Tuesday, August 30, 2011

1st English 101 Blog

  1. This is my first Blogger contribution since my high school "computer applications" Blog of aught-8.
  2. Now, instead of a spry young prom queen, I blog as a junior in college in a class of primarily freshman; the downright grandmother of English 101.
  3. On to some particulars of this class. My teacher, the Lady Gaga fan who enjoys sending her children off to school, has set her office hours as Monday and Thursday, 2:00 till 3:30 in the CAC 115. She will have us write 2 essays. Earning extra credit will be easy, as 2% of our grade is based on filling out the teacher evaluation at the end of the course. Attending class faithfully, blogging my little heart out, and facilitating a discussion in class (creatively, with games or youtube clips) will all influence my grade in Desi's class. If I hate the grade I got on an essay, I should consider said failure of an essay as a work in progress, and (within two weeks) rework it.
  4. Speaking of essays, I shouldn't "double dip" or "take an essay that I wrote for someone else and turn that essay in to Desi as if I wrote it just for her" because that's happened to her before and it made her sad. My in-class essays can be considered drafts for future essays. English 101 espouses Pepperdine's Spiritual Mission through it's "no double dipping" policy which expects integrity from it's students.

  5. My final English 101 Portfolio simulates and will closely mirror my Junior Writing Portfolio which I have to complete this semester.
  1. Required textbooks are as follows: Ramage, John D., John C. Bean, and June Johnson. Writing Arguments: A Rhetoric with Readings. 8th Edition

    Graff, Gerald, Cathy Birkenstein, Russel Durst. They Say/I Say: the Moves that Matter in Academic Writing, With Readings

    2 large exam booklets for in-class essays


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