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Course List 8
Advanced Placement (AP) Program
Taipei American School offers more than thirty Advanced Placement courses in a variety of subject areas. An approved curriculum is followed, and a standardized external examination prepared and scored by The College Board is administered by TAS in May of each year. College websites usually contain an accurate description of an institution’s policy on placement and what academic credit, if any, is awarded for an Advanced Placement examination score. Additionally, only students who are enrolled in the AP course may sit the AP exam at TAS.
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Advanced Placement (AP) Capstone Diploma
The AP Capstone Certificate is comprised of two courses, AP Seminar and AP Research, that are designed to complement and enhance discipline specific study in other AP courses. Students who complete the two AP Capstone courses (AP Seminar and AP Research) and earn a score of 3 or higher on four additional AP exams will earn the Capstone Diploma.
History & Social Studies
Social Sciences
Mathematics
English
Science
Computer Science & Robotics
World Languages
Greek and Latin
Visual Arts
Performing Arts
All students who take AP courses must sit the AP exam in order to receive AP credit and weighted grade.
AP Capstone Diploma TM
Students earn a 3 or higher in both AP Capstone courses and on 4 additional AP exams of their choosing.
Ap Course Offerings
United States History
Economics
European History
World History: Modern
Art History
Psychology
US Government & Politics/Public Policy
Seminar
Research
Statistics
Calculus AB
Calculus BC
English Literature & Composition
English Language & Composition
Chemistry
Physics 1
Physics 2
Physics C (Mechanics, E & M)
Environmental Science
Biology
Computer Science A
Spanish Language & Culture
Spanish Literature & Culture
Chinese Language & Culture
Japanese Language & Culture
Latin
Art History
Drawing
2D Art & Design
3D Art & Design
Music Theory
Ap Capstone Curriculum
AP SEMINAR (Year 1)
Team Project & Presentation
Individual Research-Based Essay & Presentation
End-of-Course Exam
AP RESEARCH (Year 2)
Academic Paper
Presentation & Oral Defense
AP Seminar and Research
Certificate TM
4 AP COURSES & EXAMS
(Taken at any point throughout high school)
Students earn a 3 or higher in both AP Capstone courses but not on the 4 additional AP exams will receive certificates.
International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma Program (DP)
The International Baccalaureate program is a two-year pre-university course of study that culminates with the IB Diploma. The awarding of an IB Diploma is contingent upon successful examination results in six subjects – three at Higher Level, and three at Standard Level. The six subjects must include English, a second language, individuals and societies, experimental science, mathematics, plus an additional arts, language, science, or social studies course.
IB Diploma candidates must also satisfactorily complete the Diploma Core which consists of Theory of Knowledge (a course which unifies and interconnects the other six courses through a philosophical perspective), write an Extended Essay, and participate in CAS (Creativity, Activity, and Service) activities.
All students who wish to pursue the IB diploma may do so, and will be advised on appropriate programs of study by the grade level academic counselor and the IB coordinator.
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In all IB courses, a prescribed curriculum is followed, and a standardized external examination prepared by the IB is administered by TAS in May of each year. College websites usually contain an accurate description of an institution’s policy on placement and what academic credit, if any, is awarded for an IB examination score and/or for completing the DP. Additionally, only students who are enrolled in the IB course may sit the IB exam at TAS.
International Baccalaureate (IB) Courses
Students may elect to enroll in individual IB courses without pursuing the full diploma. Successful completion of the course, and the corresponding IB exam, will result in the awarding of an IB certificate.
Group 1 Studies in Language & Literature
All students who take IB courses must sit the external IB exam in order to receive IB credit and weighted grade.
English Chinese
Group 2 Language
Acquisition
Chinese Japanese Spanish Greek and Latin
Chemistry Biology
Extended Essay
Theory of Knowledge
Creativity, Activity, Service
Group 4
Experimental Sciences
Sports, Exercise & Health Science
Dance Theater
Visual Arts
Film Studies
Music
Group 6 the Arts
World Religions
Psychology
History
Global Politics
Applications & Interpretation
Analysis & Approaches
Group 3
Individual and Societies
Group 5
Mathematics
Group 1 Studies in Languages & Literature
(Literature Based)
Group 2 Language Acquisition (Communications Based)
Group 3 Individuals and Society
Ib Course Offerings
English Language & Literature SL, HL
English Literature HL
Chinese A Language & Literature SL, HL
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Spanish B: SL, HL, AB Initio
Japanese B: SL, AB Initio
Chinese B: SL, HL, AB Initio Greek and Latin: SL, HL
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History SL, HL Global Politics SL, HL Psychology SL, HL World Religions SL
Group 4 Experimental Sciences
Group 5 Mathematics
Group 6 the Arts
(Diploma Candidates must take either a Group 6 or a second subject from Groups 2, 3, or 4)
Biology SL, HL Chemistry SL, HL Sports, Exercise & Health Science SL
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Math: Applications & Interpretation SL, HL Math: Analysis & Approaches SL, HL
Dance SL, HL Theater SL, HL Visual Art SL, HL Film Studies SL, HL Music SL, HL
Theory of Knowledge (Only available to diploma students in Gr. 11 and 12)
* We also have additional course offerings available for online instruction. Students who want to learn more should speak with the IB/AP Coordinator.
ENGLISH 9-12
English is required in each of the four years in the upper school at Taipei American School. Content includes instruction in analytical and expressive writing, the writing process (prewriting, drafting, revising, and proofreading), in-class writing, reading and analyzing literature, discussing ideas in groups, delivering oral presentations, and applying correct vocabulary, syntax, and grammar.
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As students in grades 9 and 10 study literature, they will focus on genre, the varied modes of literary expression. A key goal in these grades is for students to examine how literary form influences their interpretations of the works they read. Thus, the study of genre is intended to provide students with the tools necessary to enhance their understanding of and pleasure in literature so that they may become life-long readers and life-long learners. Students are required to purchase personal copies of books in literature courses.
ENGLISH 9 (UENG01)
Required
Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grade: 9
Homework: Moderate
English 9 is designed to generate critical analysis about the short story, novel, drama, poetry and nonfiction, and about the student’s own writing, while investigating the theme of identity. Identity, leadership, and the development of one’s character form the basis for English 9 literary selections. Students will work to develop effective study skills, enrich their vocabulary, gain proficiency in grammar, generate probing questions, develop research skills, learn and apply literary terms, and improve their writing. Students will receive a series of in-class and process-driven writing assignments. Also, students will have the opportunity to share their ideas and perceptions through small and large group discussions and through oral presentations. The course work culminates in semester exams in which students analyze the characters and issues that they have encountered in their reading.
Texts may include: Coelho, The Alchemist; Ribay, Patron Saints of Nothing; Golding, Lord of the Flies; Gratz, Refugee; Of Mice and Men, Steinbeck; Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet; Card, Ender’s Game; short non-fiction narratives; a teacher-selected unit on poetry.
HONORS ENGLISH 9 (UENG01H)
Required Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grade: 9
Homework: Heavy
Prerequisite: Teacher recommendation is required.
Through the study of personal essays, poetry, drama, and novels, Honors English 9 explores what it means to come of age, to have a voice, and to have agency. We ask, and attempt to answer, what it means to grow up and to read the world critically. As a foundational English course, Honors English 9 focuses on analytical writing, reading, and speaking. Close reading and passage analysis constitute the main focus for the fall semester; in the spring, students build on those skills to tackle more complex texts like Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. Class discussions and student-run seminars are important components of the courses. Assessments take the form of timed writing, processed essays, and creative projects, providing students with a variety of ways to demonstrate their learning. Honors English 9 requires maturity and initiative; homework load may be significant due to the difficulty of the texts assigned.
Texts may include the following: Homer/Wilson, The Odyssey; Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet; Cisneros, The House on Mango Street; selection of non-fiction, poetry, and short stories.
English Flow Chart
9
10
Honors Asian Literature; American Literature; Honors American Literature; World Literature; Honors World Literature; Literature, Law & Justice
Gr. 11, 12
ENGLISH 10 (UENG02)
Required
Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grade: 10
Homework: Moderate
English 10 develops essential critical thinking and language skills. The course is built upon the premise that language has power, and students will analyze how language is used as an effective and powerful tool in three important areas: reading, writing, and speaking. Literature will focus on characters and narrators that are forced to face personal or sociopolitical issues. Students will express their ideas in argument-driven, analytic essays as well as class discussions.
Texts may include: Orwell, Animal Farm; Sophocles, Oedipus Rex; Shakespeare, Macbeth; Douglass, The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass; selection of Gothic short stories and poetry.
HONORS ENGLISH 10 (UENG03)
Required
Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grade: 10
Homework: Heavy
Prerequisite: Teacher recommendation is required.
Honors English 10 is a foundational course that builds on the students’ prior skillsets while also preparing them for future upper level courses. As such, emphasis is placed on argumentation and discernment in choosing evidence not only for written assessments but also oral presentations. Critical reading literacy in a variety of genres is a major component of the course to prepare students to showcase mastery of synthesizing higher order ideas across texts and disciplines. Students should also be able to demonstrate greater independent initiative when handling texts and when expressing ideas in class discussions. Texts for the Honors English 10 course, organized by genre, explore the extent to which language can be used in powerful ways to persuade us, to move us, and to aid us in instituting social change.
Texts may include: Imani, Read This To Get Smarter; Cho, Kim Jiyoung, Born 1982; Satrapi, Persepolis; Orwell, 1984; Hamid, The Reluctant Fundamentalist; Shakespeare, Othello; Alderman, The Power; Cho, Kim Jiyoung, Born 1982; Selected Poetry and Prose (provided by teacher)
Electives: these courses are supplementary and do not count for “Core” English credit.
Journalism 1 Gr. 9-12; Honors Journalism 2,3 & 4 Gr. 10-12
Creative Writing Workshop 1 & 2; Honors Creative Writing Workshop 1 & 2
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AP ENGLISH LANGUAGE & COMPOSITION (UENG13)
Elective
Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grade: 11-12
Homework: Heavy
Prerequisite: Teacher recommendation is required.
In this course students will have the opportunity to engage in a close study of a variety of nonfiction works. Students in AP English Language will become critical readers and skilled writers who are able to identify and explicate an author’s purpose and use of rhetorical strategies. One of the many goals of this college-level course is to prepare students to write effectively and compellingly about topics across all disciplines, a practice in which they will regularly engage, in both the university and professional contexts. In May, all students will take the AP Language and Composition Exam.
Texts may include: Thoreau, Walden; Alexander, The New Jim Crow; McGhee, The Sum of Us; selected essays and speeches.
AP ENGLISH LITERATURE & COMPOSITION (UENG23)
Elective
Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grade: 12
Homework: Heavy
Prerequisite: Teacher recommendation and successful completion of AP English Language & Composition or permission of the Department Chair.
This course is a university-level seminar that explores important themes in literature in an intertextual context. Reading, critical thinking, seminar discussion, and writing are the essential elements of the course, all of which will be rigorously assessed. The reading load, which is typically in excess of 40 pages a night, is significantly heavier than other courses with an Honors weighting, and is assessed via daily closed-book quizzes. Major assessments almost exclusively take the form of timed in-class essays. In addition to course texts, readings will also include selections from works of critical theory. The class is for mature readers with open minds who have already demonstrated excellence in writing and critical thinking and who are eager to challenge themselves further. Students should be aware that the works studied in the course will frequently engage with emotionally challenging and politically controversial topics.
Texts may include: Brontë, Wuthering Heights; Conrad, Heart of Darkness; Achebe, Things Fall Apart; Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway; Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest; Miller, Death of a Salesman; Edson, W;t; Desai, The Inheritance of Loss; Brontë, Jane Eyre; Nottage, Sweat; Hwang, M. Butterfly;
IBHL ENGLISH
LITERATURE 1 (UENG14)
IBHL ENGLISH LITERATURE 2 (UENG24)
Elective
Duration: 2 years
Credit: 2
Grade: 11 & 12
Homework: Heavy
Prerequisite: Teacher recommendation is required.
IBHL English Literature is primarily a rigorous pre-university course in literature. It is designed for students who intend to pursue a course of studies at university that places a heavy emphasis on critical reading and analytical writing. As the International Baccalaureate Organization notes, the study of literature “enables an exploration of one of the more enduring fields of human creativity and artistic ingenuity, and provides immense opportunities for encouraging independent, original, critical and clear thinking." It also promotes a healthy respect for the imagination and a perceptive approach to the understanding and interpretation of literary works. The discussion of literature is itself an art which requires the clear expression of ideas both orally and in writing. The Language A1 program encourages students to see literary works as products of art and their authors as craftsmen whose methods of production can be analyzed in a variety of ways and on a number of levels. This is achieved through the emphasis placed on exploring the means used by different authors to convey their subjects in the works studied. It is further reinforced by the comparative framework emphasized for the study of these works in all parts of the program. The flexibility of the program allows teachers to choose challenging works from their own sources to suit the particular needs and interests of their students. During the course of two years, students will be assessed in a variety of written and oral formats.
Texts may include: Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest; Garcia Marquez, Chronicle of a Death Foretold; O’ Neill; Long Day’s Journey into Night; Schlink, The Reader; Dillard, Teaching a Stone to Talk; selected poems by Emily Dickinson and other poets.
IBHL ENGLISH LANGUAGE & LITERATURE 1 (UENG17)
IBHL ENGLISH LANGUAGE & LITERATURE 2 (UENG27)
IBSL ENGLISH LANGUAGE & LITERATURE 1 (UENG16)
IBSL ENGLISH LANGUAGE & LITERATURE 2 (UENG26)
Elective
Duration: 2 years
Credit: 2
Grades: 11 & 12
Homework: Heavy
Prerequisites: Teacher recommendation is required. Students will select either the IBHL or IBSL level of the course for both years.
The course aims for students to develop an understanding of the role of language in the world and to develop skills of textual analysis of both literary (poetry, drama, novels, and short stories) and non-literary texts (essays, cartoons, advertisements, infographics, profiles, speeches, articles, films, music videos, social media posts, etc.), including texts in translation. Students will be encouraged to question the meaning and aesthetic dimensions generated by language and texts based on content and context. Students will also explore how language and texts interact with each other across time and cultures. The course will examine the ways in which authors use formal and stylistic elements to create meaning in a text and consider how that meaning is shaped by circumstances of production and reception. Students will create presentations, projects, and essays in response to texts to demonstrate their critical awareness of how texts and their associated visual and audio elements work together to influence the reader/audience. Higher Level (HL) students will submit an additional written assessment to the IBO and undertake at least one extra unit of study of literary and/or non-literary texts.
Texts may include: Duffy, The World’s Wife; Euripides, Medea; Adichie, The Thing Around Your Neck; Ibsen, Hedda Gabler; George Monbiot’s essays; Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter; Kendall, Hood Feminism; Saadawi, Woman at Point Zero
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AMERICAN LITERATURE (UENG04)
Elective
Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grade: 11-12
Homework: Moderate
Students will apply the reading and writing skills developed in the first two years of the English program to a representative study of American literature. The course syllabus will emphasize works that have earned a place in the literary tradition of the United States, while also including more recent writers whose works are expanding and redefining the American literary tradition. Instruction will be designed to help students respond to increasingly complex and challenging literary experiences. The composition component of the curriculum will include a heavy emphasis on journaling and practice in a wide range of writing modes. Work in practical grammar, academic writing, style (MLA), and vocabulary development will continue.
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Texts may include: Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby; Otsuka, When the Emperor Was Divine; Melville, Moby Dick; Bradbury, The Illustrated Man; Grann, Killers of the Flower Moon; Coates, Between the World and Me.
WORLD LITERATURE (UENG05)
Elective
Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grade: 11-12
Homework: Moderate
World Literature explores the interplay of class, gender, and race across cultures and time. Through the study of great works of Western and non-Western literature, students will gain greater perspective on their unique place within this rapidly globalizing world. This class promotes an understanding of the works in their cultural/historical contexts as well as the enduring values that unite humanity. This course is designed to challenge students as critical readers, writers, and thinkers.
Texts may include: Euripides, Medea; Su, Raise the Red Lantern; Esquivel, Like Water for Chocolate; Shakespeare, Othello; selected essays, poems and short stories.
LITERATURE, JUSTICE, & LAW (UENG07)
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Elective
Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grade: 11-12
Homework: Moderate
What lessons can be learned about law and justice, vengeance and mercy from great literature? How does literature depict the legal and judicial system? This course focuses on the execution of justice within literature. We will seek to discover the ways in which literature enhances our understanding of morals, ethics, and justice. Participants will analyze legal themes in literary and visual texts to better understand the tension between the laws we follow and our own code of ethics. Participants will also engage in a variety of immersive activities such as debates, mock trials, and reader’s theater. The class will be formatted around open-ended discussions, case examination, as well as reflective and analytical writing. Students will attend one-on-one writing conferences with the instructor to develop their analytical and argumentative writing skills. Course work culminates in an investigation essay where students are tasked with synthesizing a number of texts on a topic of their choice.
Texts may include: Camus, The Stranger; Erdrich, The Round House; Headley, Beowulf: A New Translation; Yoo, From a Whisper to a Rallying Cry; Gaines, A Lesson Before Dying; Christie, And Then There Were None; teacher-selected cases and short stories.
HONORS AMERICAN LITERATURE (UENG04H)
Elective
Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grade: 11-12
Homework: Heavy
Prerequisite: Teacher recommendation is required.
Honors American Literature will require a rigorous study of a representative sample of American literature with an emphasis on developing students’ critical reading and analytical writing skills. Students are expected to demonstrate independent initiative when handling texts and when expressing ideas in class discussions as well as in frequent in-class and take-home writing assignments. Reading load and homework expectations in the Honors class are significantly higher. The course syllabus will reflect works that have earned a place in the literary tradition of the United States, while also including more recent writers whose works are expanding and redefining the American literary tradition. Instruction will be designed to help students respond to increasingly complex and challenging literary experiences. The composition component of the curriculum will include practice in a wide range of writing modes. Work in practical grammar, style, and vocabulary development will continue. Teacher recommendation is required.
Texts may include: King, The Truth About Stories; Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby; Otsuka, When the Emperor Was Divine; O’Brien, The Things They Carried; Morrison, The Bluest Eye; Coates, Between the World and Me; selections of poetry, short stories, and essays provided by the instructor.
HONORS WORLD LITERATURE (UENG05H)
Elective
Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grade: 11 -12
Homework: Heavy
Prerequisite: Teacher recommendation is required.
Honors World Literature requires a rigorous study of the literary, cultural, and human significance of selected great works of classical Western and non-Western literary traditions, as well as a greater mastery of critical reading, thinking, and writing. Students should demonstrate greater independent initiative when handling texts and when expressing ideas in class discussions as well as in frequent in-class and take-home writing assignments. Reading load and homework expectations in the Honors class are significantly higher. The works studied in the course will be examined through the lens of different literary theories. An important goal of the class is to promote an understanding of the works in their cultural/ historical contexts and to reveal the enduring human values which unite the different literary traditions.
Texts may include: Sin-Leqi-Unninni, Gilgamesh; Virgil, Aeneid; Heaney, Beowulf (trans.); Cervantes, Don Quixote; Achebe, Things Fall Apart; Euripides, Medea; Ibsen, A Doll House; Narayan, The Guide; Marquez, Chronicle of a Death Foretold; She, Rickshaw Boy; selected essays, poems and short stories.
HONORS ASIAN LITERATURE (UENG10H)
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Elective
Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grade: 11 -12
Homework: Heavy
Prerequisite: Teacher recommendation is required.
What does it mean to be Asian? What does it mean to be an Asian author? In this course, we will explore polyphonic voices from across the Asian continent and question what it means to be an Asian voice in the context of diaspora. The course aims to explore the diversity of cultures, concerns, and literary traditions across Asian cultures and to challenge the idea that Asian literature is monolithic. Students will conduct rigorous study of our texts through daily reading and writing homework assignments. Assessments will include analytical essays, student presentations, dramatic performances, and projects.
Texts may include: Eka Kurniawan, Man Tiger; Sayaka Murata, Convenience Store Woman; Su Tong, Raise the Red Lantern; Yiyun Li, A Thousand Years of Good Fortune; Min Jin lee, Pachinko; Shyam Selvadurai, Funny Boy; Balli Kaur Jaswal, Sugarbread; Ken Liu, The Paper Menagerie; Lysley Tenorio, Monstress; Yoko Ogawa, The Memory Police; Shawna Yang Ryan, Green Island; Souvankham Thammavongsa, How to Pronounce Knife; Mosin Hamid, How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia; Duanwad Pimwana, Bright
Carolyn See
JOURNALISM 1: THE BLUE & GOLD (UENG 71)
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HONORS JOURNALISM 2: THE BLUE & GOLD (UENG 72H)
HONORS JOURNALISM 3: THE BLUE & GOLD (UENG 73H)
HONORS JOURNALISM 4: THE BLUE & GOLD (UENG 74H)
Elective
Duration: Full year
Credit: 1
Grade: 9-12
Homework: Heavy
Prerequisite: None for Journalism 1
Subsequent courses to be taken in sequence
Journalism is primarily a production class dedicated to creating the student newspaper, The Blue & Gold. In this class, students will gain a broad understanding of journalism by participating in the reporting, editorial, and publication processes for digital and print newspapers. Students will study and write in various journalistic genres including news, features, and opinion as well as produce photos, graphics, and designs to support their stories. They will use different technologies to create online, print, and audio-visual stories while learning to engage audiences across various platforms, including social media. Students need to work independently as well as collaborate in groups on all stages of newspaper production. They are expected to work as part of a team, show initiative, and manage their time effectively. Students and parents should be aware that students in this class are expected to spend extra time at school: they must be able to devote several evenings or weekend days each semester to the production of The Blue & Gold.
Students are encouraged to take the course for multiple years and will earn honors course credit for every year after the initial year of enrollment. Students in Honors Journalism will additionally be expected to take on mentoring and leadership responsibilities. The Blue & Gold managing and editorial roles are given to students who show exemplary expertise, commitment, and leadership.
Required Texts: Kovach and Rosenstiel, The Elements of Journalism; The Associated Press Stylebook
Books are the mirrors of the soul.
CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP 1 (UENG 611)
HONORS CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP 1 (UENG 611H)
CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP 2 (UENG621)
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HONORS CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP 2 (UENG621H)
Elective
Duration: Full year
Credit: 1
Grade: 9-12
Homework: Light (Moderate for Honors)
Prerequisite: Teacher recommendation is required for Honors.
Subsequent courses to be taken in sequence
In this creative writing course, students will examine different forms of storytelling from a writer’s perspective and produce original work in various genres – creative nonfiction, fiction, poetry, and graphic narrative. As members of a college-style workshop, students will share works-in-progress in a relaxed and supportive environment, while developing both the skills and sensitivity necessary to give/receive feedback to/from their peers. This course is designed for students who have a passion for and independent rigor towards their creative work. Through these discussions, the collective goal is to first identify and subsequently refine one’s own habits that shape artistic choices and abilities as writers in order to establish one’s voice. Assessments will include: the creation of a portfolio of work in a variety of genres, the maintenance of a daily journal, and at least three submissions of their creative work to competitions, publications, and literary journals, as an exercise in sending personal, creative work out into the world.
Suggested texts may include work by Alexander Chee, Kyoko Mori, Chang-Rae Lee, Jhumpa Lahiri, Lorrie Moore, Ross Gay, Julia Alvarez, Susan Choi, Cathy Park Hong, Elizabeth Alexander, Ken Liu, Malaka Gharib
Graduation Requirement:
Public Speaking: 1 credit
Students may satisfy the requirement by taking: Public Speaking, Debate, and Performance, International Relations/Honors International Relations/IB Global Politics, or AP Research; or, by taking 2 years of Theatre classes. IB Diploma students may fulfill the requirement automatically through TOK Year 2.
Note that students may NOT satisfy both the public speaking and the performing & visual arts requirements with the same course.
PUBLIC SPEAKING, DEBATE, and PERFORMANCE (UPSF012)
Duration: 1 year
Credit: 1
Grades: 9-12
*Satisfies Public Speaking requirement
Homework: Light to Moderate
Note: Class is taught in semester sections. One semester will be taught by the Social Sciences teachers and one semester will be taught by the Theater teachers.
The ability to express, defend, and compare ideas in a confident and fact-based way is critical regardless of one’s profession or field of study. In this year-long course, students will receive formal training in effective public speaking and argumentation, as well as examine the physiological connections between thought, breathing, the physical body, and the performative aspects of speech. By experimenting with a variety of speech types and techniques, students will be able to create effective speeches with solid openings, main points, transitions and conclusions whilst