This week weāre spotlighting Professor Iddingsā English Composition 2 course site (ENG 1121-D433). After a quick tour around Professor Iddingsā course site, it is easy to see how this site functions as an important hub for her students and aims to support them in being successful in the course. With this in mind there are a number of features Iād like to highlight:
At 15 points of their overall grade, Blogging is an important component of this english course. For Professor Iddings, blogging is a part of the larger motto of the class: āWritingāand writing frequently, with intention, and with significant feedbackāis a great way to improve your understanding of the texts we will read.ā With this in mind, Professor Iddings gives extensive details on how to approach the assignment including the requirements and deadlines, notes on how to post and what should be included, and a grading rubric. In addition, she gives an overview of what blogging is and how its style and etiquette compare and contrast with other forms of class writing. This last component seems particularly important given the likelihood that many students havenāt had the opportunity to blog before.
A second feature Iād like to highlight is her main menu item entitled āClassworkā. As her page description states, āThis is where all kind of handouts, slide shows, and student-generated work will land.ā While the page contains only slide shows at the moment, I think it’s worthwhile to note the facility of having a place where any loose-leaf handouts can be stored digitally. Undoubtedly, there will be a student or two (or 10!) who will lose track of handouts that will prove useful to them throughout the course. By uploading them here, Professor Iddings never has to worry about students in her losing access to these documents.
The last feature I will highlight here – though there are many more and I encourage you to check out the site! – is the āHelpful Linksā section and RSS Feed for the NYTimes which she has in her widget area (the menu on the right side of the course site). While each of these offers different content – the first providing students with easy access to educational resources around City Tech and beyond, and the second linking to the latest articles from the Times – both work to connect the studentās classroom experience to the outside world. This is an important capability of the OpenLab platform that we encourage instructors to take advantage of!
Thanks both to Kristen and Prof Iddings! The information for students about how to blog is going to be extremely useful to me/us in the Fall. I did incorporate the New York Times RSS feed in our FYLC course this past term (Eng 1101/Bio 1101) to direct students to the Science pages, and it they found it invaluable.