Difference between revisions of "IW"
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There are minor homework assignments, including Google Forms, which are generally worth 10-20 points; and major multi-paragraph assignments, worth 100 points. | There are minor homework assignments, including Google Forms, which are generally worth 10-20 points; and major multi-paragraph assignments, worth 100 points. | ||
− | ===Minor homework assignments | + | ===Minor homework assignments === |
+ | |||
;Self-intro / survey GF: | ;Self-intro / survey GF: | ||
This is worth 10 points, and you will receive the 10 points simply for filling this out honestly and on time. You will provide some basic info about yourself, and some contact info; then you will answer some survey questions, which are for research purposes, and eventually, to help me improve my courses. | This is worth 10 points, and you will receive the 10 points simply for filling this out honestly and on time. You will provide some basic info about yourself, and some contact info; then you will answer some survey questions, which are for research purposes, and eventually, to help me improve my courses. | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ;Email assignment: | ||
+ | In this assignment, you will email me and answer a few questions. See the section in the book on writing emails. The general format and structure can be more formal, but the contents of the body paragraph can be more semi-formal (including first and second person pronouns). Your subject line should include your name, ID#, and a brief subject. The contents of your email can be 1-3 paragraphs. This will be worth 20 points. Be sure to send your email to at least two of my email accounts simultaneously, to avoid emails getting lost (and that helps my email filters to put it in the right folder). | ||
+ | |||
+ | # Tell me about yourself: where you are from, why you chose your major, and your future plans. | ||
+ | # Tell me about an important experience or event in your life, and how it has affected you - e.g., your personality, your identity, or your future plans. | ||
+ | # Why are you taking this course? What do you hope to get out of it? What do you expect from this course? Or, what would you like to learn, or what would you like to improve in this course? | ||
+ | # Any questions you have for me. | ||
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This form is worth 10 points, and will be graded based on your effort in answering the questions. There are no right or wrong answers; I just want to know about your writing habits. Please fill out the text box below with a few sentences. The terms below are outlined in sections 2.1-2.2 of the book, which may not be available yet. | This form is worth 10 points, and will be graded based on your effort in answering the questions. There are no right or wrong answers; I just want to know about your writing habits. Please fill out the text box below with a few sentences. The terms below are outlined in sections 2.1-2.2 of the book, which may not be available yet. | ||
* [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSegWxzO4EafHbs8WI7g5PHgZpNPQach-BGwTqPNywSvmPhIFw/viewform Prewriting methods GF] | * [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSegWxzO4EafHbs8WI7g5PHgZpNPQach-BGwTqPNywSvmPhIFw/viewform Prewriting methods GF] | ||
+ | |||
;Pre-midterm GF: | ;Pre-midterm GF: | ||
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===¶#1=== | ===¶#1=== | ||
− | For the first | + | For the first multi-paragraph writing assignment, you will discuss some of the following questions - at least two of the following topics. |
− | |||
− | |||
# Tell me about your English learning experiences. What things have you found to be actually helpful and useful in learning English (habits, practices, experiences, reading materials, media materials, etc.)? What things have been unhelpful or adverse? How do you feel toward English? Do you personally like it or find it useful, or do you feel negative about it? What experiences have made you feel that way? How important is English for your future? | # Tell me about your English learning experiences. What things have you found to be actually helpful and useful in learning English (habits, practices, experiences, reading materials, media materials, etc.)? What things have been unhelpful or adverse? How do you feel toward English? Do you personally like it or find it useful, or do you feel negative about it? What experiences have made you feel that way? How important is English for your future? | ||
# Tell me about your experiences learning another language (and various aspects like those mentioned in the previous item). | # Tell me about your experiences learning another language (and various aspects like those mentioned in the previous item). | ||
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# Any questions you have for me. | # Any questions you have for me. | ||
− | + | Due date: TBA. For grading, you can refer to the grading criteria for minor writing assignments in the book. However, this is a semi-formal assignment, so I will not grade too strictly, and will not expect this to be in the very formal style of a college essay. Thus, I will also consider your effort as well, and so for this, the criteria are a rough guideline. | |
− | |||
− | |||
− | Due date: TBA. For grading, you can refer to the grading criteria in the | ||
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# https://www.enwiki.org/w/Chicago_Manual_(parenthetical) | # https://www.enwiki.org/w/Chicago_Manual_(parenthetical) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Final reflective paper=== | ||
+ | In this final written assignment, to be uploaded in the LMS assignment space, you will evaluate your learning and improvement over the semester. Specifically, you can discuss the following – focusing on those that are relevant to you. | ||
+ | # What did you expect to learn from the course, or what improvements in your abilities did you expect? Were these expectations reasonable? | ||
+ | # What were your goals in learning, and how did you try to achieve them? | ||
+ | # What learning strategies and methods did you use? How effective were they? | ||
+ | # How much effort did you put into the course and your own learning? How well did you participate in class. | ||
+ | # For group activities or discussions in-class or outside of class, what role did you play in the groups? How actively did you participate? | ||
+ | # What did you learn? Specifically, what skills did you learn, or what improvements did you experience? | ||
+ | # What changes happened in your attitudes, or how you view yourself, your major, your learning, etc.? | ||
+ | # What difficulties did you experience? | ||
+ | # What kind of help did you seek when you faced difficulties or shortcomings? | ||
+ | # In what specific areas do you think you did not improve or learn, and why? | ||
+ | # In what ways do you still need to improve? How do you plan to continue improving yourself? | ||
+ | # What grade do you think you deserve in the course, and why? | ||
+ | # Do you have any suggestions for modifying or improving this course? | ||
+ | |||
+ | This can be about 1-2 pages long. This assignment will be evaluated on the simpler grading rubric for minor writing assignments above (though this is treated as a major assignment), and criteria like contents, clarity and effort will consider the following: | ||
+ | * The quality and effort in your self-reflection | ||
+ | * The depth and detail of your self-reflection | ||
+ | * The sincerity of your self-reflection | ||
</div> | </div> |
Revision as of 07:18, 16 August 2022
Intermediate Writing (Higher Intermediate / Intermediate 2)
- Pukyong National University (Daeyeon Campus)
- Room: TBA
- Instructional medium: This course will be a live in-person course.
Prof. Kent Lee
- Office: C25-1103
- Office hours: By appointment
Contents
1 Course description
This course is designed mainly for sophomores, juniors and seniors in social science and humanities fields. The goals of the course consist of improving your academic English writing skills, and expressing yourselves better in English. This includes specific skills like:
- Writing different types of paragraphs (definition, classification, narrative, etc.)
- Business, professional, and academic writing
- Prewriting techniques
- Using basic sentence types effectively; this includes common second-language issues such as essay structure, style, wording, and grammar issues.
- Developing main ideas, topic sentences, and body paragraphs
1.1 Grading
Here is the general grading scheme. You can refer to the syllabus and the textbook for more information.
Attendance | 10% |
Homework & minor assignments | 20% |
Midterm paper | 20% |
Self-reflective essays | 20% |
Final paper | 30% |
2 Assignments
There are minor homework assignments, including Google Forms, which are generally worth 10-20 points; and major multi-paragraph assignments, worth 100 points.
2.1 Minor homework assignments
- Self-intro / survey GF
This is worth 10 points, and you will receive the 10 points simply for filling this out honestly and on time. You will provide some basic info about yourself, and some contact info; then you will answer some survey questions, which are for research purposes, and eventually, to help me improve my courses.
- Email assignment
In this assignment, you will email me and answer a few questions. See the section in the book on writing emails. The general format and structure can be more formal, but the contents of the body paragraph can be more semi-formal (including first and second person pronouns). Your subject line should include your name, ID#, and a brief subject. The contents of your email can be 1-3 paragraphs. This will be worth 20 points. Be sure to send your email to at least two of my email accounts simultaneously, to avoid emails getting lost (and that helps my email filters to put it in the right folder).
- Tell me about yourself: where you are from, why you chose your major, and your future plans.
- Tell me about an important experience or event in your life, and how it has affected you - e.g., your personality, your identity, or your future plans.
- Why are you taking this course? What do you hope to get out of it? What do you expect from this course? Or, what would you like to learn, or what would you like to improve in this course?
- Any questions you have for me.
- Prewriting methods GF
This form is worth 10 points, and will be graded based on your effort in answering the questions. There are no right or wrong answers; I just want to know about your writing habits. Please fill out the text box below with a few sentences. The terms below are outlined in sections 2.1-2.2 of the book, which may not be available yet.
- Pre-midterm GF
For this form, you will look at the midterm options on the course website, and tell me which option you want to do. Then you will tell me your rough ideas for how you plan to develop your proposal and your ideas, as best you can. Of course, after submitting this form and while working on the proposal, your ideas might change, and that's okay. This is simply designed to help you get started.
2.2 Multi-paragraph writing assignments
Click on the 'Expand' applet on the right to see or collapse past and future assignments and materials.
3 Evaluating sources
3.1 News sites
There are the top news outlets, sites and publications for general world news, political news, original reporting, investigative journalism, commentary and analysis. Many of these predate the Internet, so here, format includes its original format before going online.
3.1.1 General news
Name / site | Format & scope | Location |
---|---|---|
ABC News (US) | Traditional nightly TV news | US |
ABC News (Australia) | Traditional TV news | Australia |
Al Jazeera | TV news | Qatar |
The Associated Press | Wire service | US |
The Atlantic | Magazine; commentary & analysis of news, culture and society | US |
BBC News | Traditional TV news | UK |
CBS News | Traditional TV news | US |
CNN | TV news; general news | US |
Deutsche Welle | Radio & TV news / TV news | Germany |
Foreign Affairs | Magazine; in-depth analysis of global affairs | US (published by a famous thinktank, the Council on Foreign Relations) |
The Globe and Mail | Newspaper | Canada |
The Guardian | Newspaper | UK |
The Hill | US political news & commentary | US |
Huffingtonpost | Magazine format; commentary and analysis of US & international news, politics, society, and culture | US |
NBC News | Traditional TV news | US |
The New Yorker | Magazine; commentary & analysis of news, culture and society | US |
National Public Radio | Radio news | US |
New York Times | Newspaper | US |
Reuters | Wire service | Germany |
Politico | US political news & commentary | US |
South China Morning Post | Newspaper | Hong Kong |
Time magazine | Magazine | US |
The Times of India | Newspaper | India |
The Wall Street Journal | Newspaper; US & international financial & general news | US |
The Washington Post | Newspaper | US |
The following are foreign language news sources from around the world.
- Le Monde (France]
- Sverige Tillskott (Sweden)
- El País (Spain)
- Frankfurter Allgemeine (Germany)
- CNTV (China)
- Deutsche Welle (Germany)
- Der Spiegel (Germany)
- Yomiuri (Japan)
- RT (Russia)
- France24 (France)
- Niews (Netherlands)
- De Telegraaf (Netherlands)
The following are news aggregators, which do not do original reporting, but merely aggregate or collect trending stories from many news outlets.
The following provide commentary and analysis from a specific political perspective. They are not intended as general news sources, but as sources of (generally) intelligent political commentary.
- The New Republic (US; liberal)
- The Nation (US; liberal)
- National Review (US; conservative)
- The Weekly Standard (US; conservative)
3.1.2 Business & financial news
Name / site | Format & scope | Location |
---|---|---|
Bloomberg | TV news | US |
Business Insider | Magazine | US |
Business Standard | Newspaper | India |
CNBC | TV news | US |
The Economist | Magazine | US |
The Financial Times | Newspaper | UK |
Forbes | Magazine | US |
Fortune | Magazine | US |
Market Watch | Magazine | US |
New York Times (business section) | Newspaper | US |
The Wall Street Journal | Newspaper | US |
3.1.3 Technology & IT news
3.1.4 Science news
3.1.5 Suggested journals & professional publications
Here are some professional trade journals, and some easier academic journals, that you might like to look at to find articles for the genre analysis assignment.
3.1.5.1 Professional trade journals
- The Chronicle of Higher Education https://www.chronicle.com
- Inside Higher Ed http://www.insidehighered.com
- Times Higher Education https://www.timeshighereducation.com/
- Observer https://www.psychologicalscience.org/observer (psychology)
- Food Technology http://www.ift.org/food-technology.aspx
- World Landscape Architecture https://worldlandscapearchitect.com/
- Psychology Today https://www.psychologytoday.com
- Harvard Business Review http://www.hbr.org
- Other trade magazines
- Wikipedia list of trade magazines in different fields: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_trade_magazines
3.1.5.2 Academic journals
- International journals
- English Today https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/english-today (applied linguistics, language education)
- Domestic journals from Korea
- English Teaching
- Journal of Asia TEFL
- Korean Journal of Applied Linguistics
- Modern English Education
- Korea TESOL Journal
4 Paraphrasing and summarizing
Sample revision essays from an assignment may appear here.
5 Reference materials
5.1 Citation systems
The following are some commonly used citation systems; you can use any one of these for your papers in this course.
- See also this general introduction to citing and referencing sources.
- Brief Prezi on citing & referencing sources.
Style | Typical field |
---|---|
* Chicago Manual, short & long footnote styles | humanities (This is a more semi-formal citation style; end references are still required with footnotes) |
* Chicago Manual (parenthetical) | humanities (This is a more formal style with Author+Year in parenthetical in-text citations) humanities |
* Chicago Manual (all versions) | complete guide to all versions |
If you have a lot of media sources, you might find Chicago or MLA easier to use.
6 Discourse & style issues
Read the relevant course packet chapters on coherence / transitionals, cohesion, reporting verbs, and word choice. We may go through some of this quickly in class, as this is rather dry. Please look at the examples and bring your questions, as you may or may not understand why some examples are given, or are flagged as problematic.
To revise and improve your midterm paper, first look at these more general guides to style and wording. | Then look at these more specific topics.
|
- ↑ Doznees of scholarships have been awarded by this foundation to students at Hogwarts, Gotham City University, Metropolis University, Monsters University, Mars University, Wossamotta University, and Starfleet Academy.