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Paul Beaufait

This Side of the Mirror » Blog Archive » Why the Five Paragraph Essay is Maki... - 0 views

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    Janet Lee proposes five options to consider in case five paragraph essays are what you're calling on students to produce. 
Paul Beaufait

One-Click Lorem Ipsum Generator - 0 views

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    Generates paragraphs, words, and sentences, with optional paragraph, italic, and bold tags
Paul Beaufait

Always Learning: Business Writing Tips - Writing Effective E-Mail - Paragraphing - 0 views

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    Provides rationales and tips for paragraph formation in mail messages to make them reader-friendly
Paul Beaufait

How to Write a Book Review, by Mark Nichol - 0 views

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    "A book review summarizes the book's content, examines the author's intent in writing it, and expresses the reviewer's opinion about to what extent the author succeeded in conveying the intent or communicating a message. Just like any other piece of writing, a book review requires a lead paragraph that will attract the reader's attention..." (para. 4-5).
Paul Beaufait

Paragraphs | Explorations of Style - 0 views

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    2nd of five post in a series about revising academic writing
Paul Beaufait

speech accent archive - 1 views

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    "The speech accent archive is established to uniformly exhibit a large set of speech accents from a variety of language backgrounds. Native and non-native speakers of English all read the same English paragraph and are carefully recorded. The archive is constructed as a teaching tool and as a research tool. It is meant to be used by linguists as well as other people who simply wish to listen to and compare the accents of different English speakers" (About page, ¶2, 2012.04.10).
Paul Beaufait

SLWIS Newsletter - March 2011 - 0 views

  • several problems are inherent in machine scoring. First, though Ferris (2003) claimed that students will improve over time if they are given appropriate error correction and that students use teacher-generated feedback to revise things other than surface errors, students rarely use programs like MY Access! to revise anything other than surface errors (Warschauer & Grimes, 2008); paragraph elements, information structure, and register-specific stylistics are largely ignored. Second, although teachers can create their own prompts for use with the program (more than 900 prompts are built into MY Access! to which students can write and receive instantaneous feedback.), MY Access! will score only those prompts included in the program. Third, regarding essay length, in many cases, MY Access! seems to reward longer essays with higher scores; consequently, it appears that MY Access! assumes that length is a proxy for fluency.
  • Overall, students’ opinions regarding MY Access! were mixed; students found useful aspects as well as aspects they termed less helpful.
  • Some students found working with the program very helpful in discipline, encouraging multiple revision. Others liked working with the many tools provided, finding them very helpful in the revision process. On the other hand, some students, lacking basic computer skills, found the program stressful and unusable. Others were discouraged by the seeming overabundance of feedback; in some cases, writers found it overwhelming, so they tended to disregard it. Our most disheartening finding: When some of the students were unhappy with their scores, they found ways to raise them by simply inserting unrelated text to their essays.
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  • They appreciated the help MY Access! offered in finding grammar errors, but they were not always sure how to fix them. Further, the program offered no positive comments about what students were doing well, which could negatively impact student motivation. In addition, after working on a prompt once or twice, many became bored and wanted to switch to another prompt. Many of the student writers used MY Access! for surface editing only and rarely used it for revision. In general, students in this study did not use features in MY Access! (e.g. My Portfolio, My Editor), possibly because their teachers did not explicitly assign them.
  • Locally controlled assessment is important; when assessments are created from within, they are specific to one context―they are developed with a very specific group of students in mind, considering what those students have learned in their classes and what they are expected to be able to do as a result of what they have learned in that context. Standardized tools such as the many machine-grading programs available today cannot address this specificity.
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    "Though Crusan (2010), Ericsson and Haswell (2006), and Shermis and Burstein (2003) offered a more thorough treatment of machine scoring in general, in this article, I concentrate on one program―MY Access! (Vantage Learning, 2007)―briefly describing it and discussing a small study conducted in a graduate writing assessment seminar at a midsize Midwestern university in which graduate students examined second language writers' attitudes about using the program as a feedback and assessment tool for their writing in a sheltered ESL writing class" (¶2).
Paul Beaufait

Transitions | Explorations of Style - 0 views

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    Third of five key strategies for revising academic writing
Paul Beaufait

10 Tips For Making Your Blog Posts Easier To Read - The Edublogger - 0 views

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    Morris has compiled "ten tips for making your blog posts easier to read" (¶6).
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