Showing posts with label classes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label classes. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Please Read and Follow Instructions


Dead week almost killed me. Really. Besides the mountains of grading, I got to be the recipient of all that student wrath--and that's always much harder on me than the actual grading.

Dead week's about the time the students start to realize the ramifications (like, "But I'll lose my scholarship!" or "But I'll be kicked off the team!" or "But Mom & Dad will kill me!") of all those poor decisions they've been making all semester (like skipping class, not reading assigned texts, and failing to turn things in). And it's a whole lot easier to be angry at your professor than it is to admit that you're the cause of your own problems.


In Comp classes, the most important paper is usually the last one--the dreaded research paper. There are, of course, those nasty plagiarism issues. They are never fun to deal with. I usually hear "But I didn't know!"s, no matter how much I explain plagiarism in class, and I often see tears. Sometimes there are protests of innocence, even with the proof staring them in the face.


But the issue that gets me the most is students' refusal to read and follow directions. Now, because of past experience, both my syllabus and my Essay Assignment Sheets look surprisingly like legal documents. They include things like:


--Two scholarly sources are required. Failure to cite two scholarly sources will result in a grade of zero and your paper will not be graded.


--A Works Cited page is required. Failure to submit a Works Cited page will result in a grade of zero and your paper will not be graded.


--Photocopies of all sources with the borrowed information highlighted is required. Papers submitted without highlighted photocopies will receive a grade of zero and will not be graded.


--A plagairized paper will receive a grade of zero, with no opportunity to redo the essay.


--Your essay must be at least X# of pages long. If your paper is not a full X# of pages, it will receive a zero and your paper will not be graded.


You get the picture? OK.


So, not only do I spell out the requirements in detail, I also read the assignment out loud, explaining each requirement. I remind them during the process. THEN, on the last day of class before they submit their papers, I give them a checklist for editing and revision. Along with things like "Does your paper have a title? _____", I have questions like "Is your paper a full X pages long? _____ "and "Do you have a Works Cited page? _____" On the list is also "Have you included copies of your sources? _____ Remember, failure to submit copies of your sources will result in a failing grade." Notice the handy spot provided for their yes or no answers.


Elementary, my dear Watson. Or so you'd think.


But, no! I get papers that are half a page too short. I get papers with one source. I get papers turned in without photocopies of sources. And what grade do these papers get? Say it with me class: "Zero!" And to make matters worse, usually these students have written "yes" in every blank of that handy-dandy checklist that I've provided.


Now, here comes the worst part. Do you know whose fault those zeroes are? Are they the fault of those students who didn't read directions? Or who didn't listen in class? Or who assumed I didn't mean what I wrote and said? No! Of course not! It's MY fault. So students get angry and shout "Stupid class!" or slam doors or throw their papers all over the hall. One student told me that I just wasn't merciful.


Another student who hasn't managed to follow a direction all year told me she plans to major in nursing. I'm frightened.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Face-off

Isn't this an interesting picture? As soon as I saw it, I knew I'd have to post it here. In my Honors Human Situations class this semester, one of the things we've been talking about is the question/problem of the Self and how it's expressed through art. I wish I'd found this picture before I introduced that unit.



Friday, March 26, 2010

Too Much Sex


Title get your attention?

On Tuesday of this week, I taught The Thousand and One Nights in my world lit class. As the students were coming into class that day, I overheard one student say, "Man, I hope we don't read anything else with this much sex in it this semester."

On Thursday, I taught Boccaccio's Decameron. The same student said, "Man, this was my favorite thing we've read all semester."

Huh?

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Eng 403/503

Here's the flyer for my Women's Lit class this Fall. I'm excited!



Fall 2010
Eng 403/503
Women’s Literature & Feminist Literary Theory
Dr. Stephanie Eddleman


We will explore the contributions of women authors to literature by reading and analyzing works by women from diverse eras and cultures. Further, we will trace the development and characteristics of feminist literary theory and explore feminist literary criticism. The novels for this class are


Austen's Sense and Sensibility
Bronte's Jane Eyre
Rhys' Wide Sargasso Sea
Pym's Excellent Women
Haushofer's The Wall
Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale
Shreve's The Weight of Water
Satrap's Persepolis

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Suggestions, Anyone?


This semester, I'm teaching a Critical Thinking and Speaking class for the Honors College. One of the assignments is to do a book review, and I gave the students a list of books from which they can choose. The list contains non-fiction, memoirs, novels, theological texts, philosophical texts, meditations; no limits on genre. The only criteria is that they are well-written and have caused me to think critically. I might agree with the author, and I might not. That's not the point. Expanding my mind is.

Here's the list for this semester. I have a few books on my nightstand, like Barbara Ehrenreich's Nickle and Dimed, and Stephanie Paulsell's Honoring the Body that I may choose to add after I've read them. Any suggestions for the future?


Infidel by Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Receiving the Day by Dorothy C. Bass
The Writing Life by Annie Dillard
For The Time Being by Annie Dillard
Peace Like a River by Leif Enger
Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert
She Who Is by Elizabeth Johnson
Dance of the Dissident Daughter by Sue Monk Kidd
The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver
Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott
Traveling Mercies by Anne Lamott
The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis
Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis
Walking on Water by Madeline L’Engle
Spiritual Direction by Henri Nouwen
Total Truth by Nancy Pearcey
Amusing Ourselves to Death by Neil Postman
Technopoly by Neil Postman*
Letters to a Young Poet by Rainer Maria Rilke
Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
He is There and He is Not Silent by Francis Shaffer
How Should We Then Live? by Francis Schaeffer
An Altar in the World by Barbara Brown Taylor
Speaking of Faith by Krista Tippett
Night by Elie Wiesel

Saturday, August 22, 2009

The Female Preogative


The hardest part of doing syllabi is planning the Reading and Assignment Schedule for the whole semester. I have trouble deciding what I want to wear the next day, much less what I want to talk about in class every day for the next sixteen weeks. That's why I often put the word "Tentative" in front of the "Reading and Assignment Schedule" heading.

Hey, can't a girl change her mind now and then?