.Ten More Minutes
In case you didn't notice from reading the assignment sheet for #3, you need to read chapter five for class on Wednesday. Thanks. And thanks to the five students who came to class on Monday!
Just a reminder: Please send me the latest version of your second paper to: craniac@gmail.com
In the subject of the message put: "second paper sock monkey" so I can sort the incoming email. Thanks.
In the subject of the message put: "second paper sock monkey" so I can sort the incoming email. Thanks.
For your third assignment: Angle of Vision
It's based on chapter five, so re-read that chapter in Allyn and Bacon's Guide to Writing if you need a refresher. Specifically, your assignment is to
(1) locate a research site with people in it: work, school, library, car wash, meeting, club, church, health club, and
(2) observe that site for at least a solid hour. You can break that down into several visits of 20 minutes each, or one single visit of 60+ minutes. You need to then
(3) take detailed, descriptive notes of everything you see. It's not uncommon to get 3-5 pages of notes from a single observation. Next, you should
(4) Expand those notes with even more descriptive detail, then
(5) write an essay in which you describe the scenario you witnessed, first with a negative angle of vision, then with a positive angle of vision. Again, refer to chapter five for numerous examples of this. Each description should be at least 250 words long. Finally,
(6) write a conclusion of 400 words or so, describing what you learned from writing from these two perspectives.
PLEASE BRING YOUR OBSERVATION NOTES TO CLASS
It's based on chapter five, so re-read that chapter in Allyn and Bacon's Guide to Writing if you need a refresher. Specifically, your assignment is to
(1) locate a research site with people in it: work, school, library, car wash, meeting, club, church, health club, and
(2) observe that site for at least a solid hour. You can break that down into several visits of 20 minutes each, or one single visit of 60+ minutes. You need to then
(3) take detailed, descriptive notes of everything you see. It's not uncommon to get 3-5 pages of notes from a single observation. Next, you should
(4) Expand those notes with even more descriptive detail, then
(5) write an essay in which you describe the scenario you witnessed, first with a negative angle of vision, then with a positive angle of vision. Again, refer to chapter five for numerous examples of this. Each description should be at least 250 words long. Finally,
(6) write a conclusion of 400 words or so, describing what you learned from writing from these two perspectives.
PLEASE BRING YOUR OBSERVATION NOTES TO CLASS