Friday, April 20, 2012

Blog Entry Four: The Last One!

Hello Class,

Here is the last blog! Whew! You can post this by the last day of the course. I want you to take the time to do a little reflection on this, and, of course, this is valuable material for your portfolio.

Here is the blog assignment. Make sure that you only pick one of these questions or think of one of your own. It will be a really scattered entry if you attempt to answer all ten of these very different questions.



Blog Entry Four: The Last One!
·         Final Reflections on the Process of Research: You will discuss what you have learned about the process of research for life and for this class.  I am interested in the quality of the content of this assignment and how it shows evidence of your progression in the research process.  The minimum length for this part of the research journal is one page, formatted appropriately (cite a source if you use one and create a works cited entry for that source if you used one).  I have listed some suggestions for reflective topics, and you can pick one of these topics if you would like.  Of course, you know more about you than I do, so topics and entries that you create yourself will be more meaningful to the expression of your experience. Be sure to include the necessary detail to make this journal engaging and reflective. Some great topic ideas for this response would be:
1.      Discuss what you already knew about research from previous experience before beginning English 1102 and how you feel that your knowledge of research has changed.
2.      Discuss the small successes and dead ends you faced in the process of researching for class, and detail how you handled this roller coaster ride. How were both the disappointments and successes both learning experiences?
3.      Discuss why research is important to human beings. Give specific examples.
4.      Explain why we use citations and give credit for intellectual work as academic writers. Are there ways of giving credit for ideas that you see every day in non-academic writing? Do you think that this practice is a social one or a legal one? Why? Feel free to use your originality journal to help you with this one.
5.      Examine why we discriminate between popular sources of knowledge (fashion magazine, .com sites, IMDB, Wikipedia, popular music, etc.) and academic, peer-reviewed sources of knowledge. Do you think that distinction is valid? Why?
6.      Analyze the difference of process between conducting everyday research like using a phone book or scanning the sales advertisements and concentrated, academic research. Why are these two activities necessary to be a literate citizen and a strong writer? Feel free to revise or expand upon your journal entry for this entry (an unrevised copy of the previous journal is not acceptable for this assignment, so be sure that you are ready to revise if you take this route).
7.      Project how you will apply your knowledge of research to subjects beyond this class.
8.      Explore how one source (you can use more than one for this, but be sure to keep this journal narrow enough to be relevant and not so general that it loses its power) you found truly changed your views on your inquiry project.
9.      Show how one source educated you about bias through example (using inadequate sources or misinterpreting sources to push a point). You can use the STEM versus liberal arts degrees debate that we explored in class to help you with this if you feel it is relevant. Also, please consider how not clearly seeing the other side of your issue could also make writing unnecessarily biased.  Think about what it means to be both a fair and a persuasive writer.
10.   Illustrate how research has made you a stronger student. Use specific examples for this blog from class (you can feel free to use example from other classes where you are researching topics). I am looking for real reflection not flaky, generalized, non-specific writing. While this looks relatively simple, it is deeper question that it seems.


1 comment:

  1. Ram Jawahar
    4/25/2012
    Journal 4: Last One
    Discuss what you already knew about research from previous experience before beginning English 1102 and how you feel that your knowledge of research has changed.
    I have done many research projects in high school and even last year (not for English) in which I had to use a variety of sources to integrate and enhance the strength of the paper. I learned how to search for sources using the library resource and various journals and books but I really didn’t learn how to integrate them into my paper. I would most likely pick out some fact or statistic so I didn’t have to expand and elaborate on that but never really learned how to take someone else’s view point and use it to elaborate the paper better.
    I feel like my understanding of gathering resources as well as the ability to use them to enhance the meaning and effectiveness of my paper has grown tremendously. I have learned how to use Boolean operators and other methods of finding exactly the source that I need for my paper. I have talked the librarians and found out other methods to use to find different sources. I found that you can use the key words underneath the entry to more effectively search the system to find sources that will benefit your topic. I learned how to use quotations and paraphrase quotes into your paper such as the exercise that we did with the Corleone Chronicles. One very important thing that I will always remember is how important it is to find your sources first before you start writing because it will be so much simpler to form an opinion while gaining much knowledge about your topic.

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