Wednesday, September 25, 2013
25 September, Wednesday morning class
2nd row from the back -- please don't leave fragments of your snack mix in the chair. Were you raised in the woods by messy vegetarians?
For 26 September, Thursday morning class
I will be available for you by nine, as usual, but will race you out of the parking lot (metaphorically) at the end of class in order to catch a flight from Houston.
As a group, your essays are quite good. I will probably have them for you by Tuesday.
As a group, your essays are quite good. I will probably have them for you by Tuesday.
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
24 September 2013, English 1301, Tuesday Morning Class
Young scholars in the back row, leaving foot-droppings on the floor is not The Bulldog Way. If you wear shoes with patterned soles, check them before you enter the building. "I forgot" is inadequate; the nice folks who tidy up around here and in doing so help you advance your professional development should never have to clean up dried mud.
Sunday, September 22, 2013
English 1301, Lessons, Week of 23-27 September 2013
Week of 23-27 September 2013
English
1301, both sections
You
and Mr. Hall
1. Find a seat and begin writing
in your journal, ten syllables per line. There is no down-time in this
class. Don’t wait to be told to begin;
passivity is your enemy.
2. Open your Orwellian telescreen
to angryverbs.blogspot.com for your syllabus and lessons. Begin reading your
notes and the assigned pages in Bedford.
There is no down-time in this class. Don’t wait to be told to begin; passivity
is your enemy.
3. Roll call and administrivia
4. As assigned two weeks ago, the
final draft of your descriptive essay is due at roll call in your first class
of the week. If you are absent, submit
it at the beginning of the next class. Absences
are not an excuse in college or on the job.
Tuesday
only: return last Thursday’s quiz.
5. Persuasive writing
A.
I have a stack useful assortment of
handouts for you; these handouts are not posted on angryverbs.blogspot.com or
BlackBoard, so you must take a physical copy.
If you are absent, I will save these, as with other work, for the next
class only.
B.
Your specific reading assignment for
persuasive writing is on pp. 104-129, and you should begin reading now. Don’t wait for class time; passivity is your
enemy.
C.
I
will babble teach an introductory lesson on persuasive writing. Pay attention and take notes.
D.
A
quiz is always possible, and on any topic discussed this term in class,
information posted on angryverbs.blogspot.com and BlackBoard, and
handouts.
A.
11:04
– go away.
Avoid using the 2nd person, that conversational “you,” in essays and on tests. Employ the 3rd person. Write like a young professional.
Please
– no whiteout / Liquid Paper on, well, papers.
Save it for art class. If you
must make a correction on a quiz, draw one line through the error, like this,
and then go on with your emendation.
Write like a young professional.
Write
in complete sentences. Take your time
and work like a craftsman. Sound the
sentence to yourself – does it sound right?
Does it contain a complete subject and a complete predicate? Does it state a complete thought? Does it feature standard punctuation,
including an end-stop? Does it answer
the question, or have you drifted off-topic to tiptoe through the tulips? Write like a young professional.
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
17 September: Update for This Week
Week of 16-20 September 2013
Update to
angryverbs.blogspot.com and BlackBoard, Tuesday, 17 September
English
1301
You
and Mr. HallMonday / Wednesday and Tuesday / Thursday:
Both
classes: remember that the final draft
of your descriptive essay is due no later than roll call on your first day of
class on the week of 23-27 September. You
are welcome to turn it in earlier. No
late papers will be accepted; this assignment was made two weeks ago. Absences, broken printers, computers that
suffer the vapours – no excuses, please.
You
are delightful young people, and I very much appreciate your work, initiative,
and good fellowship. Work together –
when I don’t want you to work together (tests come to mind), I’ll tell
you. Remember that professionals work
together on the job, and everyone benefits from each other’s strengths. Think of yourselves as co-workers (except on
tests!).
Monday
/ Wednesday class – on Wednesday, 18 September, I will make a brief
introduction to persuasive writing and then give you some in-class time to work
on your descriptive essay.
Tuesday
/ Thursday class – on Thursday, 19 September, we will finish our round-buzzard
reading of each other’s essays. Don’t be
shy about giving and receiving assistance.
I will make a brief introduction to persuasive writing, give you some
in-class time to work on your descriptive essay, and then you will celebrate
learning with the quiz we didn’t have time for…oops…the quiz for which
we did not have time on Tuesday. Some of
you have been checking with the earlier class to see if I am going to give you
the same quiz. That is very good
thinking on your part; however, I’m giving you a different quiz. The content will be taken from any of the
presentations so far this term, including the block form business letter
(hint).
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Lessons, Week of 16-20 September 2013
Week of 16-20 September 2013
English
1301
You
and Mr. Hall
Monday
/ Wednesday and Tuesday / Thursday:
1. Find a seat and begin writing in
your journal, ten syllables per line. There is no down-time in this class. Don’t wait to be told to begin; passivity is
your enemy.
2. Open your Orwellian telescreen
to angryverbs.blogspot.com for your syllabus and lessons. Begin reading your
notes and the assigned pages in Bedford.
There is no down-time in this class. Don’t wait to be told to begin; passivity
is your enemy.
3. Roll call and administrivia
4. Monday / Tuesday: Return last
week’s quiz. Debrief. Do more than look at the grade and sigh
(either in joy or in annoyance); listen to the debriefing and learn the right
answers.
5. Monday / Tuesday: Descriptive
essay
A.
Pass
your complete rough drafts around. Don’t
wait for roll call or a specific instruction to begin reading each other’s
work. Passivity is your enemy.
B.
Everyone
in the class reads everyone else’s essay and writes useful comments in it. “This very good” is not a useful comment; “You
develop the topic of this paragraph nicely” is a useful comment. Don’t neglect to note form; we are learning
how to write professionally, and although the content in today’s assignment is
meant to be interesting, it is for the purpose of developing your skilled use of
a professional format.
C.
Your
rough draft will be given a grade mostly on its mere existence, probably a 100
– and how easy can this be? If your
paper is not typed, not in MLA format, not complete, or if it is inadequate in
any way, expect a well-earned zero. It should also be messy with your later
corrections – those indicate that you are working.
D.
I
will read every essay. I will give you
as much one-on-one assistance in class as I can, but there is little time. I am also available before and after
class. I am not going to proof-read your
paper, nor are any comments contractural – I will point out some problems and
make suggestions only; you must build your final draft.
E.
Your
final draft will be due NLT roll call (you are encouraged to turn it in
earlier) on the first day of your class the week of 23 – 27 September. No late papers will be accepted. This pace is somewhat leisurely; due-dates
will be closer as the term progresses.
6. Wednesday / Thursday:
Introduction to persuasive writing.
There is no preparation for this topic before class; focus on the final
draft of your descriptive essay.
7. Door prize!
8. 11:04 – go away.
Sunday, September 8, 2013
Lessons, Week of 9-13 September 2013
Week of 9-13
September 2013
English
1301
You
and Mr. Hall
Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday:
1.
Find
a seat and begin writing in your journal, ten syllables per line. There is no
down-time in this class. Don’t wait to
be told to begin; passivity is your enemy.
2.
Open
your Orwellian telescreen to angryverbs.blogspot.com for your syllabus and
lessons. Begin reading. There is no down-time
in this class. Don’t wait to be told to begin; passivity is your enemy.
3.
Roll
call
4.
Administrivia
A. Unfinished
business
B. Know that you
are subject to a quiz at any time
5.
Descriptive
essay
A. Finish reading
and discussing George Orwell’s “Confessions of a Book Reviewer.”
B. Consider the
five senses and how, in our time, we rely mostly on sight and sound because of
our Telescreens.
C. Discuss template
/ MLA format for essay writing.
D. Discuss scoring
matrix.
E. Discuss the
descriptive essay you propose to write.
F. A rough draft
of your essay is due at roll call on your first class of next week. “Rough draft” means that your essay is typed
in the MLA format and is complete, and that it also features lots of
corrections, emendations, and comments by others whom you ask to look at your
work. I command you to work together and
learn together; when I don’t want you to work together, such as on a test, I’ll
tell you.
Grade – you will earn 100 if your
rough draft is both complete and messy (which shows you re-read it and re-worked
it). Your grade will be 0 if your paper
reflects inadequate work or if you do the “my printer broke last night” thing.
Your final draft will be due the week
of 23 – 27 September. This pace is
somewhat leisurely; due-dates will be closer as the term progresses.
6.
Questionnaire
(handout) – write in complete sentences
7.
Work
on questionnaires and / or descriptive essays while the instructor, a poor role
model indeed, at lasts reads your journals.
8.
Door
prize!
9.
11:14
A.M. Go away.
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