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Announcements Weekly Assignments

Week 5: 3/1-5

Due by Mon. 3/1 @ 6PM:

READ:

“Literacy Narrative” by Kiki Petrosino (student sample)
“Nah, We Straight” by Vershawn Ashanti Young, pp. 49-60

WRITE:

This week, we’re getting into your first essay. As we’ve spoken about at length, and as you’ve read in “Mother Tongue” and “Learning to Read” and this week’s student sample, you’ll be writing your own education narrative.

As we now know, this genre is primarily composed of anecdotes, yes, but what keeps it coherent and of interest is what we’ll call the “argumentative framing” – namely, the thesis statement and P-I-E paragraph structure. Your task this week is to come up with a working thesis statement and a rough outline in the roman numeral (I, II, A, B, 1, 2 … etc) format.

When drafting your thesis statements, it will be useful to think back to the central argument in “Mother Tongue”. They were based on personal experience, but made some point about education more broadly. If Amy Tan had to complete this assignment, her thesis draft might look something like this: “Even though native English speakers in the United States look down at language learners and their ‘broken’ English, it was precisely that ‘broken’ English that I learned from my mother that allowed and encouraged me to become a Chinese-American novelist.” Or look to the Malcolm X, or the student sample, and you’ll find something like that operating as well.

Write a working thesis and a rough outline for your Education narrative, and file your post under the Category “Unit 1” by Monday @ 6 PM.

 

Helpful Notes:

Thesis = Claim + Reasons

“____________ is true because X, Y, Z.”

Outline Format:

  1. Intro
    1. Hook
    2. Topic
    3. Thesis = CLAIM + REASONS
  2. Body Paragraph #1 = REASON #1
      1. Topic Sentence (reason)
      2. Point
      3. Illustration = Evidence/Examples
      4. Explanation – tie back to your claim
  1. … (Repeat as needed)
  2. Conclusion
    1. Restate Thesis
    2. Summarize Evidence/Points
    3. Answer “so what?”
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Weekly Assignments

Backpacks vs. Briefcases

The genre I find myself interacting with the most is graphic novels. The medium for graphic novels is split between reading a physical copy in book format or reading it online in digital format. The books can range from tens of pages to a couple hundred, they’re mainly characterized as longer comics with a coherent narrative throughout the novel rather than being split between several issues, though a fair amount of comics will create graphic novels out of several issues that tie into one another to be read all the way through in one book. Graphic novels are characterized by being images of the story drawn out with dialogue included, it usually skips the descriptive text about the scenery that other books use because it can be seen and doesn’t need to be imagined by the audience. The tone, humor, and language depend solely on the creator, but for action and comedic scenes especially, these novels usually dedicate text bubbles to sound effects or other use of the images to further enhance a given scene or panel. As previously stated the language isn’t necessarily descriptive in the same way a book is because graphic novels can skip over describing a location or event because it can be seen by the viewers and only explains these things if deemed necessary or out of preference.

Amy Tan’s “Mother Tongue” is an autobiographical piece depicting some of her experiences with language. The language used is very exemplified and descriptive, mentioning specific events from her past as well as her view on terms synonymous with “Broken language”. She writes about particular experiences in which she has had to talk for her mother while pretending to be here just to get people to take her mother’s requests seriously. As well as how she sees her English skills as average when compared to her mathematics and science.

Categories
Announcements Weekly Assignments

Week 4: 2/22-26

Due by Mon. 2/22 @ 6PM:

READ:

WRITE:  

This week, you’re reading the essay I meant to assign you last week, and which will (I think) shed a lot of light on the question of genres. BUT, all is not lost: we will also be taking a look at an autobiographical selection from Malcolm X. This section, like “Mother Tongue,” is an education narrative. As you now know, your first essay is going to be an education narrative. The education narrative is a genre, so therefore we can think about what conventions make one piece an education narrative and another something else entirely.

One major feature of these narratives, as we discussed in our Zoom session this week, is the usage of anecdote.

What anecdotes jump to mind as you begin to think about the history of your education? What tiny moments, stories, jokes, musings, conversations, accidents etc can you think of that might help you tell the story of your relationship to education?

Write 300 words in response to this prompt, and file your post under the Category “Unit 1” by Monday @ 6 PM.