These posts are created with the aim of stimulating and facilitating interaction within my online community. (For many years, I used this blog to facilitate discussions amongst my university students.)
Thursday, December 01, 2016
Thursday, September 08, 2016
Die Slowly (a poem translated from Portuguese)
Die Slowly by Martha Medeiros
He who becomes the slave of habit,
who follows the same routines every day,
who never changes brand,
who does not risk and change the color of his clothes,
who does not talk to people he doesn't know,
dies slowly.
He who makes television his guru
dies slowly.
He or she who shuns passion,
who prefers black on white,
and the dots on the "i" to a whirlpool of emotions,
precisely those that recover the gleam of the eyes,
smiles from the yawns,
hearts from the stumbling and feelings,
dies slowly.
He or she who does not turn things topsy-turvy,
who is unhappy at work,
who does not risk certainty for uncertainty,
to thus follow a dream,
those who do not forego sound advice at least once in their lives,
die slowly.
He who does not travel,
who does not read,
who cannot hear music,
who does not find grace in himself,
dies slowly.
He who slowly destroys his self love,
who does not allow himself to be helped,
who spends days on end complaining about his own bad luck,
about the rain that never stops,
dies slowly.
He or she who abandons a project before starting it,
who fails to ask questions on subjects he doesn't know,
he or she who doesn't reply
when they are asked something they know,
dies slowly.
Let's avoid death in small doses,
reminding ourselves that being alive requires an effort
far greater than the simple fact
of breathing.
Only burning patience will lead
to the attainment of a splendid happiness.
Monday, August 29, 2016
Important Web Links for Blackstone's TLM1010, Technical Communication 1, Trimester 1, 2016-17
TLM1010 Technical Communication 1
1) Link to the Symbaloo page
http://edu.symbaloo.com/mix/tlm1010
2) Link to the Google Docs
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/0B__L-vx3a2PqaGZQdmVvWGltZEk
1) Link to the Symbaloo page
http://edu.symbaloo.com/mix/tlm1010
2) Link to the Google Docs
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/0B__L-vx3a2PqaGZQdmVvWGltZEk
Monday, August 22, 2016
The Learning Portfolio in SIE2016, Trimester 1, 2016-17
Traditionally, learning portfolios have been based on single-draft hard copies submitted to an instructor by an individual student. This format generally has led to one-way communication, from the student to the teacher and back to the student. In SIE2016, the learning portfolio is ‘soft,’ in an individual blog created by each student. This allows for a conversation to take place within a ‘community of practice.’
For this e-portfolio continuous assessment, you will post writing assignments on your blog throughout the term. The core of those assignments will be responses to the course writing tasks described in the instructional units, including reflections, multiple drafts of the summary/reader response, and various documents that form the technical report. Another key aspect of the portfolio is subsequent written interaction about those assignments with your instructor and classmates. In fact, one of the most critical components of the portfolio is the feedback you give to at least three of your peers for each post.
Portfolio assignments should be completed as follows:
Submission 1: Due by the start of the second tutorial, Week 2
Post a descriptive reflection on the topic “My English Language Learning Journey” or “The Importance of English for Me”. This should be 250 to 300 words.
Submission 2: Due by the start of the second tutorial, Week 3
Post the first draft of your summary _ reader response to one of the reading articles included in the module Resource List. This draft should be 500 to 600 words.
Submission 3: Due by the start of the second tutorial, Week 7
Post a draft of at least one section of the technical report that you have written. This might include the personal statement, the transmittal letter, the intro, various sections of the body, and/or the conclusion. This is at the discretion of your instructor.
Submission 4: Due by Friday, midnight, Week 10
Post an analytical reflection on your recent oral presentation experience. In it detail one aspect of the presentation: preparation, your delivery, the use of audio-visuals, teamwork or overall impact. This should be 250-300 words.
Submission 5: Due by the start of the second tutorial, Week 12
Post a critical reflection on the topic “The Role of Peer and Tutor Feedback."
Explain your view of that feedback, how it impacted your developing writing skills and content understanding, and whether/how you might transfer content, organization and language skills learned in the course to writing assignments within any other module at SIT. This should be 250 to 300 words.
Monday, December 21, 2015
Blogging in SEM2902 _ Spring 2016
Here are
the basic e-portfolio instructions.
Please
write 250-300 words for each assignment listed below, and then post it on your
blog by Sunday evening of the assignment week. By Saturday of the week you
posted, you should have made relevant comments in a paragraph or so on at
least three classmates’ posts.
Week 1/
Blog set up
Create
your blog (or wordpress.com or blogger.com) and forward your blog address to
your tutor’s e-mail (or post it on an instructor-created Google doc). You
should also share your address with the members of a blog group that will be
assigned during the first lesson. You might also post the links for your
classmates’ blog addresses on your own blog.
Week 2 / Descriptive Reflection: Strengths
and Challenges in Communicating (Blogpost #1)
For your
first post, describe your strengths in communication and the challenges you
have when communicating with others. 250-300 words. (Post by Sunday night
January 17th.)
After you
have posted, read at least two of your blogging group members’ posts and
at least one post by a member of your class group at large and leave
comments. There is no limit, of course, on the number of posts you can
read. However, what is most important is the quality of your response. You
should reflect on each one of the posts in light of your own understanding of
effective communication skills, and you should offer appropriate
insights in the comments section of each post that you read.
Week 5/ Evaluating Verbal and Nonverbal
Behavior (Blogpost #2)
For this
post, you need to conduct an observation of a verbal or nonverbal interaction
between two or more people, then describe it in as much detail as possible.
Briefly evaluate the interaction in terms of how culture, gender or age seem to
influence communication. (Post by Sunday night February 7th.)
As you
read your classmates' posts on the same topic, take note of the description and
evaluation, and then provide your own insights.
Week 8/
Resolving Interpersonal Conflict (Blogpost #3)
For this
post, describe in detail an interpersonal conflict situation, real or
hypothetical. Describe the context of the conflict, the people involved, the
main problem, and the possible causes. Try to identify the feelings and/or
motivations of the people involved. Finally, while considering the main problem
and your search for a solution, solicit feedback from your readers in the
form of ONE question. Again, clarity and conciseness are important, as is
completeness in your story-telling. (Post by Sunday night February 28.)
As you
read your classmates' posts on the same topic, analyze each in light of your
understanding of interpersonal competence, conflict management and other
principles of communication, and then provide feedback with appropriate
insights and a possible solution. The key here is for you to provide commentary
that is based on what you have learned about effective interpersonal
communication.
Week 13 or 14/ Critical Reflection on Project Learning
(Blogpost #4)
For this
post, you should choose one focus of the project and critically reflect on your
learning in the project with specific points discussed. As one possibility, you
might discuss, for example, your own oral presentation skills. In that case,
you could explain how the various presentations you gave helped you enhanced
your verbal and nonverbal skills. You could also discuss the challenges you
faced initially in terms of delivery and how you improved. You should not just
explain what you did and whether you liked it. You must also explain what you
learned about yourself and others in the process. How has the experience
changed your view of learning in general and interpersonal communication in
specific? Finally, you could explain what you might take forward from this
experience. (Post by Sunday night, April 10th.)
After you
read your classmates’ posts, give them appropriate feedback on their
reflection.
Week 15/
Additional course-related documentation (extra posts)
For this
post in the last week, you should upload documentation from the Project, the
Presentation Pitch (PP) and the Project Oral Presentation (POP). This could
include meeting minutes, the notes from your storyboard of the project video,
your outline for the PP, and notes or a script for the POP, and the video
itself.
Though no student feedback is required for these posts, comments are
welcome.
Once you have created your blog, please post the address on this Google Doc if you are in Group E:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1aZUbWpC2p_ML_d8p5i8EExTntdytlPFmglbibG-rbbA/edit?usp=sharing
...if you are in Group F:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1K37xWGxzrI7ACAA-09u-GwIRj-sUAml-8UTixdSPuuo/edit?usp=sharing
Once you have created your blog, please post the address on this Google Doc if you are in Group E:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1aZUbWpC2p_ML_d8p5i8EExTntdytlPFmglbibG-rbbA/edit?usp=sharing
...if you are in Group F:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1K37xWGxzrI7ACAA-09u-GwIRj-sUAml-8UTixdSPuuo/edit?usp=sharing
Tuesday, September 01, 2015
Effective Communication: The e-Portfolio for SIE2016/PEV2011
THE
“WHAT”
In SIE2016/PEV2011 posting writing on your blog is as an integral part
of the portfolio.
Essentially, your e-portfolio is an individual blog
that you will create as a home-base for most of your module writing. The core
of that writing will be responses to the course writing assignments --
reflections, multiple drafts of a summary/reader response and then various
documents that form a technical report / inquiry-based proposal -- and
subsequent interaction about those assignments with your instructor and
classmates. In fact, one of the most critical components of the e-portfolio
is the feedback you give to and receive from peers.
THE
“WHY”
Blogging, as you may know, is a form of self-publishing, online. Once a
writer has set up a weblog, or blog, he or she can post on
a variety of topics and receive feedback from anyone with an Internet
connection. This can be useful when writing is shared within a particular
community, whether a special interest group, class or any other blogging
group.
In SIE2016/PEV2011, blogging will serve as a way for you to:
1) reflect
on course content in writing in a semi-formal manner;
2) develop
and share your ideas with an audience that is not limited to your
instructor;
3) learn
about the ideas of your classmates and your tutor;
4) comment
on the ideas of others; and
5) refine
your writing skills.
Your various interactions in cyberspace have the general objective of
allowing you to connect with classmates and your instructor outside of class;
encouraging you to ask questions, give opinions and share information; and
helping you better understand the role of social media in shaping effective
communication within the academic community.
THE
“HOW”
Setting up a blog: To create your own blog website, go to http://www.blogger.com/, www.wordpress.com or any other blog site. At these sites, follow the instructions to create your own site. To make your site easily recognizable to classmates, your address could have SIE2016/PEV2011, and your given name, family name or nickname on it. Once you have created a blog for our course, within that you can eventually begin to post assignments. The title of your course-related blog might be something like “Effective Communication” or “SIE2016/PEV2011. Eventually, share your blog address with me and your classmates. We will post the link to your blog on our own blogs.
Blogging
groups: In your class/tutorial group, you will be
assigned a blogging group of 4-5 members at the start of the
trimester. For every written post that you make, you should read and respond to
the posts of at least two members of this blogging group. The purpose of this
is for you and your blogging group members to share written ideas with each
other. In this way, you might also develop greater familiarity with each other
and assist each other in creating the most appropriate and effective posts
possible. A second purpose is for this smaller class group to have an
opportunity to demonstrate the skills needed to become a cohesive social unit.
The
four-stage blogging process:
Stage One -- Having setting up your blog, read the blog assignment for the first post
(see schedule on the course website), and write a response of 150 to 200 words,
preferably as a word document. Later you can copy and paste this doc into
the new post section of your blog.
Stage Two -- Publish your post on your blog by the assigned date.
Stage Three -- Access the blogs of at least two other members of your
blogging group, and read their posts for the same
topic/assignment. After reading each post, leave a comment. In your
commentary, you might answer questions such as these: What do you think
about the post? Does it respond to the assignment? Is the content clear
and well expressed? Is the content impressive or not? If it is, what
makes it so? Is it concise, coherent, cohesive? Is the answer complete? Are you
in agreement or disagreement with any opinions stated? Is the writer courteous
(and are you)? How clear and accurate is the language use?
Once you have reacted to
the posts of at least two members of your blogging group, you can visit and
comment on the blogs of other classmates. These 'comments' should be made by the first
tutorial after the weekend when the posts were first uploaded to your
classmates' blogs.
Stage Four -- Return to your post to see what commentary has been left by your peers. Follow that up, if you like, with comments back to your readers.
Feedback: There is formal assessment of your
e-portfolio. Part of this will involve your posting various drafts and rewrites
of the main writing assignments: the summary/reader response and the technical
report/proposal. On these you will receive feedback with a focus on the content
& organization, and language use of your writing. You also receive
feedback on the reflective writing that you do. This will include descriptive,
analytical and critical reflections. Most of the feedback you receive in this
regard will come from your peers.
At the same time, the punctuality of your posting and the manner,
frequency and accuracy of your comments on your classmates' posts is also
important for the final evaluation of your e-portfolio. For further
information, please see the rubric for the portfolio.
THE
‘WHEN’
Blogging
assignments should be completed as follows:
Assignment 1: Due by Friday, midnight, Week 1
Write a reflective post on the topic “My English Language Learning
Journey” or “The Importance of English for Me,” or an instructor-approved
variation of one of these topics. This
should be 150 to 200 words.
Assignment 2: Due second tutorial, Week 3
Write the first draft of your assessed reader response essay to one of
the reading articles included in the module resource reading list. This
draft should be 400 to 500 words.
Assignment 3: Due by the start of the second tutorial, Week 7
Post the draft of each section of the inquiry-based proposal that you
have written. This must include a personal statement, and might then also
include the transmittal letter, the intro, various sections of the body, and/or
the conclusion.
Assignment 4: Due by Friday, midnight, Week 9
Write an analytical reflection on your recent oral presentation
experience. In it detail one aspect of the presentation: preparation, your
delivery, the use of audio-visuals, teamwork or overall impact. This
should be 150-200 words.
Assignment 5: Due by the start of the second tutorial,
Week 12
Write a critically reflective
post on the topic “The Role of Peer and Tutor Feedback." Explain your view
of that feedback, how it impacted your developing writing skills, and
whether/how you might transfer content, organization and language skills
learned in the course to writing assignments within any other module at
SIT. This
should be 300 to 400 words.
Your 'comments' on classmates’ posts should be
made by the first tutorial after the weekend when the posts were first uploaded
to your classmates' blogs.
A necessary condition for an assessment of excellent in the Portfolio portion of our course grade is that you read and react in writing to at least a total of three classmates’ posts per blog assignment, and that you do so in a timely manner.
Valuable Links for SIE2016/PEV2011 Effective Communication
Here is the link for the SIE2016/PEV2011 Symbaloo page:
http://edu.symbaloo.com/mix/sie2016-pev2011
Here is the link to the Google Docs folder:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B__L-vx3a2PqfkRCZmlxNUM1VHVTc2REQUI2eFNuOW51Q0pZWHVKMzFuWlVKSUpjZ0dpUEE
Take note: To edit required documents in the Brad's Groups folder, you need to add this folder to your own drive.
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
Valuable Links for students enrolled in Early Childhood Education: Writing in the Disciplines program
Google docs link:
https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B__L-vx3a2PqfnRSbkxaM2cyNURhV0htSi1uWkJKMWF0NTVaakg2RTNLcFJjY2hqNFpIV0E&usp=sharing
Symbaloo page link:
https://edu.symbaloo.com/mix/earlychildhoodeducation7
Thursday, March 05, 2015
Monday, March 02, 2015
Link to problem-solution essay components document
A03
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1YoVGmJi-Qe2xApOu2yjTg-DOJoEuvSofgQhBly-M_Ag/edit?usp=sharing
A04
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1nsczZRt9hWIVDrJg_e2PC8xiS-KddUpBCoEkyTCy3Pg/edit?usp=sharing
E07
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1-zbZh0YqXG1EQ_ejZfwHcoD9M33-AdR045DvFwDig-A/edit?usp=sharing
Monday, February 16, 2015
LINK FOR THESIS STATEMENT WORK
Here's the link to the Google Doc page where you can post your thesis statement.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ZF-4D1e0ErIfbZEalreVh9yNlRBTefL6ioIUyDD2utU/edit?usp=sharing
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ZF-4D1e0ErIfbZEalreVh9yNlRBTefL6ioIUyDD2utU/edit?usp=sharing
Monday, February 09, 2015
Thursday, February 05, 2015
Link for summary feedback template
Use this link to access, then copy, and paste on your own word doc, the summary feedback template:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1GzAnDshhVK4KusFJhkS4WOhEb29eeLp3yazEn8sN7DE/edit?usp=sharing
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1GzAnDshhVK4KusFJhkS4WOhEb29eeLp3yazEn8sN7DE/edit?usp=sharing
Wednesday, January 07, 2015
Using Social Media in ES1102
Interactive Learning for Blackstone's EAP groups
ASSIGNMENT SPECIFICATIONS
THE “WHAT”
In ES1102 we use social media as an integral part of the course. This is done in various ways.
The first way is through the use of blogging as the basis for an e-portfolio. Building an e-portfolio is a value-added component of ES1102. The primary part of the e-portfolio is an individual blog that you will create as a home-base for most of your ES1102 writing. The core of that writing will be responses to the course writing assignments and subsequent interaction about those assignments with your instructor and classmates. In fact, one of the most critical components of the portfolio is the feedback you give to and receive from peers.
The first way is through the use of blogging as the basis for an e-portfolio. Building an e-portfolio is a value-added component of ES1102. The primary part of the e-portfolio is an individual blog that you will create as a home-base for most of your ES1102 writing. The core of that writing will be responses to the course writing assignments and subsequent interaction about those assignments with your instructor and classmates. In fact, one of the most critical components of the portfolio is the feedback you give to and receive from peers.
An
additional aspect of the use of social media is your interaction via the course Facebook
page. We have an ES1102 course Facebook page (please “like” ES1102 Issues &Interactions) that we often use as a platform for sharing writing in class. You should visit this site regularly, using it
to ask questions and give opinions and as a platform for sharing relevant video
and text links with classmates.
We will refer to both the blogs and the Facebook page in class. In addition, we have a course Symbaloo page: http://edu.symbaloo.com/mix/es1102ontheweb .
We will refer to both the blogs and the Facebook page in class. In addition, we have a course Symbaloo page: http://edu.symbaloo.com/mix/es1102ontheweb .
The Symbaloo page is simply a graphic 'bookmark' of the main websites for ES1102. Join Symbaloo to enjoy this additional resource.
THE “WHY”
Blogging, as you may know, is a
form of self-publishing, online. Once a writer has set up a weblog, or blog,
he or she can post on a variety of topics and receive feedback from
anyone with an Internet connection. This can be useful when writing is
shared within a particular community, whether a special interest group, class
or any other blogging group. In ES1102, blogging will serve as a way for you to
- reflect on course content in writing in a formal and semi-formal manner;
- develop and share your ideas with an audience that is not limited to your instructor;
- learn about the ideas of your classmates and your tutor;
- comment on the ideas of others; and
- refine your writing skills.
Your various interactions in cyberspace have the general objective of
- allowing you to connect with classmates and your instructor outside of class;
- encouraging you to ask questions, give opinions and share information;
- and helping you better understand the role of social media in shaping effective communication within the academic community.
THE “HOW” of Blogging and Facebook
1.
Setting up a blog
- To create your own blog website, go to http://www.blogger.com/, www.wordpress.com or any other blog site. At these sites, follow the instructions to create your own site. To make your site recognizable to classmates, your address could have ES1102, and your given name, family name or nickname on it.
- Once you have created a blog for our course, within that, you can eventually begin to post responses to assignments. The title of your course-related blog might be something like “EAP” or “ES1102.”
- Eventually, share your blog address with me and your classmates at this link:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1YUHvB4_OOoxWYQIJHtG8kzJoSGOAxo13XHWUgSVVHuA/edit?usp=sharing - We will post the link to your blog on our own blog.
2.
Blogging groups/blogging
buddies
In your ES1102 class/tutorial
group, you will be assigned a blogging group of 4-6 members at the start
of the semester. For every written post that you make, you should read and
respond to the posts of at least two members of this blogging group. The
purpose of this is for you and your blogging group members to share written
ideas with each other. In this way, you might also develop greater familiarity
with each other and assist each other in creating the most appropriate and
effective posts possible. A second purpose is for this smaller class group to
have an opportunity to demonstrate the skills needed to become a cohesive
social unit.
3.
The four-stage blogging
process
- Stage One: Having setting up your blog, read the blog assignment for the first post (see schedule on the course website), and write a response of 250 to 300 words, preferably as a word document. Later you can copy and paste this doc into the new post section of your blog.
- Stage Two: Publish your post on your blog by the assigned date.
- Stage Three: Access the blogs of at least two other
members of your blogging group, and read their posts
for
the same topic/assignment. After reading each post, leave a
comment. In your commentary, you might answer questions such as
these: What do you think about the post? Does it respond to the
assignment? Is the content clear and well expressed? Is the content
impressive or not? If it is, what makes it so? Is it concise, coherent, cohesive? Is the
answer complete? Are you in agreement or disagreement with any
opinions
stated? Is the writer courteous (and are you)? How clear and
accurate is the language use?
Once you have reacted to the posts of at least two members of your blogging group, you can visit and comment on the blogs of other classmates.
A necessary condition for an assessment of excellent in the Portfolio portion
of our course grade is that you read and react in writing to at least a total
of three classmates’ posts per blog assignment.
Pay close attention to your language use. Remember, a blog is a form of publishing, and when and if you present your ideas in public, it is advisable to present them in a clear, grammatically accurate fashion. You should also use a tone that, while not as formal as that of a formal letter or official written report, should still adhere to standards for courtesy, correctness, conciseness, clarity, coherence/cohesion, concreteness and completeness, the so-called 7Cs of good writing.
Pay close attention to your language use. Remember, a blog is a form of publishing, and when and if you present your ideas in public, it is advisable to present them in a clear, grammatically accurate fashion. You should also use a tone that, while not as formal as that of a formal letter or official written report, should still adhere to standards for courtesy, correctness, conciseness, clarity, coherence/cohesion, concreteness and completeness, the so-called 7Cs of good writing.
- Stage Four: Return to your post to see what commentary has been left. Follow that up, if you like, with comments back to your readers.
FEEDBACK
There is formal assessment of your e-portfolio. I will
give you feedback with a focus on your blog posts' content & organization,
your language use, the timeliness of your posting and the manner, frequency
and accuracy of your comments on classmates' posts. (Please see the rubric for the portfolio).
While your interactions with Facebook in the course are also
viewed by me and others, there is no evaluation. Your own focus should be on how you make an effort to ask questions, search for
relevant video and text sources to share, and then view/read and comment on the
links provided by others, are able to value add to the course discussions by
their effort. Strictly speaking, this may not add up to points for a mark, but
it will certainly advance your learning, and it will warm your tutor's heart!
BLOGGING ASSIGNMENTS
I. Assignment
1: Due by Friday night, midnight, January 23rd, Week 2
Write a reflective post
on the topic “My English Language Learning Journey” or “Living in A Globalized
World: The Importance of English for Me,” or an instructor-approved variation
of one of these topics. This should be 250 to 300 words.
II. Assignment 2: Due first tutorial, February 9th or 10th, Week 5
II. Assignment 2: Due first tutorial, February 9th or 10th, Week 5
Write the first draft of your assessed reader response essay to one of the reading articles related to social media. This draft should be 500 to 600 words.
III. Assignment 3: Due by Sunday, midnight, February 22nd, Recess Week
IV. Assignment 4: Due by the start of Tutorial #1/Week 7
Write and post the first draft of your problem-solution essay. This should be 800-900 words.
Write and post the first draft of your problem-solution essay. This should be 800-900 words.
V. Assignment
5: Due by the end of Tutorial
#1/Week 11
Write a critically reflective post on the
topic “The Role of Peer and Tutor Feedback." Explain your view of that
feedback, how it impacted your developing writing skills, and
whether/how you might have transferred content, organization and
language skills learned in the course to writing assignments within any
other module. This should be 300 to 400 words.
Finally: In addition, please upload a paper that you have written and submitted for another course. It would be great if you could briefly explain whether/how you might have benefited from feedback given in our writing while working on this paper.
Finally: In addition, please upload a paper that you have written and submitted for another course. It would be great if you could briefly explain whether/how you might have benefited from feedback given in our writing while working on this paper.
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Focused Group Discussion of Elements of ES1102
In a subgroup of your blogging group, discuss and then list in the comments section here the main positive takeaways and negative aspects of the following elements of our course:
1) writing multiple drafts of essays (developing writing through process)
2) maintaining an eportfolio
3a) getting feedback from a tutor and peers, and b) giving feedback
4) writing both a reader response and a problem-solution essay
5) working in groups
6) other main course takeaways
Be sure to add to your post just the first names of the members of your group.
Thank you for sharing your honest opinions.
1) writing multiple drafts of essays (developing writing through process)
2) maintaining an eportfolio
3a) getting feedback from a tutor and peers, and b) giving feedback
4) writing both a reader response and a problem-solution essay
5) working in groups
6) other main course takeaways
Be sure to add to your post just the first names of the members of your group.
Thank you for sharing your honest opinions.
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
ES1102 E-PORTFOLIO (Blogging)
Interactive Learning for Blackstone's EAP groups
E-PORTFOLIO USING SOCIAL MEDIA
ASSIGNMENT SPECIFICATIONS
THE “WHAT”
Building
an e-portfolio is a value-added component of Brad Blackstone’s ES1102
tutorial
group sessions. The primary part of the e-portfolio is an individual
blog that
you will create as a home-base for your ES1102 writing. The core of that
writing will be responses to the course writing assignments and
subsequent interaction
about those assignments with your instructor and classmates. In fact,
one of the most critical components of the portfolio is the feedback you
give to and receive from peers.
An
additional, optional aspect of the e-portfolio is your interaction via the course Facebook
page. We have an ES1102 course Facebook page (please “like” ES1102
Issues & Interactions). You should visit this site regularly, using it
to ask questions and give opinions and as a platform for sharing relevant video
and text links with classmates as often as possible. We will refer to the blogs
and the Facebook page in class.
THE “WHY”
Blogging, as you may know, is a
form of self-publishing, online. Once a writer has set up a weblog, or blog,
he or she can post on a variety of topics and receive feedback from
anyone with an Internet connection. This can be useful when writing is
shared within a particular community, whether a special interest group, class
or any other blogging group. In ES1102, blogging will serve as a way for you to
- reflect on course content in writing in a formal and semi-formal manner;
- develop and share your ideas with an audience that is not limited to your instructor;
- learn about the ideas of your classmates and your tutor;
- comment on the ideas of others; and
- refine your writing skills.
Your various interactions with
the course Facebook page, ES1102 Issues & Interactions (https://www.facebook.com/Es1102CELCNUS),
which you should friend, and within the blog space of Blackstone’s World Without Walls (daddypeet.blogspot.sg), where you
and your peers will park your individual blogs, have the general objective of
- allowing you to connect with classmates and your instructor outside of class;
- encouraging you to ask questions, give opinions and share information;
- and helping you better understand the role of social media in shaping effective communication within the academic community.
THE “HOW” of Blogging and Facebook
1.
Setting up a blog
- To create your own blog website, go to http://www.blogger.com/, www.wordpress.com or any other blog site. At these sites, follow the instructions to create your own site. To make your site recognizable to classmates, your site address could have your given name and family name (or nickname).
- Once you have created a blog for our course, within that, you can eventually begin to post responses to assignments. The title of your course-related blog might be something like “EAP” or “ES1102.”
- Eventually, send your blog address to me and to the classmates. They will post links to your blog and that of other classmates on their own blog.
2.
Blogging groups/blogging
buddies
In your ES1102 class/tutorial
group, you will be assigned a blogging group of 4-6 members at the start
of the semester. For every written post that you make, you should read and
respond to the posts of at least two members of this blogging group. The
purpose of this is for you and your blogging group members to share written
ideas with each other. In this way, you might also develop greater familiarity
with each other and assist each other in creating the most appropriate and
effective posts possible. A second purpose is for this smaller class group to
have an opportunity to demonstrate the skills needed to become a cohesive
social unit.
3.
The four-stage blogging
process
- Stage One: Having setting up your blog, read the blog assignment for the first post (see schedule on the course website), and write a response of 250 to 300 words, preferably as a word document. Later you can copy and paste this doc into the new post section of your blog.
- Stage Two: Publish your post on your blog by the assigned date.
- Stage Three: Access the blogs of at least two other
members of your blogging group, and read their posts
for
the same topic/assignment. After reading each post, leave a
comment. In your commentary, you might answer questions such as
these: What do you think about the post? Does it respond to the
assignment? Is the content clear and well expressed? Is the content
impressive or not? If it is, what makes it so? Is it concise, coherent, cohesive? Is the
answer complete? Are you in agreement or disagreement with any
opinions
stated? Is the writer courteous (and are you)? How clear and
accurate is the language use?
Once you have reacted to the posts of at least two members of your blogging group, you can visit and comment on the blogs of other classmates.
A necessary condition for an assessment of excellent in the Portfolio portion
of our course grade is that you read and react in writing to at least a total
of three classmates’ posts per blog assignment.
Pay close attention to your language use. Remember, a blog is a form of publishing, and when and if you present your ideas in public, it is advisable to present them in a clear, grammatically accurate fashion. You should also use a tone that, while not as formal as that of a formal letter or official written report, should still adhere to standards for courtesy, correctness, conciseness, clarity, coherence/cohesion, concreteness and completeness, the so-called 7Cs of good writing.
Pay close attention to your language use. Remember, a blog is a form of publishing, and when and if you present your ideas in public, it is advisable to present them in a clear, grammatically accurate fashion. You should also use a tone that, while not as formal as that of a formal letter or official written report, should still adhere to standards for courtesy, correctness, conciseness, clarity, coherence/cohesion, concreteness and completeness, the so-called 7Cs of good writing.
- Stage Four: Return to your post to see what commentary has been left. Follow that up, if you like, with comments back to your readers.
4 Facebook
Please
“friend” ES1102 Issues & Encounters. Interact here by posting links to
relevant websites, with video and written information on any course-related
topic. Also, whenever you post, please write a one or two sentence explanation
of what you are posting.
FEEDBACK
There is formal assessment of your e-portfolio. I will
give you feedback with a focus on your blog posts' content & organization,
your language use, the timeliness of your posting and the manner, frequency
and accuracy of your comments on classmates' posts. (Please see the rubric for the portfolio).
While your interactions with Facebook in the course are also
viewed by me and others, there is no evaluation. The focus is on how you make an effort to ask questions, search for
relevant video and text sources to share, and then view/read and comment on the
links provided by others, are able to value add to the course discussions by
their effort. Strictly speaking, this may not add up to points for a mark, but
it will certainly advance your learning, and it will warm your tutor's heart!
BLOGGING ASSIGNMENTS
I. Assignment
1: Due by Friday night, midnight, August 21st, Week 2
Write a reflective post
on the topic “My English Language Learning Journey” or “Living in A Globalized
World: The Importance of English for Me,” or an instructor-approved variation
of one of these topics. This should be 250 to 300 words.
II. Assignment
2: Due by Tutorial #1 of Week 4
III. Assignment 3: Due midnight, Friday, September 12th, Week 5
Write the second draft of
your assessed reader response essay to one of the reading articles related to globalization.
This draft should be 500 to 600 words.
IV. Assignment 4: Due by the end of Tutorial #1/Week 8
Write and post the second, revised draft of your problem-solution essay. This should be 800-900 words.
V. Assignment
5: Due by the end of Tutorial
#2/Week 11
Write a critically reflective post on the topic “The Role of Peer and Tutor Feedback." Explain your view of that feedback, how it impacted your developing writing skills, and whether/how you might have transferred content, organization and language skills learned in the course to writing assignments within any other module. This should be 300 to 400 words.
In addition, please upload a paper that you have written and submitted for another course. It would be great if you could briefly explain whether/how you might have benefited from feedback given in our writing while working on this paper.
In addition, please upload a paper that you have written and submitted for another course. It would be great if you could briefly explain whether/how you might have benefited from feedback given in our writing while working on this paper.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)