Weekly Writing Assignment, Week 8

This week’s Weekly Writing Assignment will give you some practice with using APA style for in-text citations (after quotes) and bibliographic references that correspond with your in-text citations (at the end of your research report). The research and writing that you do on this assignment can be recycled into your research report, and it should also be in your research database file that we discussed in the Week 7 lecture (use your research database file as your record of everything you want to quote, references for quotes, and your own notes, thoughts, and discussion, which you can copy-and-paste and edit into your research report document.

For this assignment, you will write a partial annotated bibliography of three library-based sources that you might use in your research report. Format it as a memo according to the model below. Find three sources (books and/or journal articles). Write one sentence about each saying what it is about, and write one sentence including a useful quote followed by an in-text citation. Then, write a bibliographic reference entry for the source. Do this for the three sources that you find.

Make sure you listen to this week’s lecture before proceeding.

Use the Purdue OWL’s APA Guide (in-text citations, book references, and periodical references) as templates and models for how to cite your research.

TO:        Prof. Ellis
FROM:        Your Name
DATE:        11/3/2021
SUBJECT:    Partial Annotated Bibliography for Research Report

The first article is about fabricating fault-tolerant microprocessors. An important quote from the article is: “Besides the higher clock frequencies, such trends have made the IC more vulnerable to faults, especially those faults caused by radiation-induced effects or also electrical noise” (Bastos et al., 2009, p. 1062).

Bastos, R. P., Kastensmidt, F. L., & Reis, R. (2009). Design of a soft-error robust microprocessor. Microelectronics Journal, 40(7), 1062-1068. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mejo.2008.10.001

The second article is a literature review of nanolithography. An important quote from the article is: “Besides the higher clock frequencies, such trends have made the IC more vulnerable to faults, especially those faults caused by radiation-induced effects or also electrical noise” (Seisyan, 2011, p. 1061).

Seisyan, R. P. (2011). Nanolithography in microelectronics: a review. Technical Physics, 56(8), 1061+. https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A360680245/AONE?u=cuny_nytc&sid=bookmark-AONE&xid=47695af8

The third article is about fabricating fault-tolerant microprocessors. An important quote from the article is: “Besides the higher clock frequencies, such trends have made the IC more vulnerable to faults, especially those faults caused by radiation-induced effects or also electrical noise” (Bastos et al., 2009, p. 1062).

Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (Year). Title of article. Title of Periodical, volume number(issue number), pages. https://doi.org/xx.xxx/yyyy

Lecture, Week 7

After watching this week’s lecture, you should complete the Weekly Writing Assignment in the post below.

Next, you can tackle this week’s homework, which is to study these examples of technical reports (especially, the table of contents of each) and write a draft outline for your technical report project in your “ENG1133 Technical Report” Google Doc. Think about what are the big ideas that you should discuss that introduces someone to your technical report’s topic. Put another way, what are the technical aspects (e.g., background, history, process, how it’s made, how it works, what is its cost and/or market)?

Then, write an email to jellis at citytech.cuny.edu asking for feedback on your outline, which you will want to copy-and-paste into the email. I’ll reply with feedback on your outline so that you have a good plan for beginning your vetted source research after next week’s lecture.

Weekly Writing Assignment, Week 7

Read and take notes about your topic primarily focusing on the “learning sources” (e.g., wikipedia.org, wired.com, arstechnica.com, Google searches, and social media) discussed in this week’s lecture, but you may use “vetted sources,” too (e.g., ebooks and articles from library.citytech.cuny.edu, ebooks available through archive.org, and nytimes.com, which we will discuss in more detail next week).

Then, in your “ENG1133 Technical Report Research Database” Google Doc, write a 250-word memo (remember the memo header at the top: TO, FROM, SUBJECT: Brief History of X–replace X with your topic, DATE) in your own words discussing the background and history of your selected topic.

While you should have taken notes on your reading, don’t look at them during this writing exercise. Focus on what you remember. Conclude your memo with a list of at least five keywords that you will use in your ongoing research. 

Copy-and-paste your memo into a Comment on this Weekly Writing Assignment post (click the title above, scroll down to the comment area, click “Post Comment”).

Weekly Writing Assignment, Week 6

After watching this week’s lecture and making notes on it, write a memo following the basic model shown below. The first part is a discussion of possible topics for your Research-Based Technical Report, and the second part is a list of 10 potential sources that you find using Academic Source Complete (EBSCO) via the City Tech Library.

TO: Prof. Ellis
FROM: Your Name
SUBJECT: Research Expedition Memo
DATE: 10/20/2021

[Part 1 text:] 250 words discussing your possible three terms and conclude with your final choice and why you chose it.

[Part 2 text:] The ten following sources form the beginning of my research on [state your selected topic again]. [Use the “Cite > APA” tool on each article page on Academic Search Complete (EBSCO) to find the citation and then copy-and-paste it below. And, remember to organize them alphabetically according to the first author’s last name as demonstrated below.]

Altintas, T., Gunes, A., & Sayan, H. (2016). A peer-assisted learning experience in computer programming language learning and developing computer programming skills. Innovations in Education & Teaching International, 53(3), 329–337. https://doi-org.citytech.ezproxy.cuny.edu/10.1080/14703297.2014.993418

Lagravière, J., Langguth, J., Prugger, M., Einkemmer, L., Ha, P. H., & Cai, X. (2019). Performance Optimization and Modeling of Fine-Grained Irregular Communication in UPC. Scientific Programming, 1–20. https://doi-org.citytech.ezproxy.cuny.edu/10.1155/2019/6825728

Logan, W. (2008). Is C Dead? EE: Evaluation Engineering, 47(5), 44–49. 


Lecture, Week 5

After watching this week’s lecture, check your email for the peer review/”reply-all” email from Prof. Ellis.

Below are some links that you might find useful for creating PDFs and a PNG file of your four Job Application Portfolio deliverables. Beyond these links, use Google for help before reaching out to Prof. Ellis.

Weekly Writing Assignment, Week 5

For this week’s Weekly Writing Assignment, we are going to do some work to prime our thinking for the next major project in the class–the Technical Report–which we will discuss in depth next week. To prepare, I would like you to read the introduction and first section (“Technical Background Reports”) on this page and skim this page on Report Design of David McMurrey’s Online Technical Writing Textbook. Then, write a memo (remember to add a memo header with a subject of “Technical Background Report Info”) of at least 250-words in your own words discussing what a technical background report is, what kinds of information goes into it, what sections/layout should it have, and how technical reports relate to other things that you’ve read or seen before (e.g., other technical reports, examples in films or video games, other types of documents, etc.). Write your memo in your word processor of choice, save it someplace safe, and copy-and-paste it into a comment made to this post.

Weekly Writing Assignment, Week 4

Find information below for this week’s Weekly Writing Assignment, homework for the Job Application Portfolio project, and a list of useful links and troubleshooting information (for the Weekly Writing Assignment).

For this week’s Weekly Writing Assignment, go to LinkedIn Learning via the NYPL, login, and search for “Learning LinkedIn for Students.” This is a 1hr 38min course. Watch all of it or as much as you have the time to, and write a 250-word minimum memo summarizing in your own words what you took away from the course (e.g., how to create a profile, why a profile is useful, what kinds of information to include, how does LinkedIn work, etc.). Write your memo in your word processor of choice and copy-and-paste it into a comment made to this post (click the title, scroll down to the comment box, copy-and-paste into the box, and click “Post Comment”). A memo mode is included below:

TO: Prof. Ellis
FROM: Your Name
DATE: 10/6/2021 (the date it is due)
SUBJECT: Highlights from Learning LinkedIn for Students

Begin your 250 words with a sentence stating the purpose of the memo (e.g., This memo summarizes important points from the Learning LinkedIn for Students course). Then, follow with the points that you want to make based on your notes made while watching the video.

For this week’s homework, write a draft of your job application letter (i.e., cover letter) using the sample linked below and those in Anderson chapter 2 as models. Save this for our peer review work next week. Also, create a profile on LinkedIn.com. Use your personal job search database document for the information that you add to your profile. If you already have a profile, update it with information from your personal job search database document. We will also use your LinkedIn Profile during peer review next week. Watch the Week 5 lecture for more information!

Use the files and links below (and discussed in this week’s lecture) to help you with the Weekly Writing Assignment and this week’s homework. Also, pay attention to the troubleshooting section below for anyone having trouble accessing LinkedIn Learning via the NYPL.

Sample Job Application Letter

Job Search

Business Research

Cover Letters

LinkedIn

Troubleshooting

NB: Some students have reported problems accessing LinkedIn Learning with a digital NYPL card. Please use the following links to accomplish the Week 3 and Week 4 Weekly Writing Tasks:

For the Week 3 Weekly Writing Assignment, you can explore the course topics of LinkedIn Learning here:

https://www.linkedin.com/learning/browse?upsellOrderOrigin=default_guest_learning&trk=homepage-learning_hero_subjects-link

For the Week 4 Weekly Writing Assignment, you can catch a preview of the “Learning LinkedIn for Students” here without needing to login:

https://www.linkedin.com/learning/learning-linkedin-for-students-2021/tap-into-the-power-of-linkedin-8352093?autoplay=true&trk=course_preview&upsellOrderOrigin=default_guest_learning