This is tweaked version of the one Christine shared with us.
Final Reflection 1101
Congratulations! Youâve completed a substantial body of work. Now it is time for you, as the title suggests, reflect on your work over the semester. For this final assignment, reflect upon the following questions:
What have you learned about yourself as a reader, writer and scholar this semester?
How will you be able to use what you have learned this semester and transfer that knowledge to other writing situationsâeither in college or in your community?
The Reflection should be a 1000 words.
As a way to begin your Reflection, look back through your compendium of work: in-class writing exercises, homework assignments, earlier reflections, essays/projects, and so on. As you browse through your work, ask yourself about and take notes on the following questions:
- How would you compare/contrast work done early on in the semester to now?
- What was your favorite/least favorite assignment and why?
- What are some notable lessons or discussion posts that have stuck with you after completing certain assignments?
- What changed in your writing (and reading and thinking) as the genres changed?
- How did you make decisions in your assignments about content and genre?
- What were your early assumptions/beliefs about yourself and writing? Have they since changed? Explain.
- What was your experience revising assignments?
- Was there any peer feedback that stands out to you and why?
Donât simply answer the above questions in your final reflection; they are just meant to help you brainstorm ideas. Think about all of the essays weâve read about writing this semesterâsome of them certainly hooked your interest while others… probably did not. The ones that did were well-written, they had a point, the writer had a voice that you felt was worth listening to. Try to do that in your own writing here. Remember that this isnât just you writing off-the-top of your head; this is a finished piece of writing.
You are also open to write this reflection in another genre. For instance, you can write this reflection as a guide, a how-to essay, instructions for succeeding in 1101, etc. If you do choose to write in another genre, you must still address the questions listed above and quote from each of the papers you are including in the writing portfolio. Think of this reflection as an introduction to your portfolio and take the reader on a journey focusing on your academic growth in this class. Donât be afraid to be honest, if you didnât find yourself liking a particular assignment, let the reader know.
Hereâs what I will be looking for (and grading you on):
- Attention to audience.You need to have a âso what?â Donât just list off a bunch of random opinions about your writingâwrite an article about what youâve learned. Think about who you are writing for (hint: itâs not just me).
- Attention to organization. This does not have to be a traditional organization, but you should have paragraphs (not just a 1000 word paragraph, please) and some reason for why theyâre in the order theyâre in!
- Evidence and analysis. If you tell me you learned something about yourself as a writer, show me proof! By proof, I specifically mean quotes from your own writing. All reflections should have at least three quotes from your own writing this semester. And, as usual, donât just drop those quotes in there and expect your readers to figure out why youâve chosen them. Explain why that passage is important to your readers and to your âso what?â
- Proofread. Make sure itâs long enough. As usual, you can use whatever language you see fit to use, but make decisionsabout your languageâthat is, the words that are there should be there for a reason.
- Itâs gotta be on time. The reflection is due TBA and I donât have any leeway because I need to turn grades in. Make sure to post it by then! Youâve probably never written anything like this before, so Iâm sure youâll want to get some feedback before you submit it with the final portfolio due on TBA (no late portfolios will be accepted)