Thursday, February 18, 2010

Assignment Description for Week Six Now Active

Make sure to write with any questions.

Steve

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Some advice about taking notes on the King letter and about working with your group.

A student wrote with the following questions, and I thought my answer to her might help a few of you.  For asking the question--one which helps other students learn, the student who asked gets two points extra-credit on her final class grade. The student asked,

Dr.B, I need help...My group has picked 2C for our topic. So I have to re-read MLK's letter and explain the 5 most important things king has accomplish? How do I take these notes? I see you gave us some pointers on how to take notes but is it a certain software? Can I just take the notes how I want to do them? ...I am also going to try to get help from my group which sometimes is hard for me because we all have different times we do homework. 

My answer follows:

My advice is to set up a file in your favorite word processor, and use this file to take your notes.  You should be able to copy and paste the notes to your blog later.  You can also consider using the blog itself to take notes. Here, you would save your notes as a draft instead of publishing them right away as a post, and you can come back later to finish and post your notes to your blog.  You can use the "Edit Posts" link to use your blog in this way, and you'll see the link off the blogger dashboard, right next to the "New Post" button.  Just for information, you can also use "Edit Posts" to go back and edit or revise a post you have already made to the blog.

In terms of how to take the notes and what to look for: 

Read through the letter again.  The key questions you'll be thinking about are: "What is King trying to accomplish in this section of the letter, and what is it in the text which makes me think this is what he is trying to accomplish?" You'll be taking one or two notes for each section as you find answers to these questions. Your notes will be the answers to these key questions plus enough information about the section you are reading to describe it to your reader.   If you'll notice, these notes will then correspond to a point you could make later in a paper, saying something like, "In the section of the letter where King talks about X, he is attempting to accomplish Y.  You can tell he is trying to do Y, because if you look at ... you can see ..."

Don't get carried away here.  My guess is you'll end up with one or two pages max of notes on the various things the text lets you infer about what King is trying to accomplish.  As your research for the paper develops, and you read more about the context and what others say about what King is doing in the letter--you'll be doing some of this reading this coming week--you'll begin to be able to pick out what you think are the priorities in what King is  attempting to accomplish.  

Let me also offer a word or two of advice about working with your group.  Call rather than email, and try and get a list of times when it's OK to call and talk about what your group is doing.  You might consider setting up a calling tree, where you talk to a couple of people each week at a particular time, and they talk to one or two people at another time, filling each in on what is decided.  You can also consider setting up a short conference call or IM or texting session, that is, if you can identify a particular time for these sessions.

Get in touch if any of the above doesn't make sense or doesn't work.

Steve

Thursday, February 11, 2010

The Assignments Link for Week Five Is Now Active.

Last week, you began learning about different kinds of research sources and how to take research notes on your primary source(s).  In the case of your research topic, King's "Letter from a Birmingham Jail."  You also got to begin working more closely with your group, as you needed to make a group decision among a set of option as to the research topic of your King rhetorical analysis.

This week, you'll begin learning how to read secondary sources, that is, journal articles and to take research notes on them.  You'll also get an overview of the steps one goes through in writing a research paper--one of the major learning goals for ENG 112.  As you read and learn the steps in the research paper writing process, you should gain a better idea of where taking notes on your primary source, creating a working bibliography, and taking notes on secondary sources fits into the process of creating a research, analysis, or term paper.

You also have two exercises to complete with your group.  The first is a basis check in to make sure everyone is doing well and to see what help you can provide to help get anyone lagging up to speed.  As part of this check in, you'll divide up a set of journal articles, making each group member responsible for two articles.  As always when interacting with your group, be supportive and act toward each member as you would a colleague.  You want them to succeed, and it's worth your investing time to help them, because without good colleagues, your own success won't be as great as it could be with their support and help. All this is part of the process of learning to work with a team and learning how the professional world usually functions.

As always write with questions.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Explanation of Terms Used to Describe Different Kinds of Research Sources

A student wrote to ask what was meant by "outside refernce-both online and print," in the description of the research topics in this week's assignments.  I thought everyone could benefit from the answer, and it is my custom to publish such questions and answers here in the class announcements.  For asking a question which helps many in the class learn, the student will receive one point extra credit on her final class grade.  It's my way of encouraging good questions from you.  

Here is my explanation:

"There are two kinds of sources, primary and secondary.  A primary source is the text you want to understand and interpret.  In the case of our assignment, King's letter is the primary source.  When you read or find references within the letter to help you say something about the letter, you are using the letter as a primary source.  For instance, quoting the salutation to the ministers would be using a quote from your primary source to make sense of your primary source.  This is the basic idea behind analysis, that is, breaking your primary source down into parts and examining the parts closely to help you make better sense of the whole text.

When you create a text, like a paper or post about your primary text, you are creating a secondary source, that is, you are creating a text which explains your primary text/source.  The secondary source you create joins any number of other secondary sources created to attempt to explain the primary source or text.  Taken together these secondary sources form what is referred to as "the discourse" or "conversation" about the primary text.

When you use someone else's explanation of the primary source you are both trying to explain, you are said to be using a secondary or "outside" source.  This is a source or text created to help make sense of a primary  source.  Secondary sources can be found in any number of places.  You can go online and google a website which explains, for instance, who the audience was for King's letter.  Such a secondary source, would be called an "online secondary source."  You can also go to the library and find a journal article or a section of a book which explains King's audience, this kind of secondary source would be a print secondary source.  

Because print sources often require expert peers to approve and act as readers for print sources before they appear in print, in academic conversations, print secondary sources are considered more likely to be legitimate than online secondary sources which don't require this prior approval of experts in the field to be published.  There is no denying, however, that online sources are often easier to find and use, as you can find and use online sources any place you can find an internet connection.  My guess is that how we judge the legitimacy of online versus print secondary sources will continue to change in the near future; however, for right now, those who participate or use professional discourse, that is, professionals and academics like students and teachers, need to know to find and use both online and print secondary sources.

While the research topic your group will be exploring will have you looking at both kinds of sources, and I wrote the description of the research topic accordingly, for this week's assignments, all you need to do is to decide as a group which of the three topics you will research and, later, write about.  This week, you are also re-reading the letter and taking primary source notes, finding references within the text which will help you explain aspects of the rhetoric of King's letter.  The kinds of quotes and examples you look for and take notes on as you re-read the letter will depend on the topic your group picks to research, so that is the place to begin."

As always, write with any questions.

Steve

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Friday, February 5, 2010

I have activated the assignment link for week four.

I have activated the assignment link for week four.  Within the assignment, I also wrote a short essay on taking research notes which contains most of the material I planned to cover in yesterday's class.  Reading this essay is your first exercise for the week.

As always, write with questions.

Steve

PS For those who have asked or sent get well messages, my thanks.  I wish I could say I am feeling better, but I've still a hacking cough and a sinus infection.  Since I was already on a course of antibiotics and nasal steroid spray, the doctor, who I visited this morning, has me finishing these up and checking on the progress of what he thinks is a secondary sinus/chest infection.  How unlucky is it to go into the doctors one week, and then catch something on top?  In any event, I am resting, and I hope to conduct a full week of classes and office hours next week. If there are any changes to these plans, I will post them here.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Office hours cancelled for Doc B, Thursday and Friday, 4-5 Feb.

I have been fighting off a chest and sinus infection since last Friday.  The cough which has accompanied it has become much worse overnight, and my voice is affected. The upshot is that I won't be keeping office hours today, Thursday, 4 February, nor will I be able to teach.  I don't normally have office hours on Friday, but I am also cancelling all meetings and appointments Friday as well, as I have a doctor's appointment in the morning and want to get in as much rest as possible, all with an eye toward being rested and--hopefully--well enough to tackle a full week next week.

If you had planned on stopping by my office, please email using one of the forms on the webpage, as my voice isn't all it could be.

Since for our section my not being there also entails my cancelling our face-to-face class for the week, please check the website tomorrow afternoon for your online work for the week.  I also have a final note and a favor to ask:

1) Do make sure to check the class website for your assignments this week.  I doubt if they'll be posted today, but they should be by tomorrow.  In the process of posting the assignments, I'll also post, probably in the assignments themselves, on the concepts we were to go over today, that is, the basic structure of an academic paragraph and how to take good research notes.  We won't be able to replicate the group workshop I had planned for class today online, but I'll plan this activity into next week's face-to-face class.

2) Finally, not everyone checks the announcements on the webpage or their VCCS email as regularly as they should, and I would like to save folks a needless trip into campus.  Would you take a few minutes and use the contact information for your group--you can find it on the Forums page of the class website--and call the members of your group to let them know class and office hours are cancelled? You might set up a kind of calling tree, so you will only call one or two folks in your group, and they can contact the others.  

Thanks, and I'm sorry for any inconvenience my illness may have called.  As always, write with questions, and I hope and expect to be in to keep a full week next week.

Steve

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