Monday, April 29, 2013

Final Reflection


I don’t even know how to start writing my final reflection. This semester has opened my eyes to writing styles I hadn’t known before. I came into this class with no expectations. I didn’t take AP English like a majority of the class. I didn’t even take English at a high school. I went straight into Composition 1 and 2. In those classes you are already expected to know about standard academic English. I didn’t know all of the rules and I struggled. This class helped me to learn how to write academic pieces the correct way.

On the first day of class I realized that ENGL 1103 was going to be a class that I had to give my all in. When I first saw the Syllabus I realized that I had never heard of a lot of the writing we were going to do. I remember feeling overwhelmed and contemplated dropping the course. 

One of the first things Megan had us do is create a name card. The first thought that went through my head was “are we in elementary school?” I was sorely mistaking. We were then told to get a “daybook”, a journal. There were two quotes that Megan told gave us regarding the day book. One by Ralph Fletcher that states, “This notebook is a private place to write badly.” And one by John Donne that says, “The point of a notebook is to jump-start the mind.” I took that quote to heart. I wrote a lot of things in this book. One of our first writing in to the days was about Trajectory. There were a few quotes on a handout and we needed to pick one and respond to it. Mine was as follows, “Every city is always changing, on its own trajectory.” - Olafur Eliasson. At first I took this as a literal meaning. Now looking back at the quote and the assignments through the semester I see that it is reminiscent of a person. A person is constantly changing and they have the ability to choose their path and what they want to do.

                This theme appears in my Writing History Response a few times. I realized that I am in control of what my future holds. The writing history response was the first major assignment of the year. When I read what we would be doing on the Syllabus I thought it would be easy to just write. I realized that it was quite difficult to connect school and life events into my development of a writer. I had my first “Aha” moment while writing this paper. I hadn’t realized how much writing truly did help me through life. Writing turned out to be my escape from the world and help me develop into the person I am today.

One of the first things Megan told us that we would be using a lot this semester was Blogger. I was infuriated at first and couldn’t understand why I was being told I needed to blog.  I didn’t want the world to see my writing. I was very insecure with my writing and never let anybody besides my teachers read my work. The first experience with the blog was connecting our timelines for the Writing History Response. I was okay with posting this just because it was a writing piece.

Soon after posting the first draft of Writing History Response we started workshopping on our blog. Nothing had ever scared me so much in a class. I didn’t know these people in my group and I thought they were going to eat my writing alive. During the first workshop I realized that they weren’t out to get me and they too had insecurities with their papers. That night we did a workshop reflection and I soon realized that everyone in my group was there to help me and push on my thinking.

I vividly remember a heated conversation in our class that last in to two class periods that was sparked by SocialClass and the Hidden Curriculum of Work. That was the first time our class really got into a debate that was intellectually stimulating. We all were throwing around our opinions towards schools and how the different classes were taught differently. I then remember we went slightly off course and started talking about Financial Aid and how it needs to be redone. This conversation sparked my interest in others in our class as more than just classmates. I was truly interested in seeing where they came from and delving past the surface of what I could see. This then translated in my writing.
I would write well but there was no depth to what I was writing. As shown in my second draft of my Exploratory Essay. I wasn’t pushing on the topics. I would simply list some facts and move on. There wasn’t any analyzing of the information. Megan would always ask the questions “how?” and “Why?”I was only answering the “What?” and that needed to change.

The exploratory essay was the most challenging piece for me to write. Having to pick three articles and to find and connect a common theme was rather challenging. Taking Montessori and Liberal education models was a no brainer to me. Then adding in Social Class and the Hidden Curriculum of Work seemed like it would support the views from each education system. This piece was hard for me because it took me back to my school age roots where my creativity was suppressed and I could only use facts supported by the article rather than my opinion on the matter. I have always struggled with using the author’s opinion solely.

Our next assignment was the AnnotatedBibliography for our inquiry. When I first heard that we were dong an inquiry project I got excited. I was excited to look up a question that I had always been wary of. I was soon told that we had to focus our question on education and I was upset. The week before we picked our inquiry topics we watched a TEDtalks video about schools killing creativity and then we were given an assignment with a cap on creativity. That was the first time I felt displeased with the course. I loved how free we were in the class and that we were able to speak freely and engage in great conversation; but to then be forced to pick a topic in education for our inquiry seemed wrong to me. Now that the semester is over I can understand why we did it that way. We kept all of our focus on education. It allowed us to push on each other’s thinking because we were all thinking in the same mind set and all knew about the material and the background on the topic.

I had never written and Annotated Bibliography and I am extremely glad we needed to. It taught me that I needed to be thorough and that if I spent the time to make a good Annotated Bibliography that I wouldn’t have to look back at the sources every few minutes for quotes. It was all in one place.

I have always been an emotional writer since I was a little boy. I love to put my heart on the paper. I want everyone to feel what I am feeling while writing. I had never thought about writing a play or script before in my life. When we wrote Joining theConversation Step #1 I thought I would hate it and that I would suck at it. I quickly realized I could go on for days, just like when I was typing my book. When it came time to write Joining theConversation step #3 I knew that I had to write more to my script. I had to add characters and give them more distinct personalities. I completely fell in love with writing a script. I loved that I could make it real and true. I tend to write my actual papers like they are real life so it was a nice way to write the way I do best.

We had to write a letter to an elementary school student answering the questions they had asked us. I forgot what it was like to be a 2nd grader and writing a letter to someone. Sanquan's letter included questions about  if i liked writing and how do I get started writing  In his letter he drew pictures and told me that he writes about what he sees on TV. I soon realized that i was the same way as a little boy. I would be watching TV and see something that captivated me and then I would immediately have to go write a story about it, This allowed me to connect with my youth again and to realize that writing isn't about all the fancy words and hard concepts. It is about what makes you interested and inspires you to write. 

As I sit here and reflect on the semester, I am able to see how I have changed. I came in as a writer that just did the assigned tasks and followed the bullet points on the page, I left as an inquirer that can push on my own thinking in ways I didn’t know that were possible. I am now able to understand the commonalities between articles of major differences. When a person takes the time to take a step back and look at things together the thread is easy to see. This class took me, the little insecure writer and allowed me to see that others are not here to ruin me, but here to help me rise. I can only hope that now that I have some tools to enhance myself as an inquirer if I am able to continue to enhance myself down the road. 

Response to Trajectory


Trajectory Quotes


Trajectory Quotes



“Your life is a trajectory. Every choice you make alters that trajectory, in a positive or negative way. Will you categorize that dinner with friends as a business expense? Will you be honest with your daughter? Will you take more credit than you’re due? These are just the small questions that we face every day, and little by little, the answers influence the trajectory of our lives and beings.”





Sunday, April 28, 2013

Syllabus


English 1103-005 Accelerated College Writing and Rhetoric (Spring 2013)
Mondays and Wednesday 9:30-10:45 Friday 155

Instructor: Megan Keaton (You may occasionally see Megan Firestone)
Office: Cameron 113
Office Hours: MW 11:00-12:00 and by appointment
Email: mfiresto@uncc.edu

Philosophical Precepts:
“Curiosity as restless questioning, as movement toward the revelation of something hidden, as a question verbalized or not, as search for clarity, as a moment of attention, suggestion, and vigilance, constitutes an integral part of the phenomenon of being alive.”
~Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of Freedom: Ethics, Democracy, and Civic Courage

“Teacher, students, and communities…deserve schools that are places where people want to be, where home freedoms are protected and nourished, where what we say and think and feel matters to other people who in turn matter to us, where we learn to work on and work out the most important questions and challenges we face.” 
~Kelly Gallagher, Reclaiming Assessments: A Better Alternative to the Accountability Agenda 

This semester will focus on developing your abilities as a writer, reader, student, and inquirer. To this end, we will read together on the class theme and questions: What is and should be the purpose of schooling? How and why do we educate children? What is “success” in school?  What are the possible identities for “student” and “writer”? You will then develop your own inquiry questions and project related in some capacity to this theme. Your inquiry questions will guide you in the development of your extended inquiry project, which will include secondary research. In addition to documenting and reflecting on this process in your blog, you will prepare a paper for an academic audience and create a multimodal project that explores aspects of your inquiry.

Required Texts and Materials:
All of your texts will be posted to Moodle as PDFs. You will be expected to bring these texts to class on the days they are due; you may either print them or bring them pre-loaded on an electronic device.

You will also need to bring a daybook, a gluestick and a writing utensil to class each day.

Grading:                                                                                            Numerical Grading Scale:
Blog: 650 points                                                                                  990-1100 points = A
All Drafts for Big Assignments                                              880-989 points = B
Reflections for Big Assignments                                            770-879 points = C
Inquiry Process Posts                                                              660-769 points = D
Responses to Readings and Prompts                                      0-590 points = F
Final Reflection                                             
Inquiry group Reponses and participation: 100 points
Workshop feedback and participation: 100 points                
Panel discussion and multimodal project: 100 points                        
Participation in class: 50 points
Participation on blog: 50 points
Participation with elementary school students: 50 points                                                                              



Blog
Your blog will be an integral part of your inquiry project and your learning in this class.  You will set up a blog on www.blogger.com and are required to post to your blog at least twice a week.  You will respond to readings and prompts, explain the progress of your inquiry and post drafts and reflections of the assignments to your blog.  You are also welcome to post entries from your daybook if you feel the entry helps explain or further your inquiry.  You will also be assigned an inquiry group.  You will be required to respond to at least two of your inquiry group’s posts a week. See the assignment sequence section for a detailed breakdown of the grading for this blog.

Final Reflection
Your final reflection will be a long post on your blog, which will explain your learning and/or thinking through the semester and the process of your inquiry project. See the assignment sequence section for detailed instructions on writing your final reflection.

Workshop participation and feedback:
Throughout the semester, you will bring in drafts of your work for feedback from your peers. In addition to receiving participation credit for bringing in complete drafts, you will also receive grades for the feedback you give to your peers. We will discuss this extensively in class, but feedback should be specific and constructive.

Panel discussion and multimodal project
After research proposals have been approved, we will work together to form panels of students who have similar or compatible research interests. Your panel group will be responsible for running a 30-35 minute presentation and discussion with the class on your inquiries. Panels are an integral part of most academic conferences, so this will be a good introduction to this genre of academic work. Part of the panel discussion will include the sharing of the multimodal project or projects created by the panel. See details on the multimodal project in the Assignment Sequence section of the syllabus.

Participation
You will receive participation credit by coming to class on time, staying for the entire time, asking and answering questions when appropriate, contributing to class discussions and activities, and displaying a classroom-appropriate demeanor. Participation credit is also dependent on maintaining your blog, responding to your inquiry group’s blogs and responding to each assigned homework reading.

Participation with elementary school students
This semester, we will be working in conjunction with a class of elementary school students in CMS.  The purpose of our work with these students will include examining the possible trajectories through school and reflecting on student and writer identities.  We will visit the elementary school one day during the semester; those students will, then, visit on campus on another day.  This work should help you think more critically into your inquiry and be included in your Joining the Conversation piece.

How to get an A in this course:
  • Come to class. Miss no more than three sessions.
  • Contribute in the construction of a collaborative and supportive class community.
  • Turn in all assignments by the appropriate deadlines.
  • Maintain your blog throughout the semester. Respond to your inquiry group with throughout and helpful feedback. Take care to post reflections with each draft you add. Your reflections should be consistently thoughtful, specific, and self-aware.
  • Complete all reading responses on your blog.
  • Be a thoughtful, engaged reader, writer, and inquirer, as evinced by your written assignments and demeanor in class.
  • Participate with your workshop group by showing your own work and listening to others, then providing thoughtful and constructive feedback.
  • Maintain your daybook by thoughtful responding to in-class assignments and writing prompts.
  • Attend all three conferences.
  • Listen to and evaluate feedback you receive from classmates and me, then make thoughtful choices about revision.
Course Policies:
  1. Per the First-Year Writing departmental policy, you are allowed three unexcused absences with no penalty. For each absence after these three, your final course grade will drop by one letter grade. If you miss any more than six classes, you will fail the course. Please note that I do not excuse absences; this is handled by the Dean’s office, and their policies are quite rigorous. If you miss class for any reason, you are responsible for any missed announcements and assignments.
  2. If you miss more than fifteen minutes of class (by either coming in late or leaving early), you are counted as absent.
  3. If you miss less than fifteen minutes of class, you are counted as tardy. Three tardies will equal one absence. To avoid a tardy, your body – not just your belongings – needs to be in the classroom and prepared for class as soon as class begins.
  4. Your syllabus (this very document!) will be an incredibly useful tool for you in this class. I invite you to bring it with you to class each meeting.
  5. Conferences are a required component of this course. If you do not schedule and attend at least two of the three conferences, you will not be able to pass this course.
  6. Homework assignments, like drafts of papers and reading responses, are due at the beginning of the class period they are due. Late work is not accepted. If you need to turn a particular draft of a paper in late, you should discuss the need for such an extension with me prior to the deadline. I reserve the right to deduct points for late work.
  7. If a big assignment is not turned in on time (and prior extensions have not been discussed with and approved by me), that assignment will receive a zero.  This includes points for small reflections, workshopping, conferencing, drafts and inclusion in the final reflection.  However, if the reflections and all drafts for the assignment are turned into the blog and discussed in the final reflection, you can still pass the class.  If the assignment is not in your blog and final reflection, you cannot pass the class.
  8. In this class you will turn in and receive credit for assignments in a variety of ways, including bringing the work with you to class, submitting work via Moodle, and posting work to your blog. Please see the syllabus or ask me if you are unsure how an assignment should be turned in.
  9. I have included a page minimum with all assignments this semester.  This is so you will push on your ideas and your thinking.  If you have written and developed your thoughts effectively but have not met the page minimum, email me or come talk to me with the paper in hand and we will negotiate the requirement for your paper length.
  10. Back up all of your work for this class. You will be frequently posting your work to your blog, which will help, but it is a good idea to keep copies of your work on Dropbox or a flash drive, as well as on your computer’s hard drive.
  11. I will sometimes make minor changes to the class schedule. I will announce these changes in class and update the online copy of this syllabus. It is your responsibility to make a note of any such changes.
  12. Discussion of grades may only take place in person. I cannot discuss grades via email.
  13. Professional behavior in class is required. This includes language use, treatment of fellow human beings, and class preparation. Behaviors like talking while others are talking and sleeping in class are not acceptable. Patterns of inappropriate behavior may affect your participation grade, and continued behaviors that impact the class as a whole will be referred to the Dean’s office.
  14. Be thoughtful and judicious in your use of technology during class. You may use laptops, tablets, and even phones as needed for classwork, but volume should be set to silent and use of these technologies should not interfere with your participation in discussions and activities. A pattern of inappropriate technology use may affect your participation grade.
  15. By staying in this class, you are agreeing to abide by the policies set forth in this syllabus.

Email Procedures
When you email me, please include the purpose of the email in the subject line, an opening to your email (Dear Megan, Good morning, Hi, Megan, etc.) and a closing (your name).  This will be expected in other academic and professional emails; as such, I want you to get into the habit of this now.  , I will respond to your email within 24 hours if you email me on Monday-Thursday.  If you email me on Friday-Sunday, I will email you by Monday evening.  I will not be available by email after 4:00 PM on Mondays and Wednesday or after 6:00 PM in Tuesdays and Thursdays.  Please email in a timely manner with questions about assignments.

Check your email at least once every weekday.  I will occasionally send important announcements or documents through email.

Writing Resources Center – 149 Cameron:
The UNCC Writing Resources Center is a great place to continue developing your writing.  Writing consultants can help you with all stages of the writing process—from developing ideas to revision strategies.  You will be provided with more information about the WRC in class, but you can check out this website for more information: http://wrc.uncc.edu/

All students are required to read and abide by the Code of Student Academic Integrity. Violations of the Code of Student Academic Integrity, including plagiarism, will result in disciplinary action as provided in the Code. Definitions and examples of plagiarism are set forth in the Code. The Code is available from the Dean of Students Office or online. Faculty may ask students to produce identification at examinations and may require students to demonstrate that graded assignments completed outside of class are their own work. Please see me if you have any questions or concerns.

Students who have a disability or condition which may impair their ability to complete assignments or otherwise satisfy course criteria should meet with me to identify, discuss and document any feasible instructional modifications or accommodations.  If you do need special considerations, inform me as soon as possible after a disability or condition is diagnosed, whichever occurs earliest.  For information and auxiliary assistance, contact the Disabilities Resource Center.

The UNC system allows students a minimum of two excused absences each academic year for religious observances required by the faith of a student. If you have days you will miss this semester due to religious observances, please let me know those dates early in the semester, in writing, so that those absences will not count as part of regularly missed days. The form to submit can be found at: https://legal.uncc.edu/sites/legal.uncc.edu/files/media/policies/ps-134-AccommodationForm.pdf.



Charlotte English Department Statement on Diversity:
The English Department strives to create an academic climate that respects people of varied cultural backgrounds and life experiences. As a community of scholars and teachers who study language, literature, and writing, we are committed to nurturing intellectual and aesthetic diversity. In all our activities, we invite participation by diverse groups, including, but not limited to, those who define themselves in the following terms: race and ethnicity; gender; political orientation; sexual orientation; special health needs; age; religion; country of origin; and socio-economic status. Finally, by fostering multiple perspectives in our coursework, we can help our students prepare to participate in our increasingly diverse society, as well as in the global community.

All of these assignments are built around your own extended inquiry project. The Writing History Response will allow you to reflect on your experiences of writing in and out of school and how those experiences influenced who you are as a writer.  The Exploratory Essay will help you generate ideas and questions for your project, which must have some relationship to our class theme of schooling and education. Of course, within our class theme there is plenty of room for you to find your own area of interest. After writing the exploratory essay, you will develop your Research Proposal, which we will negotiate during your first conference. You will then begin your own research and produce an Annotated Bibliography with your secondary and primary research. At this time, you will analyze your field research and make connections between that and your secondary research. Your next paper will be the Joining the Conversation piece, of which you will prepare at least two different versions. Finally, you will create, either individually or with classmates, your Multimodal Piece and present this piece and your whole inquiry project during your panel discussion. All of this work will be framed within your blog, which will give you the opportunity to constantly track and reflect on your work.
In your writing history response, you will be creating a narrative that explains how you became the writer you are today.  In it, you will detail the writing you have done in and out of school, your writing influences and reflect on how your experiences have shaped what you believe, how you feel and how you approach writing (i.e. your writing process).  After reading your response, your reader should have a clear understanding of your writing history and how/what you think about writing today.

Grading:
  1. Thorough detailing of writing history
  2. Developed reflection about how your writing history has shaped you as a writer
  3. Strong sense of your voice throughout your narrative
  4. Adherence to Standard Academic English conventions (except the use of first person)
  5. Minimum length: 2 pages

Exploratory essay
By identifying and stressing the intertextual nature of discourse, however, we shift our attention away from the writer as individual and focus more on the sources and social contexts from which the writer’s discourse arises.
~ James Porter, “Intertextuality and the Discourse Community”

For this piece, you will consider the ideas, questions, and themes raised by the readings we have been doing as a class.  In terms of content, the goal for this essay is to identify some questions or themes that might develop into your own inquiry project. You should discuss at least three of the pieces we have read or viewed as class (and you may certainly discuss more than three).

Although you should quote or paraphrase closely, you should also focus on explaining the ideas of the readings in your own words. You should also analyze and connect to the readings. What is missing in the articles? What additional questions are raised for you? What do you want to know more about? You should focus on a certain aspect of the readings, a particular theme or question, and not simply attempt to summarize the articles.
In terms of form, you may write an essay or a letter to me; choose whichever form helps you most.

Grading:
  1. Structure and development. Do not simply write about each reading separately. Your job is to find connections. Make your own meaning.
  2. Use quotations and/or paraphrasing with correct MLA, APA or Chicago documentation. Use both in line citations and a Works Cited Page.
  3. Interpret the readings. Show an understanding of what the writers are communicating.
  4. Find your own understandings, questions, and connections. Look ahead to future inquiry possibilities.
  5. Take risks in your writing.
  6. Adherence to Standard Academic English conventions (except the use of first person)
  7. Minimum length: three pages.

Research Proposal

For the proposal, you will write me a letter explaining what you want to inquire into, why you are interested in this inquiry and how you plan on beginning your inquiry.  You will post your proposal to Moodle and your blog prior to our first conference.  At the conference, we will discuss your proposal and negotiate the direction of your inquiry. 

Grading:

1.      Thorough explanation of your inquiry direction
2.      Description of interest in inquiry
3.      Well planned direction for the beginning of inquiry
4.      Adherence to Standard Academic English conventions (except the use of first person)
5.      Minimum length: 1 page

Annotated Bibliography
For this assignment, you will be doing some research and reading around your inquiry topic. As you begin using the library resources to find both print and electronic sources, use your blog to help you organize your thoughts and prepare for your next assignments.

You will prepare an annotated bibliography, which will detail at least five secondary sources. This page should look like an MLA, APA or Chicago-formatted works cited page. You will add to each citation three paragraphs; in these paragraphs, (1) you will summarize the main point(s) of the source, (2) analyze the author’s argument and (3) think about how you will use this source in your own work. Does it raise important ideas for you? Do you disagree with the writer? Are there questions left unanswered? Is it a foundational text that provides you definitions and ways of thinking about your own inquiry?  In (3), you will also include at least 3 quotes from the source that might be useful for your paper.

Your first draft (for peer workshopping) must include at least three sources. Use MLA, APA or Chicago formatting.

Your second draft (for conference with Megan) must include at least five sources. Use MLA , APA or Chicago formatting.

Grading:
  1. Formatting and use of MLA, APA or Chicago.
  2. Completeness and appropriateness of sources. They should all be relevant to your questions and be academic or appropriately useful popular resources.
  3. Concise summaries of readings.
  4. Analysis and interpretation of the sources.
  5. Inclusion of at least 3 quotes from each source.
  6. Thorough explanation of application of the sources to your inquiry project.
  7. Adherence to Standard Academic English conventions (except the use of first person)
  8. Page minimum: 1 page per source

Imagine that you enter a parlor. You come late. When you arrive, others have long preceded you, and they are engaged in a heated discussion, a discussion too heated for them to pause and tell you exactly what it is about. In fact the discussion had already begun long before any of them got there, so that no one present is qualified to retrace for you all the steps that had gone before. You listen for a while, until you decide that you have caught the tenor of the argument; then you put in your oar. Someone answers, you answer him; another comes to your defense; another aligns himself against you, to either the embarrassment or gratification of your opponent, depending on the quality of your ally’s assistance. However, the discussion is interminable. The hour grows late, you must depart, with the discussion still vigorously in progress.
~ Kenneth Burke, The Philosophy of Literary Form

Dialogue or Play (Step #1): This work should be written in the form of dialogue or a play. Include a cast of characters (to include your sources and yourself as well) and an introduction/setting description. In this work, your cast will demonstrate how the sources are working with or against each other and they are helping or working into your inquiry.  You will workshop Step #1 with your classmates. Minimum length: three pages.

Academic Work (Step #2): This work should be written in the form of an academic essay. Keep in mind that personal stories and experience are still strongly encouraged. Playing with the academic form is okay, even welcome. You may include your primary research in this draft if you are ready to do so. Make sure to use MLA, APA or Chicago citation. You will workshop Step #2 with your classmates.  Minimum length: three pages.
Inquiry Project Paper (Step #3): You may pick either Step #1 or #2 to revise more closely, or you may combine elements of each into a new draft. You should include your primary research in this draft.  As a conclusion, you will fully explain what you learned throughout your inquiry project.  Use MLA, APA or Chicago citation and include a title.  You will conference with me about Step #3. Minimum length: five pages.
Grading:
  1. Synthesis of research
  2. Sophisticated and detailed portrayal of learning through inquiry.
  3. Playfulness.
  4. Thoughtful revision.
  5. Use of MLA, APA or Chicago documentation.
  6. Structure that is built around themes and ideas, not sources.
  7. Explanation of learning in inquiry project

Imagine, for example, that this book now before you were bound in leather or in large fish-like scales. Imagine that you were reading this online. Imagine that this ink were violet instead of black, or that this was a video of me speaking (or signing) these words. Imagine that this book were 2’ on each side and printed with letters 1’ high, facing you on a lectern in a dark wood-panelled room. Imagine that this chapter were appearing paragraph by paragraph in an Instant Messenger window. Each of these changes in the material instantiation of my words would change your attitude toward this text, certainly, but would also (I think) do more than that…
Precisely because the texts we give each other are produced within the articulated cultural webs I’ve been describing, they re-present values that shape and are shaped by those webs…

It is when we see but do not notice, over and over, what our texts—as parts of the material structures in which we live and work—embody and how they articulate to other practices that we are most likely to learn, without noticing, what to value and how to behave…

~ Anne Frances Wysocki, “Opening New Media to Writing: Openings & Justifications”

For this assignment, you may either work individually or with your panel group. You may even sub-divide within your panel group, if you wish. Your task is to create a piece that relates to your inquiry project(s) and that is more than a print text. You should also consider the constraints and allowances of the text you create; consider Wysocki’s examples about how our interpretations of texts change when the materiality of the texts changes.

Some examples of such pieces include (but are not limited to): documentaries, films, podcasts, music videos, radio programs, etc.

You will present your piece during your panel discussion.

Grading:
  1. Synthesis from inquiry project.
  2. Use of technology.
  3. Risk-taking, creativity, personal engagement.
  4. Structure/editing/stylistic choices.
  5. 30-35 minute discussion

Final Reflection
Students will believe that they possess intellectual authority in proportion as they see their teacher’s readiness to take them seriously, to look for serious, enlightening discourse from them, and to join with them in probing issues through talk and writing.
~ C.H. Knoblauch and Lil Brannon, Rhetorical Traditions and the Teaching of Writing

Your final reflection is just that, the record of your serious, intellectual endeavors in this course. As such, you are responsible for its content and style. You will create and maintain through your blog. This final reflection will organize and store all of your drafts and work throughout the semester, but it will also provide you an opportunity to reflect on your work and your process as a inquirer. Each time you write a draft for class, whether you bring it to class for your writing group to critique or post it to Moodle for my critique, you will also post that draft to your blog to document your process. When you post a draft, you should also write a reflection discussing the choices you have made and your next steps for that piece.  After workshopping and conference, you will also post an explanation of the critique you received and how you will use that critique to revise.

Your final reflection will be written as a single post on your blog. However, through the reflection, you should hyperlink the posts to which you are referring in your reflection.  You will also use entries from your daybook as evidence of your inquiry, thought and/or learning process. Effective reflections will show connections between the assignments, readings, in-class activities and secondary research and how those connections became your process of inquiry; in other words, your final reflection should not be an explanation of distinct and individual parts.  In this final reflection you should refer and use as evidence: Exploratory Essay, Annotated Bibliography, Joining the Conversation Paper, Daybook Entries, Reading Responses, Posts that Demonstrate the Process of Your Inquiry, and a variety of small reflections. Your final reflection should be a minimum of three pages if it were written in Word. 

Here is a breakdown of everything you will refer to and/or include in your final reflection:

Final Reflection Letter
Connectivity among parts
25 points
Thorough and thoughtful reflection
75 points


Writing History Response
50 points


Critique Reflections
Reflections on workshop and conference for Exploratory Essay and Proposal
 20 points
Reflection on workshop and conference for Annotated Bibliography
 20 points
Reflections on workshops and conference for Joining the Conversation piece
 20 points

Exploratory Essay
1st draft and reflection
30 points
2nd draft and reflection
30 points
Final draft and reflection
40 points


Research Proposal
50 points

Annotated Bibliography
1st draft and reflection
30 points
2nd draft and reflection
30 points
Final draft and reflection
40 points

Joining the Conversation Piece
1st step and reflection
20 points
2nd step and reflection
20 points
3rd step and reflection
20 points
Final draft and reflection
40 points

Panel and Multimodal Piece
Reflection
20 points

Activities Outside Big Assignments
Daybook Entries and Prompt Responses
25 points
Reading Responses
30 points
Inquiry Process
35 points

Grand Total
650 points

List of Possible Inquiry Topics – You DO NOT have to stick to this list.

Standardized testing
Extracurricular activities
Global competition
Teacher evaluations
College readiness
Job preparation in college
State universities
Ivy league universities
Community colleges
Technical/vocational schools
Tracking in schools
Perceptions/identities/stereotypes of writers in academic situations
Perceptions/identities/stereotypes of students
Gender/sex/race/socioeconomic class in schools
Language education in schools
Bi lingual education
Sex education in schools
Physical education/health in school
Graduation requirements
Tuition
Private school
Public school
Charter school
Technology in schools
School building design
Competition for college admission
Requirements/expectations for college admission
Hiring of staff in schools
State/national standards for education
Legislation for education
Student loans
Student health insurance
Teaching practices
Teaching tenure expectations
School rules/policies
Scholarships
21st century skills
Expectations in academic writing
Education expectations for different occupations
Community involvement in school
Parent involvement in school
College ratings
Finances in/for schools
Special education
Core subjects in school
Electives in school
Assessment outside of testing
Common Core
SAT/ACT/GRE
Back to the Basics Movement
Standard Academic English
Grammar teaching
Liberal Education
Freshmen English/Compositions
General education requirements
GPA
Internships encouraged/required by schools
Study Abroad
Campus/academic resources
Writing Across the Curriculum/Disciplines
Remedial teaching/classes
Test preparation classes
Preschool
Extrinsic/intrinsic motivation to learn
Learning styles/ preferences
Developing/teaching school skills – note taking, studying, test taking, etc.
Homework
Teacher/Administrator/School Staff salaries
Effort/Hard work/Independence in school
Responsibly of student/teacher/parent/administration for learning
Definitions of “success” in school
Definitions of “progress” in school
Teaching vocabulary
Pop culture representations of school