Sunday, September 7, 2014

Lessons, Week of 8-11 September 2014


English 1301

YOU and some old dude…

 

Week of 8 September 2014

Week 3

 

Posted to angryverbs.blogspot.com on Sunday, 7 September.

An attempt to post this to BlackBoard will be made on Sunday, 7 September.

 

As always, begin work when you enter the work area.  Put away the little Orwellian telescreen that tells you how to feel, take up your journal and pen, note the prompt on the board, and write.  Have your books and notes ready.  Don’t wait to be told to begin here or in any part of your life: passivity is your enemy.

 

This week we will consider descriptive writing via an excerpt from an essay by George Orwell, which you have already read.  We will then look carefully at the descriptive essay assignment itself and at the grading matrix.  You, of course, have already read all of this, which was given to you on the first day of class two weeks ago.

 

Your essay is due no later than roll call on (“Oh…wait…I’m printing it out in the library” = 0) our last class day of next week, and is certainly welcome earlier.  If you come to class after roll-call on a due date, the paper is a zero.  This is not grade school.  Now think about the concept of a due date.  What does that mean? 

 

Give the paper to me.  If you give your paper to your cousin Cletus to give to me, is there a possibility that your work will repose alone and ignored in his pickup truck in a repair shop in Louisiana?  I cannot read and grade a paper which I do not have.  No ‘net submissions; this is not a distance class. Give the paper to me.  Give the paper to me on or before the due date.  Do not embarrass yourself by asking for an extension.

 

As for that old “I gave you my paper; don’t you remember?” thing – it won’t work.  I always checkmark submissions on the attendance sheet before dismissal.  Get it right.

 

Rough Drafts

 

I am available to give your rough draft a look during office time before and after class, but not on the day a paper is due.  The operative word in “rough draft” is “draft.”  I cannot sort out disconnected notes, thoughts, and ideas, nor will I try to read hand-written manuscripts.  A draft for any consideration is always typed and double-spaced; there may be, of course, many hand-written corrections and such. 

 

A consultation over a rough draft is in no way contractural, nor will I proof-read your paper.  I will give indications of problem areas, but I will not resolve them for you; writing the paper is your job.  The minister does not hover over your courtship patterns.  The police officer does not ride with you to tell you not to drive over the limit (or that your inspection is nine months out of date).  The welding instructor will not take your welding exam for you at the shipyard.  This is not grade school.  The (metaphorical) training wheels are off the (metaphorical) bicycle – you are going to have to pedal (metaphorically).

 

MLA Format

 

When writing papers for this class follow the MLA Format, not some nebulous concept of free to be you and me.  I gave you a model of the MLA format in your handouts, and there are more examples in your expensive textbook. 

 

Test? Did He Say “Test?”

 

Tests are always possible.

 

Grouchy Remarks

 

Listen to the old teacher instead of to the diffuse noises and flickering colors on your little Orwellian telescreen.  Some of the letters I received over the weekend (the attempts at formatting should be better) indicate that some of your classmates were inattentive in class – until this moment I had not set a due date.  Communicate accurate information, not panicky gossip, to each other.

 

The good part about this is that if you worried about a due date that had not yet been made and wrote a draft of your first essay, you’re ahead of everyone else.

 

First Itty Bitty Bits of Writing

 

This week I will return to you your personal surveys, which were generally pretty bad.

 

Personal Surveys – A Few General Observations

 

You and your classmates are funny, smart, industrious, cheerful, and optimistic, and a joy to work with every day.  However, your many positive qualities seldom manifested themselves in your surveys.  Most of these were carelessly and hastily accomplished in sentence fragments and in substandard usage that would embarrass even Cousin Cletus from Buna.  When you work any assignment you should not take early retirement and schlub through it as if idly responding to anti-social media on the Orwellian telescreen.  Construct your work professionally. 

 

Here are some very general notes on some common failings:

 

Pencils are great for marking lumber and for sketching (we won’t mention mathematics).  The always-and-forever directive for this class, however, is to write in black or blue ink anything meant to be read by others.  An in-class test or essay written in pencil is a zero.  A test or paper begun in pencil and then overwritten in pen is a zero.  This grouchy message is brought to you from experience: to indulge someone is to cripple him or her.

 

Most everyone misused the adverb “hopefully.”  To write “Hopefully, I will attend the University of Bob” is technically correct if the intent is to say that you will be hopeful about anything while attending the University of Bob. If you are unsure of your admissions status, then write “I hope to attend the University of Bob.”

 

When all else fails, read the instructions.  Write in complete sentences.  A sentence is not complete without an end-stop.

 

Don’t be prompt-dependent.  If the question is “What three adjectives would your friends use to describe you?”, “They would say that I am pretty, brave, and talented” is incomplete because “they” is an unreferenced pronoun.  Write “My friends would say…”  When in doubt, write it out.

 

Never begin a response with “it,” and seldom with any other pronoun. 

 

One among you wrote a marvelous prediction in shifting tenses:  “5 [sic] years from now I do not know where I will be.”  Is the writer saying that in five – not 5 – years he will not know where he is? Read your sentences again – do they say what you intend them to say?

 

Some of the poor structure is rather like a recent headline in The Drudge Report: “Sharks are Ten Times More Likely to Kill Men Than Women.”  Does this mean that sharks are more likely to kill men than women are?  Or does this mean that sharks find men tastier than women?  Think about what you are writing – does it communicate what you intend?

 

Please look at your table-mate’s paper. If he or she wrote in pencil, give him or her a really mean look.  Be warned – the next time any exercise is submitted in pencil, the grade is a zero.  No excuses, no rewrites.

 

Answer the question that is asked; do not drift away on a mellow sea of free-floating dreams.  When you take college admissions exams, graduate school exams, and professional exams you will be penalized for not answering the question that was asked.  This penalty might involving having to run laps around your English instructor.

 

“Family time” or “being with family” is vague – what do you and your family do?  Do you water ski together?  Do you discuss the symbolism of the third murderer in Macbeth?  Do you kill and dissect skunks for amusement? 

 

Titles of books in manuscript (handwriting) are underlined (The Brothers Karamazov) ; when typed they are italicized (The Brothers Karamazov).

 

The titles of short works are in quotation marks (“Ode on a Grecian Urn,” by John Keats) or inverted commas (‘Ode on a Grecian Urn,’ by John Keats).

 

Small numbers, those of one or two syllables, are usually spelled out, such as five instead of 5.

 

Do not begin a response with a pronoun.

 

Do not in write in passive voice, as in “The passive voice is to be avoided.”

 

Pronouns replace nouns, and so must have antecedent nouns.  Don’t assume the reader knows what “it” is.

 

“N/A” is not appropriate.  Answer the question.

 

A blank space is not appropriate.  Answer the question.

 

“The real world” is a cliché and, worse, a negative one.  Whether you approve or disapprove of your current circumstances, you live in reality.

 

Does anyone here remember apostrophes? 

 

Avoid the second-person “you.”

 

“Get my degree” – please write this as “earn a degree.”

 

Some among you, growing tense because even informal writing is in some sense formal discourse and requires organization and thought, wrote stiffly and artificially, not unlike Henry David Thoreau’s occasional attempts at verse.  We tend to speak in fragments, but these fragments are also usually effective.  When writing your thoughts as effective sentences, you complete the fragments.  Don’t invert the sequence or employ an unaccustomed vocabulary.

 

In responding orally in a conversation, you might say “To town.”  If you were writing that as a sentence, you would make the thought clear to the reader with  “Cletus and I drove to town.”  Don’t botch it as “Town is the place to which Cletus and I drove.”

 

A sentence is not complete without an end stop.  If you respond to a test question with an incomplete sentence, that is a zero because the complete sentence is in itself part of the correct answer.  Get it right.  This is not an arbitrary whim; this is part of your preparation for your profession (that famous “real life” one hears about so often).

 

Never begin a response to a test question with a pronoun.  A pronoun is an incomplete thought – and thus a zero -  unless there is an antecedent noun. 

 

Punctuation is for clarity, not decoration.  Consider the following sentence:

 

Woman without her man is nothing.

 

Now consider this version of the same sentence:

 

Woman – without her, man is nothing

 

Now go to work.

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