Literary Analysis Guide

Serviceable literary resource with examples and explanations

Learning rating

Community rating

Not yet reviewed
Based on 0 review

Privacy rating

Not yet rated
Expert evaluation by Common Sense

Grades

9–12
Price: Paid
Platforms: Android, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch

Pros: Examples from literature and example analysis paragraphs.

Cons: No search function and little contemporary literature.

Bottom Line: Some content and feature limitations aside, an excellent resource for AP lit.

The Literary Analysis Guide is a great tool for AP students to use as a review to prepare for the AP exam. AP lit teachers could recommend it to students for individual study or incorporate it into lessons to offer examples from literature for specific literary devices or use the model paragraphs to show students how to write a literary analysis.

Explore literary devices and techniques for poetry, prose, rhetoric, and figures of speech. Each genre has its own wheel with spokes for different devices specific to that genre moving out of the core meaning and style. Poetry, for example, includes title, diction, syntax, meter, lines, and more, while prose includes conflict, setting, characterization, and dialogue. Each category is explained and includes sample questions to help better understand it in a piece of literature. Some include examples from literature or an annotated example.

Classic literature doesn't need bells and whistles, and neither does this solid resource. The black-and-white, all-text interface has no audio, but it's packed with information. The breakdown of literary devices by genre looks cool and is significant, with the wheel showing how all the devices affect meaning. Students, especially those in AP lit courses, will appreciate the sample analysis and examples from literature for each device. It'd be nice to see more contemporary lit included, or at least some diversity in authors. A search feature would be helpful as well.

Learning Rating

Overall Rating
Engagement

Black-and-white text with no images provides lots of information but little pizzazz.

Pedagogy

Literary devices are explained, demonstrated, and analyzed through the interactive resource, but most works are older classics with little diversity.

Support

Resource is cataloged well but has no way to search and no way to mark favorites for easy future reference.

Common Sense reviewer

No one has reviewed this tool yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.

Write a review

Privacy Rating

This tool has not yet been rated by our privacy team. Learn more about our privacy ratings