    Bio
  • Photo of Scott LeBrun
    Scott LeBrun
    Director of Student Life, English Faculty
    603-677-3436
    Boston University - M.Ed
    Western New England College - MA
    Saint Anselm College - BA
    Bio
  • Photo of Guthrie Little
    Guthrie Little
    English Faculty
    Bio
  • Photo of Jake Moore
    Jake Moore
    English Faculty
    Bio
  • Photo of Renee Morrissette
    Renee Morrissette
    English Faculty
    Bio
  • Photo of Sara Tyson
    Sara Tyson
    Science Faculty, English Faculty, Academic Support Program Faculty
    603-677-3447
    Plymouth State University - M.E.d. / CAGS
    Bio
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