Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month at TCC - Extra Credit Opportunity

I like my students cultured, even if I have to entice them with extra credit. Now please read on and become part of the rest of the world.

Carolina DeRobertis







Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month at TCC

KEYNOTE SPEAKER
Wednesday, Sept. 15, 7 p.m.

Creative writing professor and translator Carolina DeRobertis, author of best-selling novel The Invisible Mountain, published in 16 countries and 12 languages, will present the college-wide keynote address followed by a reception.

TCC Advanced Technology Center, Virginia Beach Campus

Click here for the various campus events and to contact the person in charge.


And now the extra credit for my students:

You can earn up to 30 extra points total, ten each for different kind of event you attend, up to three events. My suggestions:
  1. The Keynote Address
  2. Motorcycle Diaries (¡Viva la Revolucion!)
  3. Frida Kahlo exhibit
Requirements: Your extra credit assignment, should you choose to complete it, requires you to attend up to three events and for each event attended write a response in which you try to persuade your audience if they should also attend the event if it were to be given again. Keep summary to a minimum.

Consider addressing at least one or several of these bullets:
  • Use specific details, painting a picture for your audience: What was the tone of the presentation, the mood, what were the audiences' responses?
  • How did the speakers/art/film make you feel?
  • What did it make you think?
  • What did you learn?
  • Praise it or critique it, or both.
  • What did you like most and/or least?
  • What does it tell us about how we construct identity and/or culture?
  • What other unique response can you give?
I suggest taking some notes and I also suggest sticking around for any question and answer sessions as they can be very informative and maybe there is free food.

Word Count
: 400+ words each, but make sure you've got a complete essay in the end, therefore if it needs to be longer, make it longer. ¿Comprende?

Value: 10 points possible for each event

Due Date: 20 October 2010 for all responses.

Submission: Responses accepted as Google Doc or blog posts:
  • Google Docs responses must be in MLA format, proofread, spell checked, etc. Good writing, you know?
  • Blog posts should have spaces between paragraphs, proofread, spell checked, etc. Good writing, you know? Any student who creates and posts on a blog must send me their main blog address, to which I will link from my blog here.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Rate My Professor as a Valid Research Tool: Planning Your Successful Future


Prologue:

Do not let your experiences at school define you, not solely, anyhow. Maybe not at all. You can be who you create, not what others paint you as.





Some of the specific information herein, such as recommendations for other instructors applies specifically to students at Tidewater Community College and generally the Virginia Beach campus.

(Image borrowed from Post Secret's 2 May 2010 post).

I hope everyone finds what they're looking for, whether it means continuing your higher education, or traveling the world, or both. Check out the site for the author of Delaying the Real World, Colleen Kinder. Or look for other sites and people who can tell you the best ways to experience life and adventure without going broke before you are ushered into "the real world" or as you perhaps you're escaping it after years of servitude to wives, husbands, children, students and/or other obligations who may or may not be human, or even people.

Regardless of how and when, travel if possible. For as long as possible. Discover what the world is and who you truly are. If you can earn college credit while do so, go, go, go, go, go.

Rate My Professor as a Valid Research Tool: Planning Your Successful Future
If you use the site well, it can be very helpful. Noticed this section title says "as" and not "is". What does that mean?

Access the site here: ratemyprofessors


Weighing Comments: Where Numbers May Be Vague, Words Can Paint Pictures
First, if the student posted a rating before the semester ended, they probably formed their opinion too early. It's like watching half a movie and saying it sucks before it ends. Do you trust that integrity of that review?

Consider if the positive comments outweigh the negative and also read the comments. The comments are often going to be more educational than the number ratings. My mom used to look at the comments before the grades when I was in elementary school. Now I know why.

Also consider who submits the ratings: serious students who care about their education, or vapid boys and girls who get excited and hope class is canceled five or seven times a semester. Whose opinion matters more to you?

Who Fits Your Needs: Designing a Schedule Based on Your Learning Strengths
Decide what you want in a professor. Is it one who let’s you out early? Is it one who is hotttt! like me? Is it one who is sarcastic and doesn’t have patience for people with little common sense? Is it someone who is loose with due dates or is it someone who’ll keep on top of you or someone who expects you to be an active and independent learner? Is it someone who’ll rip apart every sentence or who has time to praise while criticizing? You can do a decent job of planning and choosing what kind of experience you’ll have based on these reviews and the knowledge you have about what kind of student you are, but don’t hold me to that; this is just my theory.

Staff/TBA:
If the catalog says "staff" or "TBA", especially a week or two before the course begins, your instructor may have been hired last minute and may not have had much time to prepare properly. Consider how this may impact your learning and outlook on the course instruction.

Find out if the instructor has experience teaching each and every method of course delivery and if the school has asked them to teach the course at the last minute as often happens. This can mean a lot when it comes to the start of the semester and your instructor might have been caught unawares.


What Course Delivery Fits Your Needs?

Classroom Type: Like Pizza, You Can Get it Many Ways
Do you need (not want) Traditional with Blackboard supplement, Hybrid, or Online courses?
  • If you're not very motivated, proficient at reading retention, need that structured classroom environment, stay with traditional, face-to-face delivery.
  • If you can be a self-starter, follow directions, and have common sense, organized, but like some interpersonal class time, consider a hybrid.
  • If you're those last few things but can do without the verbal/face time, maybe consider an online course.
  • And of course, if you're not strong with a certain subject, it's probably wisest not to take that course as hybrid or online. Know your strengths and weaknesses. Use them to your advantage.
  • Online/hybrid courses do have the highest attrition (see entry #4) rates as many students who take them are not prepared/motivated and even the instructor can have these same failings.

How Long Do You Want Your Semester?Also, consider the 8 and 12-week courses. Eight weeks if you can handle a lot of reading, thinking, and writing all at once, or 12 weeks, if you found 16 weeks to be too drawn out.

I've taught eight and sixteen and really like the eight week-semesters, though I think 12-weeks might be ideal. Not too long, not too short, but possibly just right.

The List: Who's Who at School?
The following list is based both on my personal knowledge and what you can find on ratemyprofessors, where I conducted further research.

There are other greats; I just don’t know anything about them, but here’s who I have met. Hopefully these folks’ll teach 112 in the coming semesters:

O Kim Bovee

O Robin Browder

O Maureen Cahill

O Marshall Ellis

O Rob House

O Tariq Jawhar

O Doris Jellig

O Cecilia Petretto

English 125 - Introduction to Literature
For those going for a Bachelor's Degree, you will most likely need to take this course after English 112. I'm not sure who teaches it well, but you know where to look and who to ask.


SDV and ITE-115:
Most degree paths at TCC require and SDV course and ITE-115 to graduate and it is highly recommended you take these as soon as possible.

SDV-100 (or related) I also recommend you sign up for one of the required SDV courses to help you get situated with college expectations for the next semester as well. Do your research first to find out who might make these courses worthwhile for you considering we heard a lot of negative things at the start of the semester.

ITE-115 about computing and using Microsoft Office: Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, etc.

If look in the Course Catalog or you go to the TCC website (or Google, etc.) you can do a search for ITE 115 and learn more about it, who teaches it, and maybe find some sample syllabi.


Returning to General Information:
There are probably a handful of new instructors since last semester when I originally compiled this list, so do some research and you might find some additional brilliant Composition II instructors.

To learn about who might be the best instructor for you do some research or email each of the instructors now, before signing up and see what they are willing to tell you about their expectations in the course and their teaching styles. Maybe they’ll share their tentative syllabus with you now to help you decide.

Remember, you can search ratemyprofessors by campus and department in case you use the site for choosing other professors.


Rating Your Professors: Your Option To Help Students or Attempt to Hurt
When using the site as a rater, be fair, honest, and accurate.

If you think you're going to have your revenge, good luck being immature. Consider if the instructor made him or herself available and if you took advantage of this. Consider the resources your instructor put together that you may or may not have used.

And make sure you know which campus you're taking the course at, or you may look foolish if say, the prof has never taught there.


The Future
Best of luck planning your futures. You (select one or two words that are appropriate for you) hopefully/probably/maybe/haven't/have done your best, or close to it, to overcome the obstacles before you this semester. If not, you have more chances. Own your education. Be your own leader. Work with your tragedies, celebrate each and every triumph.

I soon bid you farewell, though it doesn't have to mean forever.


Questions?
Any questions? Email your future profs.


PS: For those who consider majoring in English and perhaps one day teaching college, especially college-level English, feel free to contact me about my experiences. I can also recommend a few hilarious blogs written by fellow adjuncts and professors.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Cloverfield Analysis - Extra Credit Opportunity

This assignment is one that my Composition II students have been prepared for, but Comp I students can give this a shot.

Use the “How to Watch a Film” worksheet to guide you in your analysis and interpretation of the symbols. I'm going to tell you that if you write about "love" you will not receive any credit. Again, the visual symbolism will be incredibly important to look at here.


Requirements:

  • Write a 600—1200 word MLA formatted analysis and response to what you think the movie Cloverfield is really about. Consider what the imagery reminds you of from the news and history and how the Cloverfield monster resembles another film monster that was created as a reaction to another historical event that took place on the opposite side of the planet from us Americans.

  • Make sure your response includes direct references (evidence) to the film and American (and maybe Japanese) history support for your argument (analysis/interpretation).

  • Excessive grammatical and punctuation errors will cause me to stop reading your essay and you will then receive no credit.
  • Once you’ve written your analysis, print it and bring it to me or my mailbox or post it on your blog and email me with a link to the specific post(s) about each comic book. Again, do not send me the link to your blog, but the specific address of the post. Students in online courses may submit via email or Google Docs.

Submission: Responses accepted as hard copy or blog posts (Google Docs for online only students). Non-blog responses must be in MLA format, stapled, etc. Blog posts should have spaces between paragraphs and students will need to email me a link to their post.


Potential Points to Earn: 10 points for each piece of writing. You can write an analysis of up to three different comics from this year's selection.


Due Date: Extended to 7 May 2010


Don't forget to click on the "Extra Credit" label below to see other current and past extra credit opportunities.

Free Comic Book Day - Extra Credit Opportunity

Free Comic Book Day

Requirements:
  • Saturday 1 May 2010 is Free Comic Book Day. Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to find a participating comic book store and obtain any one, or several, of this year’s free comic books.
  • Here comes the reading and writing part. In 600-1200 words in MLA format, you will rhetorically analyze the comic book (text) of your choosing. Remember, author, audience, purpose, rhetorical purpose, and rhetorical appeals used by the writer and artist (penciller), since comic books consist of both images and copy (see your notes and Visual Rhetoric PowerPoint if needed). Feel free to use the internet to find out more about your author. Remember to be as specific as possible when explaining your analysis (someone who likes The Simpsons might not like Japanese comics (Manga), for example, so be very specific), especially because comics are a written and drawn medium. Remember, you need to use evidence from the comic book itself to support your analysis. Excessive grammatical and punctuation errors will cause me to stop reading your essay and you will then receive no credit.
  • Once you’ve written your analysis, print it and bring it to me or my mailbox or post it on your blog and email me with a link to the specific post(s) about each comic book. Again, do not send me the link to your blog, but the specific address of the post. Students in online courses may submit via email or Google Docs.

Submission: Responses accepted as hard copy or blog posts (Google Docs for online only students). Non-blog responses must be in MLA format, stapled, etc. Blog posts should have spaces between paragraphs and students will need to email me a link to their post.


Potential Points to Earn: 10 points for each piece of writing. You can write an analysis of up to three different comics from this year's selection.


Due Date: 5 May 2010


Don't forget to click on the "Extra Credit" label below to see other current and past extra credit opportunities.

Monday, March 29, 2010

TCC 9th Annual Literary Festival - Extra Credit Opportunity - Updated 4 April

http://www.ohkyin.org/books-clipart.jpg

Tidewater Community College is proud to present the 9th Annual Literary Festival.


keynote event
Address by Kay Ryan,
U.S. Poet Laureate

Monday, April 5 · 7 p.m.
TCC Roper Performing Arts Center
Norfolk Campus
Reception and book signing following


Performance Poetry
by Taylor Mali

Tuesday, April 6 • 7 p.m.
TCC Roper Performing Arts Center
Norfolk Campus


Campus Readings by
Students and Faculty

Tuesday, April 6 • 12:30 p.m.
Building A, The Forum
NEW Portsmouth Campus


Campus Readings by
Students and Faculty

Tuesday, April 6 • 12:30 p.m.
Martin Building, Room 2505
Norfolk Campus


Campus Readings by
Students and Faculty

Tuesday, April 6 • 12:30 p.m.
Room F-133
Virginia Beach Campus


Readings by Charles Wright
Wednesday, April 7 • 7 p.m.
Whitehurst Building, Room 2057
Chesapeake Campus


Campus Readings by
Students and Faculty

Wednesday, April 7 • 2:00 p.m.
Pass Building, Studio Theatre, Room 157
Chesapeake Campus


An Evening with Nikki Giovanni
Thursday, April 8 • 12:30 p.m.
Advanced Technology Center
Virginia Beach Campus


Thursday, April 8 • 7 p.m.
Building A, The Forum
NEW Portsmouth Campus


Free and open to the public


And now the extra credit for my students:

You can earn up to 50 extra points, ten each for the main speakers, and ten if you attend and write about the student readings.

Requirements: Your extra credit assignment, should you choose to complete it, requires you to attend any or all of the speakers' presentations and then for each presentation attended and viewed write a response in which you should consider addressing at least one or several of these bullets:
  • Do not summarize.
  • Use specific details, painting a picture for your audience: What was the tone of the presentation, the mood, what were the audiences' responses?
  • How did the speakers make you feel?
  • What did it make you think?
  • What did you learn?
  • Praise it or critique it, or both.
  • What did you like most and/or least?
  • What does it tell us about how we construct identity and/or culture?
  • What other unique response can you give?
I suggest taking some notes and I also suggest sticking around for any question and answer sessions as they can be very informative.

Word Count
: 300+ words each

Value: 10 points each, and an extra point of student posts on their blog

Due Date: 14 April 2010 for all responses. Responses accepted as hard copy or blog posts. Hard copy responses must be in MLA format, stapled, etc. Blog posts should have spaces between paragraphs. Any student who creates and posts on a blog must send me their main blog address, to which I will link from my blog here.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Still Blogging?

To my students past and present:

If you continue blogging past the end of the semester I encourage you to email me or post a comment on this post to let me know.

If you create any new blogs (not used for English 111 or 112) please let me know and I can include an additional links list for future students, as well as for myself, because even if you've finished my course, I'm still interested in your writing and how you express yourself.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Extra Credit: 17th Annual Virginia Festival of Jewish Film

http://www.jewishstore.com/Software/images/grt_free2.gif

From the desk of (but slightly modified by me) the Vice President for Academic & Student Affairs:

Tidewater Community College will host the 17th Annual Virginia Festival of Jewish Film at the Roper Performing Arts Center beginning on Saturday, January 23rd, and running through January 31st. TCC and the Marilyn and Marvin Simon Jewish Community Center are proud to once again bring this rich cultural tradition to the Hampton Roads community.

With each passing year, the festival has grown and matured, providing a cinematic feast and cultural celebration. The eight-day festival will feature a wide variety of films, appealing to a cross-section of tastes and viewpoints - from the opening night presentation of A Matter of Size (Israel, 2009) in Hebrew with English subtitles, to Eyes Wide Open (2009) in Hebrew with English subtitles, running January 31st. The film Zrubavel, to be shown on Tuesday, January 26th, will be followed by a panel discussion involving TCC students. This unique film features a poignant look at a multi-generational family of Ethiopian immigrants and the challenges that they face assimilating into their new Israeli homeland. The conflict of the younger generation trying to fit in while their elders try to hold on to their native customs introduces the viewer to this ethnic group and their struggle to adjust. Zrubavel is the first feature length film created by Ethiopian-Israeli film makers.

For a complete list of this year's film selections and related information visit http://www.simonfamilyj.org/.

The film festival is free to all TCC employees and students with a valid ID card. I encourage you to enjoy as much of the Festival as you can and to support our TCC students by attending the showing of Zrubavel on January 26.

And now your instructor speaks...er...writes:

Requirements: Your extra credit assignment, should you choose to complete it, requires you to see any or all of the films and then for each film attended and viewed write a response in which you should consider addressing several of these bullets:
  • Do not summarize; that's why we have Internet Movie Database (IMDB).
  • How did it make you feel?
  • What did it make you think?
  • What did you learn?
  • Praise it or critique it, or both.
  • What did it tell us about families?
  • What does it tell us about self-image?
  • What does it tell us about religion, politics, and borders?
  • What does it tell us about what we consider to be acceptable in society?
  • What does it tell us about how we construct identity and/or culture?
  • What does it tell us about...
Every response must:
  • Respond to the end of the film as well, so I know you attended the entire film.
  • Do not summarize. Again, don't tell your audience what the movie is about. Assume they've just watched it themselves.
I suggest sticking around for any question and answer sessions as they can be very informative and maybe there will be finger foods.

Word Count
: 500+ words each

Value: 10 points each

Due Date: The week of 10 February 2010 for all responses. Must be printed and stapled for traditional and hybrid courses and should be emailed for online students.