Hutchinson Central Technical High School, Buffalo, NY
  BUFFALO SCHOOLS WEBSITE

(716) 816 - 3888   Fax: (716) 851-3890 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Daniel Zack

Principal

 

 

 


Sunday, November 24, 2024



Academics Menu

  HOME  
  Graduation Requirements NEW  
  Syllabi  
  Parent Portal  
     
 

DEPARTMENTS (COURSES/STAFF)

 

  Arts  
  CTE (TECHNICAL)  
  ENGLISH  
  Foreign Language  
  JROTC  
  Mathematics  
  Physical Ed & Health  
  Science  
  Social Studies  
  Special Ed  
  Staff  
  Student Support  
     

Academics

 

 

ENGLISH DEPARTMENT

Staff:

Frank DiLeo Gaetano Falcone Andrea Gomez Glynis Hunt
Heidi Laranjo Andrew McDermott Amanda Mick-Peterson Kelly Russo
Maureen Sercu Jonathan Snekser Alicia Waller Andrea Ward

 

 

Courses:

ENGLISH I

(EN01G)

The English I course centers on Common Core aligned goals so that students will become more proficient readers, writers, and critical thinkers. Students will be introduced to close reading strategies, text analysis (of both literary and informational texts), and argumentation.  

SEMINAR IN ENGLISH

(SE01G)

 

ENGLISH II

(EN02G)

English II students will study fiction and non-fiction through poetry, drama, short stories, essays, articles, novels and other literary forms, in addition to film, audio and other media. All class assignments, classroom activities, projects and assessments are based upon the Common Core Learning Standards for English Language Arts, with emphasis in the areas of Reading, Writing, Speaking and Listening. In English II, we will concentrate on improving the depth of students’ understanding, analysis and response to literature read in class and independently.  

ENGLISH III

(EN03R)

The focus for English III is: to read as much non fiction as fiction; to learn about the world by reading; to read more challenging material closely; to discuss reading using evidence; to write arguments using evidence; and to increase academic vocabulary. Assignments, classroom activities, projects, and assessments are based upon the New York State Curriculum for English Language Arts and the Common Core Learning Standards. Students take the Common Core English Language Arts exam in June. In other words, the Common Core ELA exam is the final exam for the course. By passing (and hopefully achieving mastery - 85% or better - on the exam), students meet a mandatory graduation requirement. Students will also build their vocabulary and close reading skills throughout the course. Assignments, classroom activities, projects, and assessments are designed to enhance students’ ability to listen, read critically, write technically, creatively, and analytically, and speak in large and small group settings.  

ENGLISH IV

(EN04G)

English IV is designed to offer students a variety of academic opportunities through an electives- based year. Each distinct elective course focuses on activities related to reading, writing,
discussion, research & analysis centered on a particular theme, in alignment with the Common Core Standards.  

AP ENGLISH (LANG & COMPOSITION

(LA01P)

This course is designed to challenge, strengthen, and shape a student's writing and analytical
reading skills. The focus of the work is on various prose forms and the workload is considerable.
Each quarter students are to: generate a writing portfolio, analyze professionally generated writing,
work on grammar skills, do focused outside reading, and publish their work. A final class
publication project is the culminating activity of the course.
To facilitate preparation for AP level classes, it is recommended  

AP ENGLISH (LIT & COMPOSITION)

(LI04P)

AP Literature is a literature and writing based course with assignments designed to prepare
students for the AP Literature examination and the type of work that college professors expect.
The curriculum reflects world literature selections that include poetry; Shakespearean, Greek, and
modern drama; the 19th century novel; modern novels and several novellas. Writing assignments
range from journals, short response papers, timed writing assessments, and extended literary
analysis pieces. Students complete a literature based inquiry project that involves a degree of
student choice.  

 

 

 


The Buffalo Public School District does not discriminate on the basis of an individual's actual or perceived race, color, creed, religion, religious practice, national origin, ethnic group, sex (including sexual harassment and sexual violence), gender identity, sexual orientation (the term "sexual orientation" means heterosexuality, homosexuality, bisexuality, or asexuality ), political affiliation, age, marital status, military status, veteran status, disability, weight, domestic violence victim status, arrest or conviction record, genetic information or any other basis prohibited by New York state and/or federal non-discrimination laws in its programs and activities and provides equal access to the Boy Scouts and other designated youth groups. Inquiries regarding the District's non-discrimination policies should be directed to HRCompliance@buffaloschools.org or to:  

Jamie Warren, Associate Superintendent of Human Resources, Civil Rights Compliance Officer
727 City Hall Buffalo, NY 14202 (716) 816-3579