(note: Rhonda will be back later today)
Those of you who have been following this blog are already aware that my goal here is both to provide a sample for my 101 and 102 students and to present a method for creating a realistic research paper assignment, i.e. one that is representative of actual assignments in college courses. If you haven't read the initial material, there are links above.
Since my department is shifting to new textbooks this term (Ruszkiewicz,
John J. and Jay T. Dolmage. How to Write Anything: A Guide and a Reference with Readings. 2nd ed. Boston:
Bedford/St. Martins, 2012, and Ruszkiewicz, John J. A Reader’s Guide to College Writing. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2014), this seems like a good time for a brief progress report. Over the past few years, the most obvious result has been a decrease in students dropping the course, which has been my greatest encouragement. In addition, the problems I've seen students having are the same ones we all see every semester: writing issues, difficulty with time management, critical thinking skills that aren't yet up to the material, etc (here in Illinois, high schools apparently focus primarily on 5-paragraph essays, with the result that many students can't immediately grasp the reality that those won't work at the college level: for some, it's a kind of security blanket, and they resist the change). All of these are college-readiness issues that should have been addressed before they enter our classrooms, but that doesn't seem likely to happen anytime soon. So, as far as the things I can control go, this project is producing a quantifiable benefit.
New versions of the assignments and critical model packet will be available shortly (links will be on the left).
Finally, my thanks to those who sent condolences after my mother's death. I am very hopeful that the gaps in posts that have marked this year to date will not be necessary again.
And now, Rhonda is up next. She is taking 102 this term, so if you need a 101 example, use the Fall 2011 or 2012 entries.
This blog is meant to be used as an example for first-year composition students. Rhonda is a fictional community college student who will perpetually be taking the two-course sequence. This is her online writing and research journal (her 2012 research entries run from 1/20-5/5/2012; Eng101 reading journal that year runs from 8/22-12/5/12). For an explanation of the course, see below for Rethinking Teaching the Research Paper.
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