12/12 Class Notes & HW

Today we had our end-of-semester celebration and review. Final exam articles were handed out, and Research papers were collected.

Homework

1) Read and annotate the article handed out in class today for the Final Exam on 12/17. Please arrive 5 minutes early – we will begin the exam promptly at 8:30am. Use the bathroom before coming to class, as you will not be allowed to leave during the exam.

2) If you did not hand in a Research Paper, 12/17 is the last day you can submit it.

3) All essay revisions are due in my office mailbox (N529) on 12/19 by 9:45am. You must turn in the original draft, the revised draft, and the tutoring slip.

12/5 Class Notes & HW

Today was spent on the first half of Research Project Oral Presentations.

Homework:

1) Continue revising/completing your Research Paper essay. If you presented today, please take into account your Oral Presentation. The questions raised in class by myself and your peers point to holes in your argument and support. Please make sure to address them and research the areas/questions that require further attention. If you do not address these issues, your paper’s argument will be weak and most likely receive a low grade.

2) We will continue on with the Oral Presentations. Again, the order in which students will present on their research will be chosen at random, so make sure you are in class on time and ready to present.

Reminders: Arrive on time! Have your presentation read on a flash drive and via email to ensure it’s ready to go. Additionally, you must have your printout of your PowerPoint presentation in order to present. You may print out 6 slides per page to save paper.

12/3 Class Notes & HW

Today’s class was devoted to our Peer Review Workshop and cumulative grammar quiz.

Homework:

1) Continue revising/completing your Research Paper essay based on today’s Peer Review Workshop and my comments on your outline (if you submitted one).

2) Prepare for the Oral Presentation. The order in which students will present on their research will be according to the sign-up sheet. Please note that days/times are tentative and you must be ready to present on either day. If you are not ready to present when you are called, you may not get another chance and forfeit the opportunity (which results in a “0” grade).

Please back up your PowerPoint presentation on a flash drive and via email to ensure you have it and it’s ready to go. Additionally, you MUST print out a copy of your PowerPoint presentation to submit to me (you can print 6 slides to one page to save paper). If you do not have this, you cannot present.

Details (from Research Project handout):

Students must create a PowerPoint presentation based on their research project and present it to the class in a 5-minute presentation. Each presentation will be followed by a short Q&A session (2 minutes). You will be evaluated on: (1) content and organization; (2) presentation skills; (3) PowerPoint presentation; and (4) audience participation.

To help your listeners stay focused on your presentation, use transitional words. You must speak loud enough, slow enough, clear enough, and with enough modulation in your voice to be heard and understood without difficulty by everyone in the room. Don’t read from a prepared speech. Rather, use notes and make eye contact. Your grade will suffer if you merely read and don’t ever look up. Instead, practice your presentation aloud several times before class to be sure that it is smooth and well-timed.

You can select some of the following questions to help you generate ideas for your presentation but do not simply answer them in order. Your presentation should have a logical flow, just as your paper will.

1. What did you argue?
2. What supporting reasons did you use to support your main claim?
3. What assumptions allowed you to arrive at those reasons?
4. What was some of the strongest evidence you found to support your argument?
5. Who was your opposition? How did you account for the counterevidence?
6. What did you think about your topic before the research process began? How did your research shape the way you think about your topic? Did your research cause you to change your mind?

Lastly, make sure to organize your presentation. Chances are that your material will evolve in a progression that resembles your essay. Here is one potential way to think of it:

  1. State Point of View: provide direct statement of position on the topic at hand.
    II. State Reasons Why: provide broad reasons why you hold this point of view.
    III. Present Evidence and Examples: provide data to support the stated point of view and reasons. Discredit counter evidence.
    IV. Restate Point of View: drive the argument home.

And finally, be advised that you will need to be an active listener as well. You must listen attentively, and be prepared to answer/ask question(s) about each presentation. Students who are absent or do not actively participate will receive lower grades.

 

11/5 Class Notes & HW

Today we had our Library Workshop session led by a CityTech librarian. In addition to having a quick tour of the library, we were shown the various library databases that would be useful towards finding sources for the Research Project.

Homework:

1) Finalize your research topic and work on your research proposal, which is due in class on Monday, November 12.

2) Based on the tips/advice given in our Library Workshop session, please use the suggested search engines/databases to find 2 secondary sources for your chosen research topic. Print these sources and bring them to class on Wednesday, Nov. 7. We will use them for an in-class activity.

3) Print, read, and annotate the next set of readings in Unit 5 (Part 1):

4) Open Letter essay due in class on Wednesday, November 7. Please review the Open Letter assignment sheet to make sure you’ve included everything necessary. Your essay must include a Bibliography or Works Cited page. Your entire paper must conform to the MLA format. Papers that do not conform to this format will not be accepted.

Students must also post their final drafts to our Open Lab site, under “Discussions” then “Open Letter Final Drafts.” This allows everyone to read each other’s finished product. You may start posting AFTER class on Wednesday, November 7. The deadline for posting is BEFORE 12pm on Friday, November 9.