A little bird told me about your homework tonight

bird toldOn page 100 in the Language of Composition (the white book), do Rhetoric and Style questions 1, 3, 5-8. Post them on the blog, but come ready to discuss them in class (that may means you may want a paper copy).1

  1. In the future, I think I need to crack down on cell phones in class. Calculators fall under that umbrella too–you know who you are…
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Graff the Prose article

caged bird 2

So cruel it is outside and can see the trees...

Take the article  I Know Why the Caged Bird Cannot Read by Francine Prose and summarize and then respond to her position by using the Graff template in Class Info & Docs.

DO NOT print this out and attempt to fill in the blanks on that page. Doing so will produce inferior thinking as it was not designed to accommodate complex thoughts in such a small space.

Instead, type this out on the blog with your thoughts positioned in the paragraph where the blanks appear in the template. This template has proven useful to me and many others to drill down in comprehension and then in the thinking required for a nuanced response. We’ll read a few of these in class tomorrow to help fuel our discussion.

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Welcome to Camelot

camelot The rough draft for your JFK paper is due on Monday November 2, 2009.  Remember we will meet in the classroom tomorrow and we will be in the lab right outside our room.

Requirements and Reminders:

  • Respond to the prompt on page 57 of our textbook. You may use the sample thesis above the prompt if you wish.
  • 900-1200 words
  • Final draft due Wednesday November 4, 2009
  • Use MLA format with the following caveats: 1) Single-space your heading 2) Leave the page number and last name off the first page. Format examples are here and examples of the above-noted modifications are here.
  • I WILL NOT accept papers that are written in pencil, single-spaced, or with the heading on the right. Papers that are not in MLA format will be returned ungraded for corrections and will be counted as late.

Suggested method:

  1. Identify the purpose (JFK’s purpose) that you wish to write about.
  2. Using a different colored highlighter or pen, mark everything in the speech that supports or helps enact that purpose.
  3. Look for patterns/groupings in what you’ve highlighted.
  4. Using those patterns, develop an argument concerning how JFK uses rhetorical strategies to accomplish the purpose you identified.

Caution: Do not start writing without identifying the purpose. Without that, you cannot write a thesis. Without a thesis, your argument will meander through whatever you’ve noticed in the speech, creating a paper without clear direction that is confusing and frustrating both to write and to read/grade.

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Quick task

I’m going to try something in the computer lab Thursday.

To make it work, go to http://giddings.pbworks.com/ and request access.

Go here http://giddings.pbworks.com/JFK-Comments to use the JFK wiki page.  It will notify you via email when someone else leaves a comment.

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Analyzing JFK

JFK ghosts_11903As a first step in our work on JFK’s inaugural address, annotate his speech in as much detail as you can.  The better job you do on this, and on all the activities we do on this speech, the easier time you’ll have writing a strong analytical paper.

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Text Annotation

Go to the text annotation site and click on The Autumn of the Multitaskers link.  Clicking on the callout boxes like I showed you in class on Friday, make at least one comment on the essay.

That’s it.  Have a great Homecoming weekend!

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Multiple claims in the multitasking article

Take a look at the multitasking article tonight and identify the overall claim/assertion (the glossary of The Language of Composition has a good definition if you need one).  Then, identify the claim/assertion in each section of the article (sections are indicated by a drop cap).  Blog your results.

Remember we have a vocab quiz tomorrow (week 5).

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