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Sequential Smarts
Tuesday, May 18, 2004
 
Grades are in

If you want to know yours, shoot me an email and I'll break it down for you.
Sunday, May 16, 2004
 
Things That Make Me Feel Like a Failure

Every paper I have read so far contains the following errorsWhat do these three errors have in common? They are the only three errors I have pointed out twice or more in class.

Please don't keep making these mistakes. I don't want future graders to complain about how you learned nothing in English 100.
Friday, May 14, 2004
 
Continuing in this vein of Things Authors Say, Kurt Vonnegut has an odd and brilliant essay in "In These Times" (a left-wing biweekly news magazine), "Cold Turkey." I should point out right away that Vonnegut is a radical left-winger himself, so please don't be alarmed if you are a friend of the president and, in reading the article, find him insulted. For what it's worth, Vonnegut's insults are always soft and fairly peaceful: he seems to find all humans equally inhumane, and he specifically derides the liberal/conservative dichotomy in his essay.
 
Most author interviews tend to be banalities and the sorts of lies that sell books. "I was inspired by the courage of the soldiers of the Vietnam War in depicting my character blah blah blah," etc. There have been a couple of recent interviews--with children's book authors, none the less--that radically challenge this norm.

Most exciting to me is Madeleine L'Engle's hilarious and aggressive interview with (of all places) Newsweek. She's rightly famous for A Wrinkle in Time.

Not quite as snarky but even more impressive is Philip Pullman's televised conversation (here's a transcript) with the Archbishop of Canterbury. His recent trilogy, also for children, is called His Dark Materials, and it has been accused of being anti-Christian, much like Madeleine L'Engle's books and, for the matter, the Harry Potter series.
Friday, May 07, 2004
 
Summer reading

I had offered to present of a list of possibly entertaining reads for those of you who actually practice this ancient pastime. Then Sarah H., who is clearly wonderful, immediately emailed me demanding some ideas. Rather than let her hog all my good advice, I've decided to share these suggestions with all my favorite students.

While the titles link to the appropriate Amazon entries, I hope you will save yourself a few dollars and support your local libraries instead.
Wednesday, May 05, 2004
 
Rewarding Bloggers

One of the carrots I dangled in front of you as a reward for submitting journals online was this nebulous potential for bonus points: to quote the original blogging handout, if, at the end of the semester, I feel you have kept a consistently active, interesting, intelligent blog, I reserve the right to add up to 5 bonus points to your grade. While I reserve the final say in who gets how many bonus points (the American education system is fundamentally dictatorial), I would really appreciate your input.

If you have a minute, shoot me an email praising one of your classmates' blogs. (This might be obvious, but you cannot vote for yourself.) Let me know what you most enjoyed about that blog, and what you learned by reading it. (Naturally, you can use this email as your final journal.)
Tuesday, May 04, 2004
 
Ending the semester

As you think about your final two journals for this class, consider spending at least a little time looking over your work this semester. Compare your first paper to your third; your first journal to your most recent. What specific skills have improved for you as a result of this class? What do you still need to know before you will be comfortable writing your first paper next semester?
Monday, May 03, 2004
 
Missing Journals

There are still depressingly many holes in my grade book, and I'm pretty sure that these particular holes aren't my fault. You should have received an email if I am missing one of your journals (from as early in the semester as February 13th). Here's a reminder of teh missing late/journal policy:
Any journal received even a minute after the start of class time automatically receives a check minus, although I have fudged this for journals that show up three or four minutes late on days when we don't have class. Any journal arriving more than a week late gets an automatic 0. That is bad, but it's not nearly as bad as what happens if I simply don't have a journal from you when I compile grades: you get a 0 and you also lose 1% of your final grade. It is really worth your time to make up missing journals before the end of the semester.


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