(Return to Home Page)                      Webquest A--Shakespeare Introduces the Classics

Editorials, forewords, and other texts of David Bevington and Joseph Papp (Shakespeare, Bevington, Kasta, & Papp, 1988) are important to our understanding of the causes for which Shakespeare coordinated certain subjects and environments within his plays and poetry. Furthering analysis, criticism, and considerations in respect to discussions relating to these impacting histories, one must develop and maintain student journals and regular projects.   Furthermore, the understanding of classical literature relates to sequences and relationships of literary events--psychological and cultural concerns and implications. Through the following, you will find seminars and blogs that pertain to current productions and relevant events, and to pertinent literary pedagogy, threaded discussions, major webs published ebooks, instructional guides, artifacts, activities, and research/editorials:

http://www.folger.edu/, • http://www.shakespeare-online.com/, • http://www.bardweb.net/,

http://www.asdk12.org/depts/language_arts/curriculum/high/Electives/Shakespeare.pdf,

http://shakespeare.mit.edu/, http://shakespeare.com/, and • http://shakespeare.palomar.edu/.

 

Consider the following while composing sentences:

Appositives

Articles

Auxiliary or helping verbs

Basic forms of verbs

Cardinal numbers

Case (of pronouns and nouns)

Clauses

Collective nouns

Comma splice

Common nouns

Comparative form

Complement

Complete subjects

Complex sentence

Compound adjective

Compound noun

Compound prepositions

Compound sentence

Compound subject

Compound-complex sentence

Concrete nouns

Conditional verbs

Conjunctions

Conjunctive adverb

Contraction

Coordinate adjectives

Coordinating conjunctions

Correlative conjunctions

Count nouns

Dangling participial phrase

Declarative sentences

Definite article

Demonstrative pronouns

Dependent clauses

Direct object

Double negative

Exclamatory sentences

Feminine gender

Finite Verbs

Fused sentences

Future tense

Gender

Gerunds

Imperative mood

Imperative sentences

Indefinite articles

Indefinite pronouns

Independent clauses

Indicative mood

Indirect objects

Infinitive

Intensive pronouns

Interjections

Interrogative pronouns

Interrogative sentences

Intransitive verbs

Irregular verbs

Linking verbs

Main verb

Masculine

Mass nouns

Modal auxiliaries

Modifiers

Mood

Negatives

Neuter

Nonrestrictive clauses

Noun clauses

Noun phrases

Nouns

Number

Object case

Object complements

Objects of prepositions

Ordinal numbers

Parallel

Parts of speech

Passive voice

Past participles

Pas tense

Perfect tenses

Personal pronouns

Phrases

Possessive case

Predicate

Predicate adjective

Prepositional phrase

Prepositions

Present participles

Present tense

Principal parts

Progressive

Pronouns

Proper adjectives

Proper nouns

Reciprocals

Reflexive pronouns

Regular verbs

Relative clause

Relative pronoun

Restrictive clauses

Run-on sentence

Sentence

Sentence fragment

Sequence of tenses

Simple sentence

Simple subject

Split infinitive

Subject

Subject case

Subject complement

Subjunctive mood

Subordinate clauses

Subordinating conjunctions

Superlative form

Tenses

Transitive verbs

Verb phrases

Verbals

Verbs

Voice