Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Final Learning and Performance Evaluation



English 111

Steven Brandon

Jay Saunders

12/10/12

 

Final Learning and Performance Evaluation

 

This has been an exciting semester, in which we have learned much.  As based off of the learning outcomes paper, I can say that I believe I have successfully completed the goals of this course.  We have covered a great deal of information, and learned quite a bit.  I believe the self evaluation effectually demonstrates this.

First we will start with the writing process.  What is the writing process?  There are many ways to describe it; but for this paper the best definition is this- the writing process is a series of six steps in which one starts from scratch, and ends up with a written, proof-read and published paper.  In English class, we learned the six steps of the ideal writing process, how to put them into practice, and some various techniques for using the steps.  The six steps of the writing process are: prewriting, drafting, revising, proof-reading and editing, publishing and reviewing.  We also learned many ways to draft.  This included drafting in sections and drafting in class.  Drafting in sections is when you draft your paper one segment at a time, and then stopping after a segment is compete and proof reading what you have already written.  When we drafted in class, we focused on using familiar styles, and them changing them into what we wanted our paper to end up as.  However, before starting to draft, you must pre-write.            

 Pre-writing is the act of researching and finding out all of the information for your paper.  This includes looking up sources on the internet, and finding books in the library.  This also includes putting together an outline.  After pre-writing and drafting, comes revision, which is going over your paper and working out all of the major kinks.  Most of this is just rearranging your paper, sentences and making sure your thesis matches the rest of your paper.  We have also learned many ways to proof read, which is fixing the skin deep surface flaws.  One of the ways is to leave your paper for a while, the longer the better, and come back to it later to read it with a different mindset.  Another idea is to read it out loud.  This helps you recognize the mistakes, as you come across them.  Reading slowly also helps locate mistakes.

Now that you have a revised, well-written, and supported paper, it is time to publish it.  Bringing your work to the world can be performed many different ways.  The ones we covered in our class were blogging, and handing them into our teachers.  When we blogged, we set up an account and posted our work there.  When we turned our homework into our teachers, we just printed it out and gave it to them.  The last step in the writing process, and sometimes the most skipped, is the reviewing stage.   This step consists of taking your paper after it has been published and looking back over it, seeing if you could improve it anymore.  These six steps are of course the ideal process, but does my actual writing process look like this?  Coming into this class I had a writing process, but it was not nearly developed.  The process I learned in high school was actually very close to the one taught here at J Sergeant Reynolds, but did not delegate points.  One of these points was pre-writing.  In high school I had performed pre-writing without knowing what I was doing because the teachers gave it to us as homework.             

Now, in college, I know the value, name and reason for pre-writing.  Even though I see the reason for the research, I sometimes do less pre-writing because I have less time.  By this I mean that I have more activities, like work, and am a poor time manager.  Because of this lack of pre-writing, my papers sometimes turn put for the worst.  As far as drafting is concerned, I believe that I am very much the same.  By this, I mean that I usually sit down and draft all at once.  I do this because I often need the motivation that the pressure of the due date provides.  I am trying to work on this by applying one of the techniques we learned in class, drafting in segments.  I am working on this because I believe my papers will benefit from this practice.  It also helps with forcing yourself to have more time with pre-writing.

 In English 111, we have also learned about citing sources, people, when to cite and how to cite.  One of the examples I have provided for this is my second paper.  In this paper, I have cited all of my sources as in-text citations, as well as including a bibliography at the end of the paper that cites all sources used in MLA format, the current format that is preferred by most non-historical professors.  One of the criteria for English 111 is to prove yourself a man of integrity.  I believe I have done this.  One has just to take a look at my cited sources, to see that I have cited what I have used. 

In English 111, we are also learning about communication.  The two types of communication we learned about are oral communication and written communication.  In oral communication we learned about how your stance influences the message and that the relaxed position is feet shoulders width apart and hands behind back.  We also learned about maintaining the proper distance between yourself and the other speaker.  I demonstrated this in class by conversing with three others in the correct, relaxed position at the proper space.  In addition to our oral communication, we also studied written communication.  This included the sentence types: IC, FANBOYS IC, IC, because IC, if IC, then IC and although IC, actually IC.  We also covered introductory phrases, conjunctional adverbs, prepositional phrases and dependent clauses.  I must admit that this is probably my weakest point in this class.  I have trouble with it because when I am writing, I get on a roll with a good idea and I want to put it down on paper before I forget it.  Because of this, my sentence structure sometimes suffers. 

Another criteria of the learning outcome is knowing how to use digital technologies as well as old fashioned paper.  I believe I have excelled at this as demonstrated of my mastery of the blog.  At first, this blog was very difficult for me because I was not used to publishing electronically.  In high school, I had done very little on the computer, but this class helped to develop these basic, necessary skills.

In this class, I have also learned about rhetoric.  One of the points drilled into my mind was the rhetorical triangle.  This triangle is how three groups relate to each other.  You have the author, who crafts a message to the audience.  The author crafts a message to persuade the audience to take a certain course of action.  The audience’s job is to provide feedback to the author, letting him know if he was successful or not.  This is proved useful to me because it reminds me of the fact that the author always has an agenda in mind and reminds me that I must approach information critically. 

I have learned much in this class that I will be able to apply to my life and hope I have persuaded you with my message that I have done the work to deserve a worthy grade.

 

 

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