Understanding Discourse Communities

 

Title of Article + Proper MLA Citation for Works Cited page Melzer, Dan. Understanding Discourse Communities. Parlor Press, 2020. 
Summarize the article — include your reaction, thoughts, anything to help you remember its claims. 100 to 150 words In the essay Understanding Discourse Communities by Dan Melzer the author uses the concept of a discourse community as defined by john swales to explain why the concept is useful not only in college writing but very far beyond college writing as well.  the section provides more details on the manner in which genres functions in discourse communities, the reason as to why various discourse communities places differing expectations for writing and also in understanding what qualifies as a discourse community. The article utilizes classic examples on personal level to elucidate more on the concept including further illustrations within academic realms of history. 
Define new terms and concepts by quoting or paraphrasing the original author. I started to learn the musician’s vocabulary I needed to be familiar with to function in the group, like beats per measure and octaves and the minor pentatonic scale. 
How does this reading connect to other articles from class and/or your own research?

 

The past 2 or 3 articles we have read have been focused on discourse communities. 
Based on the reading, craft one question to act as a springboard for class discussion. How can we use discourse in our daily lives?

Navigating Genres

 

Title of Article + Proper MLA Citation for Works Cited page Dirk, Kerry. Navigating Genres
Summarize the article — include your reaction, thoughts, anything to help you remember its claims. 100 to 150 words In Navigating Genres by Kerry Dirk, the author writes about how genre is nothing more than a specific category and also says that they go far beyond just fitting into a particular class or type. Each genre is unique and has its own characteristics and categories. Knowing what genre to use is important in your writing because it helps deliver what a writer is intending to convey.  Throughout the essay, Dirk introduces students to genres as rhetorical responses to similar situations. Dirk uses humor to poke fun at these situations to make the point that rhetorical circumstances must be taken into account. 
Define new terms and concepts by quoting or paraphrasing the original author. And more importantly, I noticed that the writer did not talk as an authoritative figure but as a coach”.
How does this reading connect to other articles from class and/or your own research?

 

So far We haven’t really read anything that connects to this essay.  
Based on the reading, craft one question to act as a springboard for class discussion. Can you have more than one genre in an essay?

Critical Thinking In College Writing

 

Title of Article + Proper MLA Citation for Works Cited page DasBender, Gita. Critical Thinking in College Writing: From the Personal to the Academic
Summarize the article — include your reaction, thoughts, anything to help you remember its claims. 100 to 150 words In the article, Critical Thinking In College Writing, the author has very useful tips for students on how to conduct textual analysis. The author breaks down the process into simple steps making it easier for the reader. The author calls for the reader to read the article attentively with an open mind.  She says that the reader has to list the main ideas, keep track of important terms and summarize important quotes. Then, the reader has to write a personal response on how they feel about the essay while using the quotes they have summarized. The writer has to make an academic connection to his or her personal response. Then the writer has to craft the essay, since academic writing requires him to be more critical.  It also tells the student to look at essays of peers or earlier students who receive high grades.
Define new terms and concepts by quoting or paraphrasing the original author. accustomed to reading and responding to difficult texts

provocative essay that pulls the reader into the argument and forces a reaction

How does this reading connect to other articles from class and/or your own research?

 

We haven’t really read anything yet that connects to this article. 
Based on the reading, craft one question to act as a springboard for class discussion. When do you conduct textual analysis?

Discourse Communities

In discourse communities the focus is on texts and language, the genres that enable members throughout the world to maintain their goals, regulate their membership, and communicate effectively with one another. As students engage with discipline, as they move from exposure to experience, they begin to understand that the different communities on campus are quite distinct, that apparently common terms have different meanings, apparently shared tools have different uses, apparently related objects have different interpretations, as they work in a particular community they start to understand both it’s particularities and what joining takes, as these involve language, practice, culture and conceptual universe, not just mountains of facts. People are born or taken involuntarily by their families and cultures, into some communities of practice. These first culture communities may be religious, tribal, social, or economic, and they may be central to an individuals daily life experiences. Academic communities are selected and voluntary. Discourse communities can also be professional. Every major profession has it’s organizations, practices, textual conventions, and it’s genres.. Active community members also carry on informal exchanges at conferences through email interest groups, in memos, hakway discussions at the office, in laboratories and elsewhere, the results of which may be woven intertextually into public, published texts. 

  1. Email i wrote yesterday
  2. Poem i wrote in middle school
  3. Country music playlist
  4. The prison guard
  5. My nurse
  6. Support groups
  7. Teachers 
  8. Chick fil-a
  9. ESPN
  10. Medical researcher

Article exercise 1/22

  1. How have you generally started your own writing assignments? What worked and didn’t work for you? Are there any ideas you have for invention in writing that are not in this chapter that you would like to add? What are they, and do you think they could help other students? I usually start by choosing a topic that I am very passionate about. More times than not the more interested in a topic you are, the better you are at writing about it and the more thought you put into it.
  2. Out of the new invention strategies you have learned in this chapter, which do you think would be most helpful as you transition into writing in higher education? Why do you think the invention strategy you choose would work well and in what way do you see yourself using it? Use the speaking voice to influence your writing. when I think of this I think of not letting any other outside voices control how you write. You write how you write and that’s the best way to do it.

Reading Journal Grant-Davie

 

Title of Article + Proper MLA Citation for Works Cited page Rhetorical Situations and Their Constituents

Grant‐Davie, Keith. “Rhetorical Situations and Their Constituents.” Rhetoric Review, vol. 15, no. 2, 1997, pp. 264–279., doi:10.1080/07350199709359219.

Summarize the article — include your reaction, thoughts, anything to help you remember its claims. 100 to 150 words In Rhetorical Situations and Their Constituents by Keith Grant-Davie, it talks about the steps a writing student should make to analyze certain rhetorical situations and understand why they happened. For a writing student to understand a rhetorical situation they must first understand the exigence that gave rise to the dialogue. Rhetorical exigence, an issue that demands discourse to resolve it, can be analyzed by using the stasis theory, “a natural sequence of steps for interrogating a subject” (266). The sequence of steps helps a writer find out what the subject of discourse is about, why it matters and should be deemed important, and how to plan a resolution.     
Define new terms and concepts by quoting or paraphrasing the original author. Epideictic

intrinsically

How does this reading connect to other articles from class and/or your own research?

 

Because it relates to the rhetorical situations we discussed in class. 
Based on the reading, craft one question to act as a springboard for class discussion. How can we incorporate these situations into the papers we write for this class?

Reading Journal For Jones

Title of Article + Proper MLA Citation for Works Cited page Finding the Good Argument OR Why Bother With Logic?

By: Rebecca Jones

Jones, finding the good argument or why bother with logic, http://writingspaces.org/sites/default/files/jones–finding-the-good-argument.pdf

Summarize the article — include your reaction, thoughts, anything to help you remember its claims. 100 to 150 words In the article finding the good argument or why bother with logic the author Rebecca Jones informs us of the effects of a well thought out, high quality argument. She starts by providing examples of what an argument is then giving us ways to get our argument through. The author tells you how to successfully carry out your argument by using the tips in the article. The audience seems to be more of a college level audience because of the activities they say people use the tips with.   
Define new terms and concepts by quoting or paraphrasing the original author. Entrenched

Masquerading

How does this reading connect to other articles from class and/or your own research?

 

This article is the first I have read about tips with arguments. 
Based on the reading, craft one question to act as a springboard for class discussion. Why don’t we ever talk about how to make and carry out an argument. 

 

ACE Blog Post

ACE’s or Adverse Childhood Experiences are traumatic events that occur mainly between the ages of 0-17 and these events can include abuse, neglect, or violence in the home or also in the community. Toxic stress can occur if a child experiences very tough adversity which can include physical or mental abuse, family economic struggles, exposure to violence, etc. If you’re a kid that grows up in poverty and violence or racism it really affects your development growing up and even as an adult. If you see and hear these things on a daily basis it distracts you from what you need to do whether it’s school or extracurricular activities. When you grow up in these situations it’s very hard to get out and make it to where you want to get in life. ACE’s can have a big impact not only on literacy but school in general. Growing up with these kinds of distractions especially if you are a young kid it is very hard to get your school work completed. A lot of these families didn’t take their education seriously and don’t push their kids in school. Dedication and hard work is your best bet in getting out of these toxic environments.

Blog Post Sept 16

Dr. Mona Brought the issue to the local government about the water crisis in Flint and caught the attention of local and national news to promote how big of an issue it was and how it needs to be fixed. The poverty in flint was also a big issue because their only access to water was from tap. The people couldn’t afford to buy bottled water so they were forced to drink the lead water. Drinking water with lead in it has a big impact on the minds of the people. At the start of the CoronaVirus, everyone I knew thought that the beer Corona was the cause of the sickness. I simply told these people that they were wrong and that this was actually a huge problem. To make our world a better place in the time we are living in at the moment, we all need to find a way to work together.

“The Maker’s Eye”

 

Title of Article + Proper MLA Citation for Works Cited page “The Maker’s Eye” by Donald Murray

Murray, Donald. The Maker’s Eye. nabuckler.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/the-makers-eye.pdf. 

Summarize the article — include your reaction, thoughts, anything to help you remember its claims. 100 to 150 words A piece of writing is never finished. There is always room for that better word or better sentence. Beginning writers usually check rough drafts for typing errors and consider the job of writing complete. Professional writers consider themselves just getting started with their piece after they finish their rough draft. Professional writers seek the opportunity to discover what they have to say and how they need to say it. When getting feedback you must accept criticism of others and be suspicious of it. The more experience you have the more efficient you can be with each step of the writing process. Most writers pay close attention to the seven key elements to help them stay on track when they are writing a paper. The aim of writing is communication. Reread with care and make sure you identify your subjects. “The Maker’s Eye” moves back and forth from sentence to sentence and paragraph to paragraph and they look at sentences for structure. At the end of the day the tentative Makers Eye is never satisfied.  
Define new terms and concepts by quoting or paraphrasing the original author. Nuance- a subtle difference in shade of meaning, expression, or sound
How does this reading connect to other articles from class and/or your own research?

 

This article is going to really help me when i’m looking over my rough draft because it reinforces good habits to get into to get the most out of your rough draft
Based on the reading, craft one question to act as a springboard for class discussion. Why don’t we use “The Maker’s Eye” strategy more often