Thursday, July 16, 2009

Day Sixteen Class Notes

Check your Wikipedia Article
Have your edits and revisiosn remained? If they have changed, what has changed? Do you know why there were changes made to your edits and revisions? Take a moment to check the talk/discussion page, too.

Editing sweep
Take 10 minutes to review and edit your revision.

Class Evaluation
Answer the following questions in the D2L Discussion component

What learning tools were effective? (Consider D2L Discussions, written peer responses, spoken peer responses, large group critiques of rough drafts, evaluating sources, learning how to navigate Wikipedia, using the course wiki, conducting research (for your project; for a classmate's project), having the lessons and assignments on the course blog, having the assignment deadlines embedded in the D2L course news, the instructor's audio comments, and so on.)

What learning tools were less effective?

Review the course goals - identify two of the goals which you were able to achieve and briefly describe how you achieved them - identify one goal that has remained elusive.

Evaluations of the Persuasive Analytical Essay revisions will be completed by the end of the work day on Monday, July 27. I will send you the scoring rubric as an email attachment. Within the email, I will indicate your final grade for the course. You will have 24 hours to contact me to address any discrepancies in your grade before I post the final grades to the registrar on Tuesday, July 28.

[photo: Albert feared the finality of completion by zen]

Day Fifteen Assignments

Revise and post your Persuasive Analytical Essay Revision. (Be sure to scroll to the bottom of the page to find the "revision" listing; don't post the revision in the "small peer response group" section.)

Michael will be available in his office (Helland Center, Room 4141) to respond to drafts and revisions between 12:00 and 3:00 pm on Tuesday, July 21. Send your revisions and drafts to him as email attachments (Michael.Kuhne@minneapolis.edu). If you wish to make an appointment to meet with him, please do so (rather than showing up unexpectedly).

Day Fifteen Class Notes

Instructor-led Writing Workshop - addressing common issues (25)
  • establishing clear thesis statements (nuanced and nuanced; hint at essay's structure)
  • establishing effective analytical body paragraphs (claim-evidence-explanation-closing)
  • incorporating sources accurately and effectively (introducing the source-signal phrase-S?P?DQ?-in-text citation)
  • making good use of the Wikipedia Article revising and editing experience

Small peer response group conferences (45)

  • One person volunteers to have his or her draft to discussed.
  • A different person volunteers to begin discussing the draft.
  • At minimum, each person should discuss the draft's thesis statement, the body paragraph's topic sentence, the use of evidence (especially how well or how poorly the writer explains how the evidence supports the claim), and the conclusion.
  • When everyone has had a chance to discuss the draft and the writer's questions of the group have been answered, move on to the next draft.

Submitting the Persuasive Analytical Essay revision. (10)


Class will end once these activities are completed. You will be free to leave. You are also welcomed to stay and work in the classroom on your revision. The instructor will stay in the classroom and be available for consultations until the end of class.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Day Fourteen Assignments

  • Review and comment to the drafts posted within your small peer response group.
  • Continue revising and editing your own Persuasive Analytical Essay.
  • The revision of the Persuasive Analytical Essay is due by the beginning of Day Sixteen.

Day Fourteen Class Notes

Wikipedia Article - evaluated (check D2L); scoring rubrics and comments sent later this afternoon.

Take 5 minutes - check your Wikipedia article: has anything changed since you made the edits/revisions?

Persuasive Analytical Essay Rough Drafts (20)

  • return to the wiki page where you posted the rough draft
  • click "edit," scroll to the bottom of the screen
  • in a short writing (2-3 sentences) address the most challenging aspect of this assignment
  • also, write three questions for your peer reviewers - the more specific the question, the better

Discuss

Large Group Response and Norming Activity

Drafting an accurate Works Cited page for the final essay (15)
--See "Preparing the list of works cited" at the bottom of MLA Manuscript Format
--MLA List of Works Cited - Hacker's Documentation Page
--Questions about Works Cited

Work Time(60)
You may use this time either to continue writing your own draft OR to begin commenting on your peer's draft.
There will be time for small peer response group conferences on Day Fifteen

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Day Thirteen Assignments

Post your rough draft on the course wiki in the Persuasive Analytical essay rough draft and revision wiki page. This must be posted prior to the beginning of class on Day Fourteen.

Day Thirteen Class Notes

Reflection on the Wikipedia Article assignment (20)

  • what did you enjoy?
  • did anything surprise you?
  • what was frustrating?
  • would you describe the research that you had to do for the article as similar to or different from the research that you have done in the past? how so? in what ways?
  • what did you learn?
Review Persuasive Analytical writing assignment (and calendar) (15)

  • One might revise either the Wikipedia Debate or the Wikipedia Feature Article Analysis essay for the Persuasive Analytical essay IF the revision meets the guidelines (primarily the new, extended 1250-word limit)
  • Remember: the new persuasive position articulated in the thesis should be nuanced (not over-simplified)
  • You can also develop a new essay, as long as it focuses on Wikipedia and meets the assignment's requirements
  • We strongly recommend that whatever you write addresses your experience as a Wikipedian. This can be either the focus of the final essay or a smaller section.
  • In the final essay, a higher quality standard will be applied to various writing items such as thesis statements (with sub-claims); body paragraph development (claim-evidence-explanation-closing); the accurate and effective use of sources (introducing the source, using signal phrases, formatting the direct quote correctly, using accurate in-text citations, and signalling the use of summaries and paraphrases where necessary), MLA Works Cited accuracy, and overall quality of the writing.
Thesis and sub-claim work for the final writing assignment (35)
Some questions that might lead to a more nuanced approach:
  • In your experience working with Wikipedia in this class, what were some of your most frustrating moments? Why were these moments frustrating? How did they affect your thinking about Wikipedia or its use?
  • In your experience working with Wikipedia in this class, what were some of your most rewarding or fun moments? Why were these moments rewarding or fun? How did they affect your thinking about Wikipedia or its use?
  • If you had to tell someone what you like about this class, what would it be? Why?
  • If you had to tell someone what you don't like about this class, what would it be? Why?
  • How has learning more about Wikipedia changed the way you think about it?
  • How has learning more about Wikipedia changed the way you use it?
  • If there were one thing you could change about Wikipedia, what would it be?
  • If there were one thing you would never change about Wikipedia what would it be?

Discuss

Given your understanding of the assignment, revise or draft your working thesis statement Share this one other person: as readers of your peer's working thesis statement, ask yourselves these questions:

  • is the thesis nuanced (not over-simplified)?
  • is the thesis arguable?
  • can you predict what the structure of the essay will be based on the thesis statement?

Once you have consulted with a peer, received feedback, and made the necessary revisions, please write your working thesis on the whiteboard.

Review working thesis statements

Organizing the Persuasive Analytical essay (30)

Based on the working thesis statement, create a list of potential sub-claims.

Scrap Paper Evidence activity(based on one sub-claim)

Writer identifies a claim in need of (better) evidence

--your name

--the name of the Wikipedia article you are discussing

--the claim for which you need better evidence


Instructor gathers and re-distributes to students working in pairs


Partners must then find evidence for the claim


When complete, partners return scrap - with evidence - to the original writer-- and discuss

Once the scrap paper has been returned, develop a working outline of your essay:

  • include the introduction (working thesis, plus brainstorm ideas for a lead)
  • include all of the sub-claims (plus supporting evidence, if available)
  • include the conclusion (tentative offerings acceptable)

Drafting an accurate Works Cited page for the final essay (15)

Volunteers for Norming?

Drafting time (35)




Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Day Twelve Assignments

1.) Finish all of the work on the Wikipedia article assignment by the beginning of class on Monday, July 13.

2). Use the "Sample Format for Collaboration Page" to guide your organization of information on your collaboration page.

Day Twelve Class Notes

Housekeeping and formatting of collaboration pages

Collaboration pages must include
  • updated and identifiable action plan
  • 4 evaluated articles with Works Cited entries
  • 3 clearly identified sub criteria
  • links to all wikipedia article edits with justifications/explanations
  • text that was changed as part of the "Add or substantially revise (add or rewrite a paragraph at least four sentences long) a section of the article" criterion
Look at current pages and brainstorm formatting ideas.

Demonstration of adding images

Okay, it's not as hard as we thought-- if you took the image yourself or someone gave you permission to use it. If it isn't your image, then it is hard because of the legal issues, not the technical ones.

Here's what you need to do:
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Welcome --login on this page (top right of page); your wikipedia login should work-- if not, create a new account (top right of page)
  • Click upload file on the left after you get logged in
  • Click "entirely my own work"
  • scroll down the page and fill in the information (click the question marks next to the text boxes to get more information on what goes in the box. You do not have to fill-in all the boxes)
  • Obviously, start with the "local filename" box by browsing to your computer and finding the image (be sure to give the file a descriptive name while it is still on your computer)
  • You do have to fill-in the license box: my suggestion is to go with the recommended license (Multi-license with CC-BY-SA-3.0 and GFDL); however, you should know that you are giving away almost all rights to the image-- but this is what you need to do if you really want to share it.
  • you should choose a category to make the image easier for others to find (and you too if you lose it later!); you'll need to read about categories to get the idea of them
  • click "Upload file"
  • shout "woo-hoo" like Homer Simpson when the file finishes uplaoding
Now,to put it in your Wikipedia article
  • view this page http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Images_help (it's a good bit of information, but you need to read it because it allows different ways of formatting the images on the page)
  • Because your image is in Wikimedia Commons, the Image tag will pull it directly into the Wikipedia page (sweet!)
  • I edited the MCTC page and added a picture using the following tag: [[Image:MCTC_Technical_building.jpgthumbleftThe Technical Building on the MCTC/Metro State campus as seen from Loring Park]]-- this pulls a small (thumb) version of the image into the page from Wikimedia Commons, floats it to the left of the text, and puts a caption under it -- go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minneapolis_Community_and_Technical_College to see what it looks like
  • If you click on the file it goes to the full-size image-- it does that automatically (more sweet!)
  • Caveats: 1) when placing images, do it by editing the sections of the page, not by using the "edit this page" tab at the top; 2) image file names are case sensitive, so make sure you get the image name right
So, go forth and try to make Wikipedia more image-y.

Continue Wikipedia article work in class


Intro to Persuasive Analytical Essay assignment

Read and ask questions in comment section of wiki page

Discuss
  • Brainstorm nuanced argument
  • Share ideas
  • Respond
  • Brainstorm again and refine
[photo: Sharing by furiousgeorge81]

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Day Eleven Assignments

These assignments are due by the beginning of class on Day Twelve:
  • Date these additions "July 8" on your Collaboration Page
  • Establish the 3 sub-criteria that you will address
  • Identify the section of the Wikipedia article where you will provide the addtional four sentences (minimum) of text
  • Provide a minimum of two more sources, that you must evaluate (criteria for evaluating internet sources: make sure that you address the authorship, the accuracy of the information, the goals of the site, and access)
  • Add to Wikipedia Resources page

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Day Eleven Class Notes

Revisions (5)
  • Revisions of the Wikipedia Debate article were due today by 11:59 am
  • Revisions of the Wikipedia Feature Article Analysis are due by 11:59 am on Wednesday, July 8.
Housekeeping (5)
When you make an edit to your Wikipedia article, place a link to that revision on your collaboration page

(Find the revision by going to the history page and clicking the link for "cur" - meaning "current"- at the beginning of the line for that revision).

Editing round-up (15)
Having evaluated the Wikipedia Feature Article Analysis revision, it is time to address a few stylistic hiccups:
  • then/than
  • etc.
  • its/it's
  • there/their/they're
  • cite/site/sight
  • indefinite you/they
  • semi-colon (;) and colon (:)
  • parallel structure

Capturing the Process and Responding to the Wikipedia Article criteria (10)

  • Date these additions "July 8" in your Collaboration Page
  • Establish the 3 sub-criteria that you will address
  • Identify the section of the Wikipedia article where you will provide the addtional four sentences (minimum) of text
  • Provide a minimum of two more sources, that you must evaluate (criteria for evaluating internet sources: make sure that you address the authorship, the accuracy of the information, the goals of the site, and access)
Time to Work on the Wikipedia Article Assignment (Revisions and Edits due at the beginning of Day 13) (70)

Sharing Challenges (20)

Using the main workstation, groups share challenges they are experiencing as they edit Wikipedia Articles Feedback and suggestions from class

Add to Wikipedia Resources page