Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Homework For Thursday 10/30 (Important change of Plans!)

For Thursday, I am asking you NOT to read Schunk's article "Self-Efficacy for Reading and Writing." Instead, I am asking you to read Gee's "Reading as Situated Language." I have taken Schunk's article off of our google groups page and added Gee's.

Before you go into this piece, I want to warn you: it is among the more difficult texts I will ask you to read this semester. It is just 10 pages or so, but it is packed full of complicated terms and ideas. I suggest you pay careful attention to the first two paragraphs of the piece. In paragraph 2, Gee lays out exactly what he is going to do and talk about in the rest of the article. Keep returning to this paragraph as you read so that you can keep track of where you are in the "big picture" of his article at any given moment. Use your feature/function reading skills to keep track of the journey you are taking as you read this difficult text (which is to say, notice the headings, think about which section you are in and refer back to his explanation, again, paragraph 2, of what he is going to do and talk about).

In your blog entry, and this is Blog Entry #9 (please title it as such), please just take notes on the article. Your notes should consist of what you consider to be key passages in the article, key terms (e.g., discourse, language), and your understanding of Gee's argument. You might also pose questions that arise for you as you go. What he is saying in this article challenges our traditional notions of how language works and how people "make meaning." You might think carefully about how and where he challenges our traditional notions. I would also suggest you pay attention to the various examples he gives to make what he is saying a bit more accessible.

Your Blog #9 should be roughly 500-750 words in length. I suggest you just open an MS Word document and start taking notes and use the "Word Count" function to keep track of how much you've got (try to get notes on the WHOLE article...in other words, don't fill your Blog #9 with notes on just the first section). Then copy and paste your notes from Word into your blog post.

FINAL POINT: with an article this challenging, you shouldn't try to understand EVERY single thing that Gee says. What you are looking for is the gist or the general outline of the piece. Imagine that you are trying to look at a picture that is slightly out of focus and trying, slowly, to bring it into focus. This is not an article that one reads once by oneself and immediately understands. It is a challenging piece that requires multiple readings and the help of peers and teachers to "get." Having said this, please don't give up and stop reading when you're lost! Push yourself to keep going. If you feel lost for a while, that's okay...keep going and try to get yourself to that point where you are understanding again. Assume that you will get lost, but press yourself to keep at it.

Good luck.
mm

Sunday, October 26, 2008

For Tuesday, 10/28

1. Please make sure to bring Writing Project #1. You should have the following three documents:

-Your analytic/reflective essay
-your transcript
-your essay (in response to prompt #1 or 2)

Please make sure that each of these items is stapled together and please paper clip all three of them together. Make sure your name is on all three of them.

IMPORTANT: As I said on the syllabus, I will not accept late work. You either have it in class on Tuesday, or you receive an F. If you aren't in class, do not email it to me or call me to ask when to drop it by. It is due in class. No exceptions will be made. Also, if the papers are not properly stapled (individually) and paper-clipped (all three together), I will not accept the assignment and you will get an F.

2. Please bring all seven of the articles we have read up to this point to class on Tuesday (Berkenkotter/Murray, Sommers, Rose, Flower/Hayes, Haas/Flower (on reading), Selzer, Perl).

On Tuesday, I will hand out the schedule of activities for the second half of the semester.

If you have any questions/concerns, please don't hesitate to get in touch.

MM

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Blog URLs (Section 06)

Bryant, Nicholas C
http://nickwriting100-06.blogspot.com/

Callahan-Cormier, Devin R
http://dcal215.blogspot.com/

Carroll, Katherine L
http://katiecwriting100.blogspot.com/

Chau, Sathiarith
http://wrtg100-06.blogspot.com/

Choice, Mason T
http://bballmase21.blogspot.com/

Chrane, Sarah C
http://sarahswritingcourseblog.blogspot.com/

Coccio, Kevin E
http://thewritingwriter100.blogspot.com/

DeAlmeida, Shawn G
???

Downing, Tiffany L
http://tiffanydowning.blogspot.com/

Laythe, Jordan T
http://jordanlaythe.blogspot.com/

Levesque, Michael
???

Lussier, Gabby
http://gabbylu08.blogspot.com/

Marquis, Hailey A
http://xxgymnasty.blogspot.com/

McIntyre, Hunter G
http://huntermcintyre9.blogspot.com/

McKenzie, John (JR)
http://jrmcknz89.blogspot.com/

Ortega Boggio, Miatta D
http://miattaboggio.blogspot.com/

Pappas, Alexandra A
http://alipappas.blogspot.com/

Patterson, Jessica A
http://jessicap89.blogspot.com/

Trenholm, Brenda J.
http://bjtrenholm.blogspot.com/

Wapenyi, Richard T
http://richiew39-richiesblog.blogspot.com/

Wygant, Patrick T
http://pwygant.blogspot.com/

Zevallos, Richard R
???

Blog URLs (Section 14)

Attolino, Alex
http://aattolino.blogspot.com/

Blinn, Kelsey J
http://kelsweesblog.blogspot.com/

Cary, Megan A
http://meganswriting07.blogspot.com/

Clark, George R
http://george-writingrhetoric.blogspot.com/

Collins, Allie
http://www.alliewriting100.blogspot.com/

Erilus, Jenn
http://jerilus-writing-and-rhetoric-blog.blogspot.com/

Farrell, Alex
http://alexandrafarrell.blogspot.com/

Henry, Amanda M
http://allofmylovetoyounow.blogspot.com/

Kashouh, Joseph E
http://josephswritingcourse.blogspot.com/

Macamaux, Allie R
http://amacamaux.blogspot.com/

McDonald, Mike
http://mcdonald054.blogspot.com/

O'Loughlin, Jeff
http://joloughiln.blogspot.com/

Rado, Corrado A
http://corradorado.blogspot.com/

Reyes, Clemente R
http://creyesjr.blogspot.com/

Rezendes, Jasmine L
http://thenowannoyedblogger.blogspot.com/

Russell, Jess
http://aintthatlivin.blogspot.com/

Sarlitto, Laura M
http://lsarlitto.blogspot.com/

Trombley, Katelyn A
http://katelyn-writingblog.blogspot.com/

Werner, Austin S
http://austinwerner.blogspot.com/

Wilkinson, Phil
http://eatpiealot.blogspot.com/

Homework for Thursday 10/23

1. For this Thursday, please read the article called "Understanding Composing" by Sondra Perl. You can find this article on our google groups page, under "Files." It is fairly short and a bit different in format from the previous Introduction/Methods/Results/Discussion type articles we have read. Please be sure to carefully annotate the Perl article as you read.

2. Once you've finished the Perl article, please post an entry to your blog. Be sure to title this entry: Blog #9. In your posting, please pose (3) questions you have about the Perl article. They can be questions about comprehension--like things you didn't understand. Or, they can be broader questions--like questions that came up as a result of reading the article.

3. Once you have posted your (3) questions, please take a moment to visit (3) of your classmates' blogs. How do you do this? I have posted two blog entries to my blog (you probably also received an email about this) which contain your classmates' blog URLs. Look for your class's list by section # on my blog (06: morning, 14: afternoon) :

http://progressivelyprofressing.blogspot.com/

Once you have found the list of your classmates' blog addresses, visit (3) of them and read their three questions about the Perl article. Then, use the "Comment" function to post a comment to their blog in which you attempt to answer, or at the least address, their three questions. How do you use the "Comment" function? Simple, look for the link that says "0 Comments" at the end of their Blog #9 post. Click that link and it should take you to a new screen which will provide you with a textbox where you can leave comments.

Of course, the sooner you can get your Blog #9 posted, the more likely someone is going to come along and post a comment on it. So, try to get the reading done and your three questions posted to your blog ASAP.

4. Before you come to class on Thursday, print out: 1) your Blog #9 post, 2) any comments that were left on your Blog #9 post by your classmates. Bring this printout to class on Thursday.

I think that's it. If you have any questions, please get in touch.

Best-
mm

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Announcements and Homework, 10/21

I am writing with an updated plan for completing Stage 2 of Writing Project 1 and also with a brief schedule for the next week or two.

1. Over the past few days, I have been reflecting on what Stage 2 of this project will be. I knew all along what I wanted it to be, I was just trying to find a format that would be appropriate for it. In section 06, we went over the handout on Stage 2 in class yesterday, Tuesday, 10/14. By the time I got to my afternoon class, section 14, I had decided that what I was asking you to do with that handout was too complicated. Thus, I did not give the handout on Stage 2 to the afternoon class. For now, I'd like students in both sections to just hold on Stage 2. I'm going to be out of town for a few days and I will be working on getting out a different assignment sheet for Stage 2 in the days to come.

2. Plans going forward:

10/21: review student transcripts together in class (no homework due)
10/23: linking transcripts with published research on composing processes (homework TBA)
10/28: Writing Project 1 deadline (due: transcript, essay (from prompt), reflective essay (on transcript...more to come on this soon).

3. I have to submit a mid-term grade for each of you to the registrar, due by noon this Friday. Your mid-term grade will consist of your mid-term blog grade and your quiz grade. It will also reflect my general impression of your performance in class thus far. It will not, obviously, include your grade on Writing Project 1. If you would like to see your mid-term grade, I should have it up on WebCt by Friday at noon. If you would like to speak with me about your grade, please feel free to drop me an email.

4. For those of you who produced thorough and detailed transcripts and brought them to class this past Thursday, there is no homework for 10/21. Just bring your transcript to class again. For those of you who produced less than thorough transcripts, meaning--you did the assignment wrong or only brought in a page or so of notes, please use the weekend to rework your transcript or choose the other prompt and start over. How do you know if your transcript was thorough enough? The transcripts that were thorough and well-done and satisfactory were no fewer than five or so single-spaced pages. You're going to need LOTS of data in order to complete Stage 2 of this assignment. So, if you are one of the people who came in with a transcript just 1-2 pages long, you have some work to do.

As always, if you have any questions or concerns, please get in touch.

mm

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Homework for Thursday 10/9

Today in class we discussed Writing Project #1. This is not a small assignment. In light of this, I am assigning NO other homework between today, Tuesday 10/7 and the day that the Stage 1 of the project is due to be completed, Tuesday, 10/14. There will be no readings and no blog entries due. Your only responsibility is to work on this assignment, Writing Project #1.

Having said this, for this Thursday, 10/9:

1. Please bring those five articles to class that I asked you to bring for today (Berkenkotter, Selzer, Sommers, Flower/Hayes, Rose). Please bring hard copies of each article. No need to print new copies if you have already printed them out and annotated them.

2. I would advise you to get started on conducting your think-aloud protocol. I will allow time on Thursday for discussion of Writing Project #1. If you already have a head start on the project, you may be able to raise questions about the process and talk about how things are going. Again, I advise you to get the actual writing of the essay (in response to Prompt #1 or 2) out of the way before Sunday 10/12 so that you can devote Monday and what time you have on Tuesday to transcribing the tape.

Any questions, let me know.
mm

Monday, October 6, 2008

Link to "The Fakebook Generation"

Here's the link to "The Fakebook Generation" by Alice Mathias:

The Fakebook Generation

Friday, October 3, 2008

Homework for Tuesday 10/7

1. The homework for the weekend is to take some time to carefully review the following articles, information from which will appear on the quiz on Tuesday:

--“The Composing Processes of an Engineer” (Selzer)
--“Revision Strategies of Student Writers and Experienced Adult Writers” (Sommers)
--“The Cognition of Discovery: Defining a Rhetorical Problem” (Flower/Hayes)
--“Rigid Rules, Inflexible Plans, and the Stifling of Language: A Cognitivist Analysis of Writer’s Block” (Rose)

2. On your blog (entry #7, I think?, write one question you'd like to ask in class about each of the articles before the quiz on Tuesday. I will take a good chunk of time on Tuesday, before the quiz, to answer questions to help you prepare. Thus, blog entry #7 should just have four questions, one about each of the articles. Print out this blog entry and bring it to class on Tuesday.

3. Print out a hard copy of each of the following five articles (if you haven't already done so) and bring these hard copy to class for Tuesday's class (if you already have a hard copy print-outs of all the articles that you have already annotated, please just bring these copies):

1. “Decisions and Revisions: The Planning Strategies of a Publishing Writer, and a Response of a Laboratory Rat: Or, Being Protocoled” (Berkenkotter)
2. “The Composing Processes of an Engineer” (Selzer)
3. “Revision Strategies of Student Writers and Experienced Adult Writers” (Sommers)
4. “The Cognition of Discovery: Defining a Rhetorical Problem” (Flower/Hayes)
5. “Rigid Rules, Inflexible Plans, and the Stifling of Language: A Cognitivist Analysis of Writer’s Block” (Rose)

The activity we'll be doing on Tuesday will require you to have a copy of all five of the above articles with you, so, please just make sure that you bring your copy to class.

Have a nice weekend.

mm