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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Paul Beaufait

Paul Beaufait

APA Style Blog: How Do You Cite an E-Book (e.g., Kindle Book)? - 0 views

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    "This post shows how to cite any e-book in APA Style" (Lee, 2011.06.03, ¶1 [retrieved 2011.06.09]).
Paul Beaufait

Always Learning: Business Writing Tips - Why Format Is Important With E-Mail - 0 views

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    Six major points "to keep in mind when formatting e-mail to make it as readable as possible" (para. 4).
Paul Beaufait

Dead Poets Society (1989) - Plot Summary - 0 views

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    Internet Movie Database plot summary by Liz Jordan
Paul Beaufait

Death to high school English - Education - Salon.com - 0 views

  • As for the students who did make it to more accelerated English courses,
  • they have bigger fish to fry. They have professors in every area and every discipline telling them they're going to fail if they don't learn how to write a comprehensible, grammatical and at least marginally organized academic essay.
  • Sometimes we do things not because they're fun but because they're important.
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    Brooks, Kim. (2011). Death to high school English. Salon: Life: Topic: Education, 2011.05.10. Retrieved May 17, 2011.
Paul Beaufait

LinkWithin - Related Posts with Thumbnails - 0 views

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    "LinkWithin is a blog widget that appears under each post, linking to related stories from your blog archive" (Show Related Stories Under Each Post, para. 1, 2011.05.14).
Paul Beaufait

Purdue OWL [Online Writing Lab] Search Page - 0 views

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    "The Purdue OWL offers global support through online reference materials and services" (Mission, ¶1, 2011.05.10).
Paul Beaufait

Basic Research and Writing: Earthquake-tsunami-nuclear crisis - 0 views

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    Resource "links for students to use" as they move from traditional reading, to critical reading, and on to critical literacy
Paul Beaufait

Free online reading materials & resources - 0 views

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    Catalog of links to online reading collections including Rob Waring's extensive reading links and the Project Gutenberg libraray
Paul Beaufait

Nellie's resources for students - how to's - 0 views

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    Resources in this directory include: + How to use graphic organizers,  + How to write an essay, and  + How to summarize.
Paul Beaufait

Collablogatorium: 10 Things You Should Know About Blogging - 0 views

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    " ... [T]en things I've learned and wished all bloggers knew about blogging" (Carla Arena, 2011.01.16, retrieved 2011.04.10).
Paul Beaufait

Life Feast: 10 sites I plan to use in 2011 - 0 views

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    List of sites, some still in beta, for use by students and teachers.
Paul Beaufait

APA Style Blog: Using Serial Commas - 1 views

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    Concise explanation of how and why to use serial commas
Paul Beaufait

What's New?: Another transition for this blog - 1 views

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    Public discussion of plans for collective blog
Paul Beaufait

iTunes Movie Trailers - 0 views

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    Movie trailers you can use for listening practice - Thanks to Rickla for pointing them out.
Paul Beaufait

SLWIS Newsletter - March 2011: Introducing argumentative writing though dialogue and We... - 1 views

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    "In this article, I first explore the pedagogical basis for dialogue writing and then explain the process for creating online dialogues" (¶1, retrieved 2011.03.30).
Paul Beaufait

Always Learning - 0 views

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    A blog focusing on Business Writing Tips since Dec. 2010
Paul Beaufait

Always Learning: Business Writing Tips - Writing Effective E-Mail - Clarity and Focus - 0 views

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    Ten rules for writing effective mail messages that the Writing Center, Inc., will explore in coming weeks.
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.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • 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

BBC - CBeebies - Story Time: Watch and read along to stories featuring all your favouri... - 0 views

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    Site offering activities and stories in various thematic groups: Animals and Nature, Everyday Life, Seasonal, Fairy Tales, Poems and Rhymes, World Stories, and Colour in Stories (2011.03.15)
Paul Beaufait

Online Audio Stories - 0 views

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    "Free Downloadable Audio Books" (2011.03.15)
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