Friday, August 29, 2008

Reflections

Today we will respond to and discuss your reflective journals.


You will print out and pass your response to two other students. They will respond to your selection.

Tuesday: Students will review the 5 paragraph essay format.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Writing Sample





Artist:


Edvard Munch





Reflective writing


The need to think reflectively improves your ability to read critically and analyse ideas presented in class as well as daily experiences. As you write, you clarify your own understanding. The process of thinking and writing reflectively helps you to lay philosophical foundations all of your creative work.

Thinking reflectively helps you:

understand the concept of reflective writing
recognise the benefits of reflecting on your developing an idea or philosophy
ASSIGNMENT: Study the painting below. Place yourself in the composition and experience the message that the artist, Edvard Munch, is attempting to convey. If you are the person Munch is painting, what have you just experienced? Why are you here? What is Edvard Munch's message? What do you see? Incorporate the following concepts into your essay:

1. Your emotional reaction

2. What emotion is being expressed?

3. How do the colors influence the emotional impact? (Comment on the use of color, direction, brushstrokes used)

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Introduction

Intro to Advanced Composition [08/27/08]
WELCOME TO ADVANCED COMPOSITION

I. Course Title: Advanced Composition

II. Description: Instruction and practice in writing expository prose. Students use word-processing software to write and revise essays.

III. Purpose of Course: The course is designed to help students improve their writing processes, to improve students’ critical thinking skills, to increase the organizational effectiveness of students’ writing, and to develop students’ awareness of the importance of context in writing.

IV. Course Objectives: Advanced Comp. focuses much attention on helping students learn and foster the process of writing for academia. The course goals include helping students develop


Critical thinking skills, as reflected in substantive discussion of reading and writing;
An awareness of audience and purpose in their writing and in the writing of others;
Effective organization and idea development skills;
Appropriate style, diction, and voice in their writing;
Skillful argumentation, including use of detail and supporting evidence;
The ability to thoughtfully evaluate and productively revise their own work;
The ability to judiciously read and analyze works by professional writers and peers, and;
The ability to edit their own writing for usage, mechanics, and academic conventions.

V. Content Outline: The course attempts to meet the above objectives by helping students do the following, arranged in order of minimum competence to full competence:


1. Know the appropriate usage, mechanics, voice, and style to use in a given text.
2. Comprehend the benefits of adopting a recursive writing process and thereby of benefiting from multiple revisions.
3. Apply the evaluative strategies acquired through class discussion of readings to their own writing and to the texts they will incorporate as support for their writing.
4. Analyze the rhetorical strategies used by other writers in class readings and in the writing of other students.
5. Evaluate the effectiveness of an argument and reflect that new found knowledge in effective arguments written by the student.
6. Writing assignments that move sequentially toward more sophisticated, rhetorically challenging requirements, including Narrative, Analytical, and Argumentative Writing.


Assessment:
Daily Work/ Participation/ Homework

Quizzes/Reading Checks

Timed writings

Assignments and Projects

Presentations