Wednesday, November 16, 2016

late Nov. - early Dec. due dates for Adv. Comp.

This is the second in a recent series of posts to help you "sort out" the many upcoming due dates in Adv. Comp. These assessments and other requirements are due between the final progress report deadline yesterday (11/15/16) and the end of the first full week in December ...

Monday, Nov. 21
Tuesday, Nov. 22
Monday, Nov. 28
Tuesday, Nov. 29
  • first few pages (2.5 - 3.5) of AoF essay in draft due
Thursday, Dec. 1
  • ALL sources due in Noodletools (16 notecards)
Friday, Dec. 2
Tuesday, Dec. 6
  • FULL version of AoF draft due for peer-critiquing
Sunday, Dec. 11

Tuesday, October 4, 2016

information regarding redos and retakes for all of my classes

updated - Oct. 17, 2017
Students,

Now that the end of the quarter is upon us, I want to share some information regarding redos and retakes for all of my classes and all of my sections.

As with my colleagues in the English Dept., I will (of course) honor the redo/retake policy as articulated by our Dept., which is included in all of my syllabi as well as available here.

Once you have reviewed the policy you will notice I expect you to notify me of your intent to redo or retake within two days of your score posting in Aspen. Just to be clear, I do not expect you to notify me within two days of the due date of the summative assessment but, rather, within two days of seeing your grade in the portal. Once you have notified me, you will have ten days to redo or retake and this timeframe includes any out-of-class redo/retake steps, including but not limited to meeting with me during a mutual free period.

Furthermore, I ask that you notify me of your intentions to redo/retake in writing via email. We will discuss the particulars of these emails in class, but I do expect you to include an appropriate subject line, your name, your class, and your section. Stay tuned for more details!

Monday, October 3, 2016

a busy end to a busy quarter in adv. comp.!

I want to share some clarifying details regarding the end of the quarter push for due dates and such. Here are the relevant dates (in bulleted form), and these dates are also accurately reflected in Aspen as well.


  • deadline to post college admissions essay to turnitin.com - Sunday, Oct. 16 @ 11:59 PM
  • deadline to post final draft of the Rhetorical Analysis Essay - Sunday, Oct. 23 @ 11:59 PM
  • additionally here are the dates "along the way" for the RA assignment
  • deadline to finish reading your "expertise book" - Fri., Nov. 11 @ end-of-class

Friday, January 15, 2016

Think of a Great URL for Your Blog

You will begin blogging soon, and, so, you need to think of a clever URL for your blog. We will use the Google blogging platform Blogger, and your URL will be _____ .blogspot.com. Like mine is drjonessclassnotes.blogspot.com.

So ... come up with something creative, something that express you for those first several letters of your own URL. I'll give you three examples.

First, one of America's most influential bloggers is a guy named Andrew Sullivan (you can google him), and he made a name for himself when he wrote for The Daily Beast. In fact, he became so influential that he started his own blog called The Dish. Now, I'm sure you get the reference, right? The Urban Dictionary defines "the dish" as "the scoop only bigger." Mr. Sullivan is a clever guy! (Unfortunately, The Dish ended continuous publication last June.)

Second, former Houston Chronicle reporter Jenny Lawson runs a blog she's dubbed The Bloggess. She's not a "goddess" she's the "bloggess" -- cha-ching! Oh, and she wins lots and lots of awards too for her scathing, sarcastic humor.

Third, two years ago I had a student named Melanie, and she named her blog "Peanut Butter and Melly." Her URL reflected this accordingly.

Hopefully, these examples illustrate and, well, inspire. Pick a strong name as it will "brand" your blog.

Friday, December 18, 2015

Spruce Up Your Blog!

As you are sprucing up your blogs for my final evaluation, make certain to review my feedback on your "formative" evals. 

Also, do not overlook the advice I gave in class. I've added a pic of these notes from the whiteboard in class. From this list - I am most impressed by those students who "write like they mean it!"

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

for Adv. Comp. students - steps in app. essay process

Today (9/30/15) in class you may remember this numbered list of the steps for your college app. essay, beginning with the first week of school ...


posted on the wall in C-117

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Sunday, October 5, 2014

Notes Relevant to the First Chapter of NARRATIVE OF THE LIFE ...

I will be posting here on my blog throughout (I hope!) our reading of The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass.  I want you to keep up with these posts, as I think they will aid your understanding of the finer points of Douglass's text.

First of all, I want to "back-up" a bit and point out something about the reading you have been doing over the past ten days ...

You have been reading primary source documents in my class, at least insofar as you completed the "Representing Slavery Project."   The "document sets" you read from the Rochester Libraries are all primary sources -- that is they are original historical documents, written by people who experienced the events firsthand.  F. Douglass's Narrative is a primary source too.  By contrast, for instance, your history textbook is, mostly, a secondary source -- that is one that is written by experts discussing events after the fact.  When you study history, these distinctions are important to your full understanding of the readings.  I have a feeling that your U.S. history teachers will be talking more and more about this.

Just as an interesting example of the power of primary sources and the wealth of their scope, consider one of the questions we have before us: how did Southern politicians and "statesmen" (to use F. Douglass's word) justify slavery?  We have discussed this briefly in class (see again end note 15 in our edition of the Narrative), and we will continue to look at the question, yes.  But here's an interesting primary source (published in 1856) that presents justification for enslaving African Americans.  If you skim just the first few pages, you will recognize the Biblical argument, erroneously founded on Genesis.  Hard to believe, right?

Just to reiterate from our discussion on Friday, Southern slaveholders believed that, based on Genesis 9:18-27 , Caanan and all of the children of Caanan as well as (by extension for some reason) his nieces and nephews were rightfully enslaved.  We will continue to discuss this Southern "argument" for the next few days and weeks ...

I want to also remind you about our "learning target" for last Friday: "I can recognize a common inductive pattern (of  F. Douglass's)."  So, to remind you, Douglass begins his narrative (identically like all "slave narratives") with a short discussion of his origins, insofar as he knows them.  Soon, he shares some difficult revelations about himself -- namely that his mother was black but his father was white.  Then, he goes on to explain how he is the kind of child/person, one of mixed race heritage, who could bring down slavery.  Douglass clarifies that Southerns could not possibly continue support the enslavement of Caanan's progeny, especially since so many now are mixed with generations of white blood.  I tried to illustrate Douglass's "inductive pattern" with a diagram on the white board. Keep in mind that "inductive" means to reason from the specific to the general -- that is from something small to something very large.  (In fairness, yes, inductive reasoning can also be deeply flawed, especially in the case of stereotyping.)

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

outling is a reading skill too!

Advanced Composers,

Today in class seemed to confuse a few of you, so I wanted to provide a bit of clarification in this blog post.  First of all, the homework to complete tonight is a reading task not a writing one.  You are to outline your "expertise book" author's "opening matter" -- that is the Introduction, Preface, Preamble, or Forward.

This outline is the "skeleton" of the author's argument, and our various authors will include these bits of "opening matter" in an effort to lay out the much, much longer work's cogent features and arguments.  In essence, the "opening matter" in book-form non-fiction is a "road map" for the rest of the text, and, reading the "opening matter" along with the Table of Contents will provide a complete picture of the depth of the longer work's full revelations and insights.

I've found a relevant post from Salisbury University (in Maryland), and I will re-post the best bit here:


"The key to both outlining and summarizing is being able to distinguish between the main ideas and the supporting ideas and examples. The main ideas form the backbone, the strand that holds the various parts and pieces of the text together. Outlining the main ideas helps you to discover this structure ..."

So, you are outlining the main points (essentially listing the main points in an organized, tiered fashion).  Your own outline will look nothing (really) like mine, as no one of you is reading To End All Wars.  (I also sent you via email a handwritten, .pdf copy of the Google Doc that is linked in the previous sentence.)

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

rhetorical analysis resources -- all in one place!

Advanced Composers,

I want to remind you of all of the resources at your disposal for writing the Rhetorical Analysis.  I would review them in this order:


Also, I have done a bit of internet searching on your behalf, and I have three good college writing center pages to share.  (The college writing center information is particularly rich in general and the various approaches to writing this type of assignment are often pointed and highly relevant.)

Try these three: