Thursday, February 28, 2008

Week 9 Assignments

For Tuesday, March 4:
  • Read p. 196-211 in your text. Prepare a typed response to questions 1-5 under “Considering Method”n on page 198.
  • Work on General project: due in class on Tuesday. No exceptions!

For Thursday, March 6:
  • Remember your "Catastrophe" essay? Take everything you've learned so far and revise it. The revision is due today; attach the graded first draft. I will be looking for significant revision: add something new, expand material that's already there, move content around, etc. Revise!
  • All extra credit is due in class today.
  • All teacher conferences must be completed by today. If we haven't already met, it's now up to you to contact me to arrange an appointment.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Week 8 Assignments

For Tuesday, Feb. 26:
  • Second draft of Process Analysis due. Staple together graded (first) draft, invention work, workshop feedback, and revision, with revision on top.
  • Read p. 171-188 in your text. Prepare a 1+ page typed response to the story about "Stress" on page 171.
  • Finish the compound word assignment (handed out in class on Feb. 21).
  • Start next task-- handed out on Feb. 21.

For Thursday, Feb 28:
  • Do the apostrophe exercise on pages 184-185 of your text. Type this and bring to class on Thursday.
  • Read 189-195 in textbook. Take notes on this in your notebook. Be prepared to discuss in class.
  • During class on Tuesday, we talked about "scar tours." Parlay that discussion into a 1+ page typed piece due in class on Thursday. The form and content are up to you. You may expand on the list made during class, reflect on your own scar tours, etc.
  • Keep working on your "Final Project" task.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

BONUS ROUND!

This extra credit is no longer available, but I'm leaving the link up as an FYI.

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Go to this site. Review the "Top Ten Graphic Novels" of 2007.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Teacher Conferences

A teacher conference is required at least once during the term-- below is the schedule to date. If your name isn't here and you want to be added, email me at peszneck@pdx.edu.

These are casual conferences. We'll meet in my office-- N376. Bring your notebook and at least one piece of writing that you'd like to discuss.

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Thursday, Feb 28: [Week 8]
9:30- Stephanie I.
11:45- Lily H.
12:00- Janette S.
12:15- Wyatt F.
12:30- Charles A.
12:45-
1:00-
1:15-


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Thursday, Feb 21: [DONE]
9:30- Annie T.
11:45- Tatjana D.
12:00- Kyle F.
12:15- Nick H.
12:30- Angel M.
12:45- Joe R.

Tuesday, Feb 26: [DONE]
9:30- Tanya K.
11:15- Rachael
11:30- Lily
11:45- Hideaki I.
12:00- Arielle K.
12:15- Emi G.

Week 7 Assignments

For Tuesday, Feb. 19:
  • Workshops! Read your groupmate's essays; annotate and fill out a review sheet for each one.
  • Read p. 133-147 (ch. 5) and 148-170 (ch. 6) in your text. Prepare a 1+ page typed response to the story on page 154 or page 163.
  • Notebooks will be checked today, during workshops. You should have 30+ pages.

For Thursday, Feb 21:
  • No homework-- work on your Process Analysis draft.

According to the PSU site, tomorrow-- Feb. 22-- is the last day

to change from pass/no pass to a letter grade.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Week 6 Assignments

For Tuesday, Feb. 12:
  • Second draft of case study due today. Staple the following together: second draft, first draft, invention work, and peer review sheets.
  • Read p. 101-133 in your text.
  • Answer questions 3, 4, and 5 under "Considering Methods" on p. 123. Type your responses. This is due in today's class.
  • Revise and polish your restaurant review-- typed revision is due in class today.
  • Begin work on next essay: "Process Analysis." (assignment posted elsewhere in this blog)

For Thursday, Feb 14: (Happy Valentine's Day!)
  • Read p. 232-235 in your text; this should help with your Process Analysis paper.
  • First draft of Process Analysis due today. Bring a copy for the teacher and copies for groupmates.

Essay #3: Process Analysis

In a process analysis, the writer explains the materials and steps required in order to accomplish a task.

Assignment: Choose a realistic task, i.e., one that your reader could reasonably encounter in everyday life. This could be a routine, mundane task (e.g., setting the table, changing the oil in your car) or, if you have a special or unique skill or hobby, it could be something less common (e.g., how to skydive, grafting fruit trees, cooking a special recipe).

Considerations:
Study the process, and the way you feel about it. Create an introductory paragraph that summarizes these feelings and draws the reader in. “Some people get their adrenaline rush snowboarding, or driving a fast car. I’m here to tell you that for sheer thrills, there’s nothing like jumping out of an airplane at 10,000 feet.”

Use chronological order to organize your process analysis. Use clear transitions to signal the order of steps in the task.

Explain your task in an interesting, engaging way. Use lots of details and description. You’re not just trying to explain the process to the reader: you’re also trying to get them interested. Make the process fun and lively by including unexpected steps or interesting details.

Structure: Create a catchy, interesting title. Use an introduction, two or more body paragraphs, and a conclusion.

Follow the class style guide in formatting the paper.

Length: Two-ish pages.

Audience: Your groupmates and your teacher. Write your essay as if you're explaining something we know nothing about.

Writer: You may use first or third person.

Due dates:
Rough draft due: Thursday, Feb. 14 (Bring copies for teacher and groupmates; attach invention work)

Workshops: Tuesday, Feb. 19

Revision due: Tuesday, Feb. 26 (Staple together graded rough draft, invention work, and revision, with revision on top)

Fine-Tuning Your Papers: Part I

1. Compound words

Lots of you are missing compound words:

Correct (Incorrect):
  • Yourself/yourselves (not your self/your selves)
  • Itself (not it self)
  • Herself (not her self)
  • Outside (not out side)
  • Backpack (not back pack)
  • Sidewalk (not side walk)
The best way to remember these is to memorize the ones you miss. The best long-term solution is to read a lot. By reading, you’re exposed to lots of new words and your eye and brain will begin to recognize them automatically.


2. When working with dialog or any kind of quoted material, periods and commas go inside the quotation marks.

Correct: “Make yourselves at home,” she told us.
Incorrect: “Make yourselves at home”, she told us.

Correct: I took a deep breath and tried to restart my “computer.”
Incorrect: I took a deep breath and tried to restart my “computer”.


3. Sentence fragments

Every sentence must have (at the very least) a subject and a verb:

The subject is the person, place, or thing that the sentence is about.
The verb is the action that the subject is performing.
The predicate is the part of a sentence containing a verb and stating something about the subject.

The Wizard incanted.
The Wizard incanted a spell with his wand.

In both of these examples "Wizard" is the sentence’s subject and “incanted” is the verb. Everything else is the predicate.

Let’s imagine that you wrote: “The Wizard incanted. A spell.”

“The Wizard incanted” is a complete sentence, with subject and verb. But “A spell” is a fragment, because it has no verb and may or may not have a subject (we can’t tell if “spell” is the subject or not).

Many creative writers use fragments in creative writing, to sound bold and punchy. But when writing academic essays, you should avoid fragments.


4. The evils of comma splices rear their ugly heads!

A comma splice is an error created when two independent clauses—essentially, two complete sentences—are joined (incorrectly) by a comma instead of a connecting word.

In doing this, the writer tries to use the comma as a kind of end punctuation—which doesn’t work, because a comma can never be used to end a sentence. (That privilege is reserved for periods, question marks, and exclamation marks.)

(Note: splices can also result from trying to use a comma to join a sentence and a fragment, or two fragments. In this case, you have to fix the fragments first, and then fix the comma splice.)

There are two ways to fix a comma splice. The easiest way is to replace the comma with a period:

[INCORRECT] I arrived home at dinnertime, I was hungry.

[CORRECT] I arrived home at dinnertime. I was hungry.

The other way is to insert the word ‘and,’ a coordinating conjunction that changes the two sentences into a single, compound sentence:

[INCORRECT] I arrived home at dinnertime, I was hungry.

[CORRECT] I arrived home at dinnertime, and I was hungry.

Another example:

[INCORRECT] I spent all weekend writing my essay, I was
exhausted by the time it was done.

[CORRECT] I spent all weekend writing my essay.
I was exhausted by the time it was done.

[CORRECT] I spent all weekend writing my essay
and
I was exhausted by the time it was done.


5. Subject-verb agreement.

If you have a singular subject, your pronouns and verbs must also be singular.
If you have a plural subject, your pronouns and verbs must also be plural.

For example:
  • INCORRECT: Verbs has to agree with their subjects. (plural subject (“verbs”), singular verb (“has”) (Doesn’t work!)
  • CORRECT: Verbs have to agree with their subjects. (plural subject (“verbs”), plural verb (“have”) (Success!)
The easiest way to find these sorts of errors is by reading your work aloud.


6. Use possessives correctly.

Use an apostrophe to show ownership:

The boy’s coat (the coat belonging to one boy)

The boys’ coats (the coats belonging to two or more boys)


7. Underline or italicize book, film, magazine, newspaper, and television show titles if used in your essays:

Harry the Potter and the Deathly Hallows
No Country for Old Men
The Portland Oregonian

If using story or poem titles, enclose the title in quotation marks but don’t underline or italicize:

“The Will of Albus Dumbledore”
“Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”


8. As we discussed in class, always use the serial comma, e.g.:

CORRECT: He eats, shoots, and leaves.

INCORRECT: He eats, shoots and leaves.


9. Watch your verb tense!

You can’t start writing in present tense and then suddenly switch to past. The best way to make sure you don’t accidentally switch is to read your work out loud; it’s quite easy to hear any errors this way.


10. When using numbers in your writing, write out the small numbers rather than using ordinals, e.g.:

CORRECT: Eight o’clock, two buses, etc.

INCORRECT: 8 o’clock, 2 buses, etc.

Use ordinal numbers when that's the simplest way to express big or complex numbers. Write big numbers out when it’s simpler to do that:

SIMPLEST: 1624, two million

CUMBERSOME: one thousand six hundred twenty four, 2,000,000


11. Never begin a sentence with an ordinal number or an acronym.

CORRECT: Portland State University has an excellent writing program.

INCORRECT: PSU has an excellent writing program.

Monday, February 4, 2008

Week 5 Assignments

For Tuesday, Feb. 5:
  • Most important: read your groupmate's essays (making notes and adding comments right on their papers). For each essay, fill out a Peer Review Worksheet passed out last week in class. (Also emailed to you-- contact me if you didn't get one.) We'll be workshopping these essays during Tuesday's class.
  • Read p. 77-100 in your text.
  • Answer any two of the questions under "Considering Content" on pages 88-89. Type your responses. This is due in class on Feb. 5.
  • Brainstorm a list of your favorite restaurants-- from any location.
  • Bring two colored pens to class on Tuesday.
For Thursday, Jan. 31:
  • Review pages 77-84 for Thursday discussion.
  • Read the restaurant review handouts-- in your writer's notebook, write a restaurant review about your own favorite restaurant.
  • Be working on your case study: the second draft is due on Tuesday.

*All reading assignments refer to the class text, unless otherwise noted.

Sunday, February 3, 2008

The Writing Center at PSU

I hope that many of you will spend time in the Writing Center-- it's a terrific place and one guaranteed to improve anyone's writing.

Winter Term Hours (Jan. 8-March 14)

Monday: 9:30 am to 8:00 pm
Tuesday: 9:30 am to 8:00 pm*
Wednesday: 9:30 am to 8:00 pm
Thursday: 10:00 am to 8:00 pm
Friday: 9:30 am to 4:30 pm

*Closed 12:00-2:00 pm for weekly staff meeting.

Call 503-725-3570 for an appointment, or use the link on this page to make an appointment on line.

Be sure to let me know if you use visit the Writing Center, so I may give you your extra credit points!