ENGL 505A
Professor Samantha Blackmon
Office: 302B Heavilon Hall
Phone:(765) 494-3742
Office Hours: 10:30-11:30 a.m. TH & 2:30-3:30 F
Email: blackmos@purdue.edu
This is a practicum in the teaching of writing. Most of our time together will be spent discussing materials that you will be teaching, talking about student papers, and working on evaluating student writing. In addition we will be reading pedagogical essays. It is important that you come prepared so that we can have a lively and useful discussion. Near the end of the semester we will also spend time preparing for teaching English 106. This practicum is meant to be helpful to you and I will try to address all of your questions and concerns, so you will need to voice any concerns that you have during our meeting times so that everyone can benefit.
Every week you will be expected to bring the proposed plans for the next week's classes to our mentor group meetings for discussion and suggestions.
We will have alternating week's of theory and practice discussion. We will keep a journal of our teaching experience for discussion on practice weeks. These journals will be kept electronically. We will discuss this in more detail in class.
I will visit your classes once (or twice) during the semester after you have had time to get to know your students and establish the mood of the class. I will schedule these visits with you in advance. They will never be unannounced and a few days before the scheduled visit I will ask that you give me a written description of what you will be doing in class on the day of my visit. After the visit we will meet and discuss how the class went.
I also want you to visit each other’s classes. You should sit in on a minimum of three classes each semester. You will find it helpful to see how other people cover similar material and how other students react to the material. After the visit I suggest that you get together with the other instructor and discuss what went on during the class. The person being visited should see this as an opportunity to get informal feedback; the person doing the visiting should be looking for reflections of his or her own teaching. I suggest that you start these visit early in the semester and that you make your students aware of the fact that other instructors will occasionally sit in on the class so that there is as little disruption as possible.
You are also expected to maintain a teaching journal where you will keep notes of what you have done in class, how successful it was, and what (specifically) you would change about that week's lesson plan if you could. Around mid-term, I’ll give you an opportunity to do both self- and course-evaluations. At the end of the semester there will be three additional kinds of evaluation. Your students will have an opportunity to evaluate the course and your teaching using specially designed forms. These forms include a computer-based evaluation and an open ended one. You’ll also receive a written evaluation of your work from me. The third evaluation will be yours of this practicum and of me as instructor. While student evaluations are often unreliable and erratic, you’ll find that patterns of response from students may offer you tips about making changes in your teaching. Most research on student evaluations suggests that there is a direct correlation between student evaluations and the grade they expect to receive in the class.
This is a pass/fail course that will usually meet twice a week. I order to receive a grade of pass, students must complete all assignments and attend class regularly. In any case, missing more that three class sessions will constitute failure. It is the sole responsibility of the student to contact group members for missed notes, assignments, etc.
And always remember that my door is always open and no problem is too small to bring to me if you consider it a problem at all.
The second semester of this practicum will follow the same schedule as the first and will include exercises that are reflexive of your teaching practices. These exercises along with the teaching evaluations that were done by your instructor and classmates, and other materials will be collected in the form of a teaching portfolio which will be submitted at the end of the semester.
RESOURCE LINKS FOR HELP WITH COMPUTER QUESTIONS:
Your Purdue ITaP Account information page (available at http://www.itap.purdue.edu/connections)
ITaP Lab Information page (available at http://www.itap.purdue.edu/tlt/lab/about.cfm)
Directory Services (available at http://www.itap.purdue.edu/directory)
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Date |
Reading |
Assignment |
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Week 1
August 20, 2007 |
T:
Tech Mentoring
TH: Week in
Review |
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Week 2
August 27, 2007 |
T: No Class: P.C. Meeting
TH: Praxis Discussion |
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Week 3
September 3, 2007 |
T: Tech Mentoring
TH: Rose (TCBR) |
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Week 4
September 10, 2007 |
T: Tech Mentoring
TH: Booth (TCBR) |
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Week 5
September 17, 2007 |
T: Tech Mentoring
TH: Sommers (TCBR) |
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Week 6
September 24, 2007 |
T: Tech Mentoring
TH: No Class
Teaching
Observations |
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Week 7
October 1, 2007 |
T: Tech Mentoring
One-on-One
Meetings |
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Week 8
October 8, 2007 (M&T off) |
T: No Class- Oct. Break
TH: Showcase Mentoring HEAV 125 |
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Week 9
October 15, 2007 |
T: Harassment, October 16, 9:00-10:20, BCHM 105 (Biochemistry Hall, behind Lilly)
TH: Connors (TCBR) |
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Week 10
October 22, 2007 |
T: No Class: P.C. Meeting
TH:
Christensen (TCBR) |
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Week 11
October 29, 2007 |
Teaching
Observations |
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Week 12
November 5, 2007 |
T: Tech Mentoring
TH: CAPS STEW 314 |
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Week 13
November 12, 2007 |
T: Tech Mentoring
One-on-One
Meetings |
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Week 14
November 19, 2007 (TG) |
T: Tech Mentoring
TH: Thanksgiving: No Class |
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Week 15
November 26, 2007 |
T:
Syllabus Prep
TH: Syllabus Prep |
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Week 16
December 3, 2007 |
T:
Syllabus Prep
TH: Syllabus Prep |
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This section of the course syllabus contains support materials for teaching ENGL 106.
To get started with ENGL 420Y, you'll need to complete a few steps, which include
Registering for the course website
To get started with ENGL 420Y, you'll also need to complete this second step:
Logging in for the first time
To get started with ENGL 420Y, you'll also need to complete this third step, which will take a bit more time than the previous two.
Editing your account for the first time
Once you've logged in successfully, you need to edit your account and provide some additional information about yourself.


The following steps ask you to complete information for your profile. This will enable the instructor and fellow students to learn a little more about you and help the instructor tailor this class to your background and goals, as well as arrange collaborative projects.

That's it! You have completed all the steps of the Getting Started process. If you ever need to change any of the information, you can always edit these pages again.
If you have any trouble along the way, please be sure to let your instructor know.
doo doo doo doo doo Inspector Gadget
Words
Some of you may be in search of an avatar or image to use in the profile that you created for yourself when you registered. If so, here are some suggestions:
An avatar is just an image that "stands-in" for your picture and can be an object, artwork, a photo, or something else that might convey some aspect of your identity, personality, or interests. So, for example, someone interested in biking might use an image of a bike as an avatar rather than a personal picture. The image works best if it's in jpg, gif, or png format, and the dimensions should be (about) 85x85 so that it displays correctly (and doesn't get squished when displayed, for example).
To find an existing avatar to use for free, you could look at a site like these. If you have a Yahoo! ID (free to get, if not), you can get some nice ones:
or try
You could also take an existing image of yourself and then create a picture by cropping out the part you don't want. If you haven't used an image editing program before, that can be a bit tricky. But if you have, just use the crop tool to draw a box around the part of the image you want to use, crop it, and then resize it so that it's about 85x85 pixels.
If you have a larger photo and would like help to make it into an avatar, send it to your instructor as an email attachment. Your instructor can help you from there.
For this class, you'll have to learn at least one HTML tag, the one for making hyperlinks.
It's easy to learn. Check it out:

Your link will now show up in your test.
Here is how you make links in traditional HTML coding. Still easy, but it doesn't show up with our rich-text settings and input format.
<a href=""></a>
is the tag itself without any information in it. Within the quotes, you'll put the url, or web address, for the site which you want to link to. In between the ><, you'll put the text you want displayed on the screen.
For example, the url for slashdot is http://slashdot.org/. And if you want to make the word Slashdot a link in a sentence to the website in a blog post, type in,
<a href="http://slashdot.org/">Slashdot</a> is a well known community blog site.
To get
Slashdot is a well known community blog site.
HTML is picky and it's easy to make a careless mistake. Don't include any extra spaces in the HTML tag. Make sure that you include "http://" as a part of your web address. In fact, one of the easiest ways to make sure that you get the URL correct is to copy and paste it from the address bar of a browser window currently displaying the page.
See? Not too difficult. But there's one more thing . . . .
Avoid merely posting the URL as a link:
Notice how this doesn't convey much information. Better to have put the page title (often found either on the page or in the window bar at the top) or link to part of your text (think of the examples in this site). At the same time, really long URL's won't word wrap at the end of a line. They may cause problems with the way that text is displayed on web pages.
For review, check out Chapter 30 in The Thomson Handbook, "The Basics of HTML Coding" (p. 664).
Portable Document Format (PDF) is a file format created by Adobe Acrobat and useful for sharing printer ready versions of documents. Unlike when files are shared between different productivity applications (i.e., word processing, spreadsheet) or different versions of the same productivity software, the same layout and typographic styles are maintained regardless of the computer environment. What the author sees when creating a PDF is exactly what the receiver of the file sees and can print out on their computer. Consequently, PDFs are particularly useful for sending resumes, cover letters, and other business documents where layout and presentation is critica. Writers want all of the effort they put into formatting professional-looking documents to be maintained.
PDFs are typically viewed using Adobe Reader (which is free to download). However, Adobe Reader will not produce PDFs. As you will soon be submitting drafts of cover letters, resumes, and other documents in PDF format, make sure that you can successfully generate a PDF using one of the following means:
Please see the attached.
Feedback welcomed.
Cris.
I plan to add some explanation for each requirement over the weekend.
Grading rubric ENG 106
Posting comments, as you will soon see, is easier than creating and sending an email.
If you don't see an add new comment link, you are most likely not logged in.
Note: You can use the Comment viewing options to change the way that comments are displayed on the page. Experiment with this feature and see which configuration works best for you.
Posting to your individual weblog is a little more complex than posting a comment, but after a couple of times, you'll find it as easy as email.
Notes:
ENGL 106 -- RUBRIC
Name: ________________________ Teacher: McIntosh
Title: _________________________ Date Submitted: ______________
RHETORIC & DESIGN (_____ out of 30)
AUDIENCE _____________________________________________________________________
PURPOSE ______________________________________________________________________
CONTEXT ______________________________________________________________________
GENRE/MODE __________________________________________________________________
CRITICAL INQUIRY (_____ out of 25)
RESEARCH/KNOWLEDGE __________________________________________________________
ANALYSIS ______________________________________________________________________
SELF-DISCOVERY ________________________________________________________________
ORGANIZATION (_____ out of 25)
THESIS ________________________________________________________________________
STRUCTURE ____________________________________________________________________
SUPPORT ______________________________________________________________________
GRAMMAR & MECHANICS (_____ out of 15)
_____________________________________________________________________________________
FORMAT (_____ out of 5) ______________________________________________________________
TOTAL __________
For the first day of class, you'll want to explore some of the features of the site. This document gives an overview of a few features you might want to take a look at that will help you to navigate the site.
In the header visible at the top of every page, you'll find one row of links:

Once you've logged in to the site, directly beneath the header on the left, you'll find the main navigation block, accessible from every page:
The navigation block is your gateway to many areas of the site useful for creating and viewing content and managing your work. For example,
All of our course materials on the site are integrated into the course guide:
The course guide is a hypertext with many levels of pages.
As I mentioned in class, I changed my Portrait Playlist assignment into a media portrait assignment, so here's my rubric for that! 
Here's my adaption of the portrait playlist assignment...
Here's my Rubric!
It's general but that was the idea.
Rubric
Posting comments and replies to the reading responses and drafts of others will be a primary means of class interaction and discussion. Instructors may promote blog posts to the front page of the course website. There, everyone will respond to and discuss the readings, drafts, or other work posted to our course website. The course description explains the purpose of this coursework:
All comments and replies to another's blog post should follow effective rhetorical strategies for networking with others on the Web. (Readings from the course text provide guidelines to follow.)
When commenting and replying to blog posts on the course's front page, you are required to
You should also
For those of you wishing to do more than the minimum requirements of the course, you might visit the class website additional times per week and post new comments and/or replies to any of the blog posts.
You'll do a lot of the writing for this class in your individual weblog space on the course website. You can access your weblog via your my account page.
One way to think of a weblog or blog is as a journal. However, unlike a journal that you might keep at home (as well as most if not all of the writing you have done in school before), your blog space is public. Your fellow class members will be invited to read your blog. Classmates will respond to your posts with comments and replies. Group members will review notes you take when doing research. And, of course, since it's on the Internet, other Web readers may encounter your writing and take a look at what you have to say.
There are many uses for weblogs, but we'll only use them for a few things here. During this class, you'll be asked to use your course weblog to
In addition to the individual weblog space that everyone has, the home page of our course website is a community blog space where anyone can post. While most of your blog writing will be posted to your individual weblog, we'll use the home page as a place to promote discussion among all class members. For example,
Good Blogging Practices
To Learn More
Each week, you will be responsible for creating a reading response. Each reading response should be specifically focused on the reading and the prompt provided on the calendar, clearly indicate that you have read and thought seriously about the reading, and be sufficiently developed. Reading responses should be 300 words or longer. Post your reading response as a blog entry and tag it "Reading Response" or use the tag provided in the prompt itself.
Sometimes, you and each of your group members will be assigned to post your reading response to the course home page by submitting a story. The posts on the course home page will then be the focus of full class discussion. Selected reading responses will also be promoted to the front page for more lively community discussion.
In composing your reading response you should:
This is my rubric and guidelines for student-led discussion, which accounts for 50% of my students' discussion grade for the class.
I'm not really sure where all of these came from -- some I made-up, some I stole from books or websites (OWL?) -- but please feel free to use or abuse at your leisure.
Sorry for the test all, but I like to see how I'll screw things up before I actually try and do it for real.