Teacher

NAME: Eileen Moore

SCHOOL: Thousand Oaks High School

CLASS: English 9CP and 11CP

SCHOOL PHONE: (805) 495-7491 x 1907


About The Teacher

I am delighted to be returning to TOHS this year as a member of the English 
Department.  Some students may also know me from past years as a Spanish 
teacher.

I was born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area and have been 
credentialed for secondary education in California since 1978.  I have
taught everything from bilingual first and second grade to middle and 
high school English and Spanish, college Spanish and adult remedial 
education with the U.S. military overseas. I hold a BA with a double major 
in English and Spanish from Santa Clara University and a Master's from 
Stanford University.  The highlight of my college career was the year I 
spent abroad studying at the University of Madrid.

When I'm not on campus at TOHS, designing lessons or correcting papers at 
home, I like driving my bright yellow New Beetle and taking my three dogs, 
Quigley (4 1/2 yrs.), Molly (4 yrs.) and Hogan (2 yrs.) for walks.  They 
are Queensland Heelers and full of energy. . . like my students! :) I also 
enjoy sewing, baking and cooking, and my husband and I often try to watch 
football or baseball games together.  He's a big Dodger and Raider fan, and I 
say, "Go 49ers and SF Giants!"  Ours can be a pretty noisy house, 
particularly when Charlie the parrot decides to add his comments!

Mission For The Class

Language was created to communicate.  Great writers write to educate or to 
entertain, and the best do both.  

Students of English 9CP explore major literary genres throughout history—
short story, fiction, nonfiction, drama, poetry and epic.  The works studied 
incorporate timeless universal themes and showcase suspense, humor, dramatic 
discovery, and personal challenge and conquest.   

Students of English 11CP explore major literary genres throughout American 
history.  The works studied incorporate themes that reflect trends, 
accomplishments and problems during critical periods in U.S. history and are 
chosen to parallel key concepts presented in the junior history curriculum. 

Within the context of these great works, classes will take a closer look at 
the tools writers use.  They will examine narrative style and point of view, 
facts, details, opinions, persuasive techniques, cause and effect, 
generalizations, denotation and connotation, analogies, metaphors and 
similes, responses and critical interpretation.  Both the English 9 and the 
English 11 textbooks contain extensive guides to literary terms, grammar, 
mechanics and common usages. 

Studying great writing also helps students find and develop their own 
writing style for the varied assignments that will become part of their high 
school portfolio.  Students will have ample opportunity to study and 
practice the essential elements of grammar, usage and mechanics in the 
context of journal entries, autobiographical narratives, analytical essays, 
research reports, persuasive pieces, business correspondence and poetry.

At the conclusion of the year, students in both classes will have been 
equipped with the study skills needed to succeed in a wide range of high 
school and college level coursework.