Dirk RJ- Laurel Cotton

 

Title of Article + Proper MLA Citation for Works Cited page Kerry Dirk. “Navigating Genres.” Published 2010. 262 pages.
Summarize the article — include your reaction, thoughts, anything to help you remember its claims. 100 to 150 words Dirk illustrates the true meaning of genre by comparing writing to music genres. Dirk starts her introduction by discussing country music stereotypes. He suggests that country songs are mainly about love, patriotism, politics, and depression but, she asks the question of, “If I wanted to write that didn’t do any of the above things, would it still be a country song?” (Dirk 3). He relates this example to thesis statements by saying, “every thesis statement should introduce three points of discussion” (Dirk 11).
Define new terms and concepts by quoting or paraphrasing the original author. N/A
How does this reading connect to other articles from class and/or your own research?

 

This reading connects to a lot of things we have covered in class about strong thesis statements and introductions because this is what makes your paper interesting and draws the reader in. The contents of your introduction reflect how your paper is going to be.
Based on the reading, craft one question to act as a springboard for class discussion. How can i specifically make improvements to my genre when writing a paper?

 

 

Title of Article + Proper MLA Citation for Works Cited page Gita DasBender. “Critical Thinking In College Writing: From Personal to the Academic”. Published 2011. 50 pages.
Summarize the article — include your reaction, thoughts, anything to help you remember its claims. 100 to 150 words Gita DasBender writes in her chapter about how to define critical thinking for first-year writer; explaining a process to help them read, write, and think. She includes focus on Anne Dillard’s essay, “Living Like Weasels”, explaining how it can teach students how to read carefully to gather ideas, analyze and identify key points in the text, and to synthesize the arguments and observations. The chapter also guides students on how to move from a personal response to a formal one, helping with academic writing as it states in DasBender’s title. She also provides an annotated essay as a student’s guide to a strong text and how to approach it critically and engage with other’s ideas to develop your own perspective and own reasoning.
Define new terms and concepts by quoting or paraphrasing the original author. N/A
How does this reading connect to other articles from class and/or your own research?

 

This reading connects to the other articles we have read in Writing 101 last year as we focus on critical thinking throughout the semester as we incorporate it into our writing. As we approach different ways of writing through podcasts, projects, slideshows, and essays. Also with the help of peer reviews to help correct our writing and others can input their opinion on our writing or issue we are writing about.
Based on the reading, craft one question to act as a springboard for class discussion. What does “mindlessness” mean in this context?

 

Ann Johns blog post- Laurel Cotton

Ann Johns mainly focuses on academic discourse communities in her writing. Her main idea is her own ideas and thoughts of her discourse community, which is academic’s. she uses evidence from other authors to explain the community of academia. She introduces the term “communities of practice” and defines this as a collection of people in the same community. She explains communities and membership. An example of this would be cultural communities that may include religious, tribal, social, or economic experiences that “may be central to an individual’s daily life”. Johns’ goal is to get students to move away from a certain academic community that they have on campus and extend the communities in order to get to know a person. Learn a person’s goals, experiences, such things that shape their lives or have impacted them. She thus explains the different communities one may be apart of; social, political, and recreational communities, professional communities, academic communities, and language, texts, and values communities. I am a member of the republican party for political communities, I am apart of the basketball players in recreational communities, I am a student apart of the professional communities, I am apart of the pre-law program for the academic communities, and I am apart of the English speaking portion of the world for the language communities.