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Rebecca Davis

amandafrench.net » Blog Archive » Make "10″ louder, or, the amplification of ... - 0 views

  • Twitter is writing. Hello! MLA members! Twitter is writing!
  • The lesson digital humanists learn, especially by using Twitter, is that scholarly conversations move quickly now, because they can, and one had therefore better be as quick as possible to join in that conversation. Monthly or quarterly journals and annual conferences used to be the way that scholars talked wrote among themselves, but now it’s e-mail listservs (yes, still) and, better, the much more public blogosphere and twittersphere.
Deanya Lattimore

Enhancing the agency of the listener: introducing reception theory in a lecture - Journ... - 0 views

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    Enhancing the agency of the listener: introducing reception theory in a lecture Author: Karen Elaine Smyth a Affiliation: a School of Literature and Creative Writing, University of East Anglia, Norwich, Norfolk, UK DOI: 10.1080/03098770902856660 Publication Frequency: 4 issues per year Published in: journal Journal of Further and Higher Education, Volume 33, Issue 2 May 2009 , pages 131 - 140 Subject: Higher Education; Abstract This article explores a teaching approach that aims to engage learners more fully in the deep learning process that is characterised by the development of critical thinking skills. The concept of critical thinking skills is reconsidered in the context of the need to shift focus away from teaching teachers about learning to teaching students about learning. A cross-disciplinary approach is used, with the educational theory of interactional learning being placed alongside the literary theory of reception study. The result of placing these hitherto unconnected theories side by side is to open up a debate concerning the rhetoric we use when discussing the value of learning, by introducing a new discourse concerning 'dialogue strategies'. This case study of the potentials in using dialogue strategies during a lecture illustrates how students' conceptual sophistication in cognitive thinking is achieved by asking them to scrutinise their own involvement in the learning experience. Keywords: lecturing; cognitive; interactional; reception theory; active; learning
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    Article could be used to more substantially position projected Twitter or live blogging in a classroom environment. Enhancing the agency of the listener: introducing reception theory in a lecture Author: Karen Elaine Smyth a Affiliation: a School of Literature and Creative Writing, University of East Anglia, Norwich, Norfolk, UK DOI: 10.1080/03098770902856660 Publication Frequency: 4 issues per year Published in: journal Journal of Further and Higher Education, Volume 33, Issue 2 May 2009 , pages 131 - 140 Subject: Higher Education; Abstract This article explores a teaching approach that aims to engage learners more fully in the deep learning process that is characterised by the development of critical thinking skills. The concept of critical thinking skills is reconsidered in the context of the need to shift focus away from teaching teachers about learning to teaching students about learning. A cross-disciplinary approach is used, with the educational theory of interactional learning being placed alongside the literary theory of reception study. The result of placing these hitherto unconnected theories side by side is to open up a debate concerning the rhetoric we use when discussing the value of learning, by introducing a new discourse concerning 'dialogue strategies'. This case study of the potentials in using dialogue strategies during a lecture illustrates how students' conceptual sophistication in cognitive thinking is achieved by asking them to scrutinise their own involvement in the learning experience. Keywords: lecturing; cognitive; interactional; reception theory; active; learning
Rebecca Davis

McSweeney's Internet Tendency: Internet-Age Writing Syllabus and Course Overview. - 0 views

  • Writing for Nonreaders in the Postprint Era focuses on the creation of short-form prose that is not intended to be reproduced on pulp fibers.
  • Instant messaging. Twittering. Facebook updates. These 21st-century literary genres are defining a new "Lost Generation" of minimalists
  • Throughout the course, a further paring down of the Hemingway/Stein school of minimalism will be emphasized, limiting the superfluous use of nouns, verbs, adverbs, adjectives, conjunctions, gerunds, and other literary pitfalls.
Deanya Lattimore

Student Avatars in the Flesh - 0 views

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    Panel at the online portion of the Computers and Writing conference.  3 undergrads share their experiences creating SL avatars.  Videos available on this page.
Rebecca Davis

The Wired Campus - Can Twitter Turn Students Into Better Writers? - The Chronicle of Hi... - 0 views

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    another article on writing and twitter
Deanya Lattimore

Hamlet (Facebook News Feed Edition) by Sarah Schmelling - 0 views

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    No visuals, but great; narrative re-write of Hamlet as though it happened on Facebook.
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    one more satire. This would also make a great Twitter assignment.
Devon Adams

Is There an Essay in This Class? Rethinking Writing in General Education and First Year... - 0 views

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    Presentation at cccc10 9:30am March 19, 2010.
Deanya Lattimore

Jockipedia - 0 views

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    Welcome to Jockipedia, the definitive source for Athletes First-Person Communication. 3,523 Athletes.
Deanya Lattimore

Practical Travel - Having a Travel Problem? Share It on Twitter - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    As hotels, airlines and other travel companies line up on Twitter to promote their brands, customers who voice their grievances in the form of tweets are getting surprisingly fast responses for everything from bad airplane seats to poor room service.
Rebecca Davis

Speaking Truth to Papers - Do Your Job Better - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

  • As we talked, and I read through the samples he had, it became apparent to me that Vaughan's real commitment to this mode of responding to papers relates more to the conversational tone of his responses than to the time-saving element of it.
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    Very cool example for giving feedback on papers
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