So, Rhetoric of Science is off to a great start! Monday's class was filled with varied comments from all participants and we are learning each other's personality. Dr. Baake provides some thoughtful prompts and admits that learning can occur instantaneously with each post. The suggestive topics for final projects sounds like each of us will be travelling unique paths down this rhetorical trail.
The first assigned text by Natalie Angier brings a certain normalcy to the topic of scientific discovery. Her use of metaphor and humor create a sense of conversation to a topic that you wouldn't find around a workplace lunch table or night out with friends, but creates the feeling that you might not mind if it did. Her style reveals why she is a Pulitzer Prize-winning author.
Off and running!
WaterhouseBlog
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
As our ENGL 5060 semester comes screeching to a halt, I'd
like to take the time to thank Dr. Rice and my fellow students for the
collaborative learning experience that created a unique voice for the
expressive discourse during the semester. My sincere appreciation to each of
you for a great semester!!
“Fill your paper with the breathings of your heart.” ~William
Wordsworth
Authority - Bartholomae
- As students begin to write in an academic setting, they begin to integrate
into knowledge-based communities building authority by adding to the
knowledge-making writing they produce.
Coherence – Coherence
can be described as the unifying element in good writing. It refers to the
unity created between the ideas, sentences, paragraphs and sections of a piece
of writing. Coherence is what gives a piece of writing its flow. It also gives
the reader a sense of what to expect and, therefore, makes the reading easier
to follow as the ideas appear to be presented in a natural, almost automatic,
way.
Evaluation -
Flower and Hayes explains evaluation as a cognitive process of revision
where a writer makes judgments against their goals, knowledge, and the current
text in an effort to determine the final product of writing.
Philosophies
of Composition - Fulkerson - philosophies about the teaching of composition
may be either expressive (personal
views of the author), mimetic
(shared universe of reality between writer & reader), rhetorical emphasizing the effect on the reader), or formalist (emphasizing traits internal
to the work)
Post-process
theory – This theory of composition endorses the fundamental idea
that no codifiable or generalizable writing process exists or could exist.
Post-process theorists hold--for all sorts of different reasons--that writing
is a practice that cannot be captured by a generalized process or a Big Theory.
Kastman Breuch views writing as an activity, looking to Kent’s claim that
“writing is public, writing is interpretive, writing is situated.”
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
As I work to finalize my FYC Syllabus, I’ve taken time to define
the terms that influenced the direction I have chosen for my project.
They are:
James Kinneavy - Author of A Theory of Discourse and Founder of University of Texas PhD
program in Rhetoric that lobbied for undergraduate writing courses that served
students at every level. He promoted a theory of how contexts shape the purposes
of writing reestablishing important connections between writing instruction and
classical rhetoric. Kinneavy used the elements of the communication situation
(audience, author, text, and referent) to develop a philosophy of the aims of
discourse (persuasive, self-expressive, literary, and referential).
Rhetorical triangle
– A graphical image used as a metaphor for the rhetorical situation showing the
relationship between writer, audience, reality, and the text that exists as a
means of communication between these elements. Kinneavy developed the
rhetorical triangle based on the I. A. Richards’ work on language semiotics.
Technical writing
– Technical writing is a style of writing that seeks to inform a user audience
using various forms of media. This media may exist as either hard-copy or
electronic content and will typically describe the function, use, and/or
maintenance of products. Samples of technical writing can be found in product literature,
user manuals, help systems, and web content.
Writing across the
curriculum – Writing Across the Curriculum, abbreviated WAC, is a subfield
of composition studies that emphasizes the need to teach students theories of
writing that can be applied throughout their academic career in the various
courses they may encounter. Through reading and writing in many different
courses, students develop critical skills that enable them to better integrate
into a chosen field.
Writing center –
Writing centers are areas maintained by educational institutions that provide
students with additional opportunities to learn about writing. Typical services
of writing centers include editing and tutoring that provides feedback to
students on their projects. Many writing centers have now developed Online
Writing Labs to automate the process without the necessity of face-to-face
interaction. These environments act as great learning tools for both those who
seek and those who provide assistance.
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Collaborative Editing
Brufee mentions that a symptom of difficulty that “students
had adapting to college life and work was that many refused help when it was
offered” noting tutoring and counseling sessions as the type of help offered by
colleges (397). One assignment that I am considering developing is requiring
students to schedule an appointment at a Student Writing Center for reviewing a
first draft of a paper. My rationale for this task was that this effort would
simulate scheduling a review with a Subject Matter Expert, an editor, or even a
peer review in the workplace. I still may try to incorporate this element into
my final syllabus project, but I stumbled onto another task that would also
work well for collaboration.
Bruffee builds on Rorty’s idea of “normal discourse” by discussing
a “community of knowledgeable peers,” which might be accomplished in a first
year writing program by separating the class into small groups based on majors
or disciplines (403). While looking at different examples of coursework from
First Year Composition programs, I noticed that the University of North Texas’ freshman
writing program mentioned group editing sessions. I liked the idea of a
collaborative group discussing an article and collectively agreeing on what
aspects could be improved upon. An instructor could then easily combine this
effort with the idea of utilizing digital editing capabilities to enrich the
students’ technology experience. Therefore, my sample collaboration assignment might resemble the
following:
Editorial Team
Project – I will divide you into groups of three or more based on your majors
or disciplines and together you will edit an article that I provide. Individually,
you will each read the article and annotate comments using either the Track
Changes function of MS Word or the editing functions of Adobe Acrobat (Note: We
will have a brief overview these software packages to introduce you to the editorial
capabilities of each.). Collectively, you will discuss the individual comments
and work as a team to create a single edited version of the article justifying the
group comments and suggested changes. Finally, each group member will
participate in a brief class presentation of the results. The presentation may
include various aspects of the project, the process taken to accomplish the
assignment, but must include the final results of the Editorial Team’s final
markup.
Deliverables:
·
Individual editing markup
·
Final group editing markup
·
Presentation
Each student will receive individual grades based on the
following:
·
Individual Markup – 5 points
·
Group Participation – 5 points
·
Final Presentation – 10 points
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Contributing to Technology
I'm trying to keep up with homework while on vacation, so I tell my wife, "Honey, I'm going to go down to the lobby to put some thoughts on paper."
Yet, this proverbial paper is my blog in cyberspace that I've logged into while sitting in the business center of a hotel in Colorado Springs, Colorado. So, how complicated can literacy be - well, actually quite complicated.
In their article, Blinded by the Letter, Wysocki and Johnson-Eilolo note that Dianne Konawati's found almost 200 different instances of literacy mentioned in the ERIC Database (717). I would have to imagine that many of those literacies were based around understanding a certain technology - computer literacy being only one example.
In his article, Literacy, Technology, and Monopoly Capital, Richard Ohmann asks us to consider technology as, "itself a social process, saturated with the power relations around it, continually reshaped according to so some people's intentions" (706).
Literacy might just be considered participating in technology by becoming involved in the development of technology and learning new tools and processes to further technology for our own "intentions."
Many people forget to look at written language as a technology because it has been around for so long. But from the industrial revolution forward, that technology has been used to communicate other technological advancements. So, it can be seen as a scaffolding of technology.
Yet, this proverbial paper is my blog in cyberspace that I've logged into while sitting in the business center of a hotel in Colorado Springs, Colorado. So, how complicated can literacy be - well, actually quite complicated.
In their article, Blinded by the Letter, Wysocki and Johnson-Eilolo note that Dianne Konawati's found almost 200 different instances of literacy mentioned in the ERIC Database (717). I would have to imagine that many of those literacies were based around understanding a certain technology - computer literacy being only one example.
In his article, Literacy, Technology, and Monopoly Capital, Richard Ohmann asks us to consider technology as, "itself a social process, saturated with the power relations around it, continually reshaped according to so some people's intentions" (706).
Literacy might just be considered participating in technology by becoming involved in the development of technology and learning new tools and processes to further technology for our own "intentions."
Many people forget to look at written language as a technology because it has been around for so long. But from the industrial revolution forward, that technology has been used to communicate other technological advancements. So, it can be seen as a scaffolding of technology.
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Peer Review
This week I reviewed many of the Extended Analysis projects created
by other students in class, but chose to review Amelia’s podcast recordings
about the composition theorist, James Berlin. The first of three podcasts does
a wonderful job of providing a historical background on Berlin, while the next
two recordings discuss the details of his works.
While I might naturally assume that his Bachelor of Arts
major was English, I caught myself wondering if it might actually be in
psychology or sociology instead. So, my first suggestion would be to mention
this in the recording. There were several quotes that I rewound and played back
until I could get them written down – the first being, “Berlin saw the English
curriculum as a key vehicle for accomplishing the goal of a democratic America
in which citizens participate in civic affairs.” It seems as though Berlin gave
credit to participation through written dialogue and felt that it counted as a strong
voice in society.
One of the more thought-provoking messages from Amelia was
Berlin’s idea that “We are teaching writing as a way of ordering the world and
making sense of it.” This speaks to principles of cognition through an etymological
lens. Amelia also notes that Berlin claimed that “theories of teaching composition
are rooted in the ways we have been taught or have chosen to see the world and to
comprehend reality.” This, along with Berlin’s idea of “socially-constructed
nature of knowledge” fully acknowledges his social constructivist theory of
knowledge.
Berlin’s theories are well covered in the discussions covering
his articles, chapters, and books. Addressing composition, Amelia notes, “Berlin
envisioned an English curriculum fully expanded…one that would unfailingly
foster a more open-minded attention to an increased range of topics genres, contexts
and perspectives.” She continues claiming that his integrity and dedication to the field of composition impressed
his colleagues. After his unexpected death, a contemporary wrote of Berlin, “[He]
made the field alive and important in ways that no one else had before” and
“explained why the writing of history is not mere recitation of facts, but
controls how we understand the present.”
The only other critique that I would suggest is that there
are a few instances where the background music overpowers the narration. (See
1:38 on Part 2), but other than this Amelia does a great job on this difficult
task – Kudos!
Monday, July 9, 2012
New Pages Nav Bar Added
I've rearranged the blog and added a Nav Bar along the top. I've added an Extended Analysis page containing a link to my Prezi and my first attempt at a Teaching Philosopy. Feel free to comment and give me some tips for my philosophy. (Thanks in advance!) -clw
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
