Image shared from the Facebook page of NBC's Community.
This is the online companion to the DACC Writing Center at Danville Area Community College, Danville, IL. The DACC Writing Center is located in CT 116 and CT 108. We are closed whenever campus is closed due to weather or for holidays/breaks. Students may schedule an appointment by going to http://www.dacc.edu/depts/la/writing. Drop-ins are also welcome. Computers are available for student use in CT 108.
Writing and Citation Goodness
- APA Format and Citation Guide (OWL @ Purdue)
- APA Sample Paper (OWL @ Purdue)
- Chicago Manual of Style 16th Ed. (OWL @ Purdue)
- Chicago Style Sample Paper (OWL @ Purdue)
- DACC Library Course Research Guides
- DACC Library Homepage (links to library search tools)
- Dave's ESL Cafe
- Elements of Style (Strunk and White's review of basic style concerns from Washington University)
- Grammar Bytes! (quick review of common grammar problems and how to fix them)
- MLA Format and Citation Guide (OWL@ Purdue)
- MLA Sample Paper (OWL @ Purdue)
- Model Papers from Different Academic Disciplines (Yale)
- Noodle Tools (citation builder)
- Paraphrasing (understanding how to do it ethically from Yale U)
- Setting Up Your DACC Username and Password
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Feeling Confused?
Image shared from the Facebook page of NBC's Community.
Friday, September 21, 2012
Two Little Liars?
In this short TED-Ed presentation, Marlee Neel illustrates how using the adjectives "good" and "bad" in our writing make liars of us all. What do you think? Is she right? If you were on the jury, would you return a guilty verdict?
The Power of Simple Language
This brief video from TED-Ed illustrates why simple language can be more effective than trying too hard to sound "educated" in your writing.
Thursday, September 13, 2012
From Grammarly.com. A timely share given the recent discussion on deadlines. Don't let this be you. Plan ahead, and if you need help with your writing, see a tutor in the Writers' Room. Appointments are available from 9:00-3:00 Monday through Thursday and 9:00-12:00 on Friday. Many students come in for help once they have a draft together, but tutors can also help you if you are having problems getting that first draft together or understanding what your instructor is asking you to do.
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Not So Urban Musings, Part 2-Dead End Deadlines
Concerning assignment deadlines Brooks writes, “In high
school and college, teachers stress no-negotiation due dates. If you don’t get
your paper or assignment in on time, your grade suffers. While this lesson
teaches responsibility, it isn’t as applicable to the working world. Deadlines
are important, but for the most part they are also flexible. In the
professional world, bosses generally prefer you take more time to create a
higher-quality product versus rushing to meet an arbitrary deadline.” Guess what?
I would prefer my students take more time to create a “quality product”
as well. In fact, I was quite amazed at the number of my ENGL 101 students who
on this past Monday hadn’t yet started their papers which are due Friday. I was
amazed to the point of being practically dumb struck again today-two days
later--at how many of them still hadn’t even chosen a general topic. I will not
name names. Suffice to say, you know who you are, and so do I, even if I don’t
call you out publicly on the fact or confront you about it in class. I do not understand this. Students say they
want to do well. They comment to their
peers that they are afraid of failing, and yet…a scant 48 hours before their draft
is due, some have yet to even look over the materials they were supposed to
have read to prepare to write the draft.
How do I know this, you ask?
Well, besides my prescient powers, I have the aid of the statistics
function on Blogger which tells me that 12, yes 12, yes ONLY 12 people have
viewed the sample writing piece (“Urban Musings, part 1”) I directed them to
read. That seems about right.
Experience tells me that about 15% of the papers I receive on Friday will
really be where they should be. And no, that’s not because of the stellar
example I provided. It’s because those
same 12 students have been working solidly all along. Reading, paying attention and taking notes in class, writing and
redrafting. Reading the posted example was just one of the many steps they’ve
taken toward crafting a solid paper and meeting the expected deadline.
Additionally, instructors have their own set of “arbitrary”
deadlines we have to meet as well.
Grades come due. Semesters end.
At some point we are all accountable to the constraints we have to work
within. In the ivory tower as well as
in the world outside of it. Instructors
rarely set deadlines that are as arbitrary as Brooks would have her readers
believe. All of the instructors I know
give a good deal of thought into structuring their classes. It takes a good deal of consideration and
planning when trying to figure out how you are going to set up a schedule that
gives your students time to produce quality work yet get through everything you
are supposed to in sixteen weeks, creates a manageable work load for them as
well as you, and meets deadlines imposed upon us.
She continues her line of argumentation against deadlines by
stating, “It is important to approach every project in a professional and
responsible manner and part of that is demonstrating respect for your boss’
timeline. However, if you know that you can produce a better piece with a little
extra time, that is something you should bring up.” This seems to contradict
what she says earlier about how deadlines in the real world are generally
flexible. This seems to say that if you
generally have shown a pattern of acting responsibly in completing work on
time, your boss or editor might grant you an extension if you talk to him or
her in advance about the difficulty you are having. I can’t speak for other instructors, but I know that in a similar
circumstance in my classroom, I’d try to work with the student as well. In fact, when we discuss logical fallacies,
deadlines are often the example I use to illustrate the slippery slope
fallacy. I ask students how many of
them have ever heard a teacher refuse to accept an assignment from a student
(none of them of course, but their friends or classmates) because it was late
and, the instructor says, if she accepts that student’s work, well then she’ll
have to accept late work from everyone.
Hands fly into the air. Nothing more than the old slippery slope logic
at work, I tell them. Most of us who
teach writing realize it isn’t an exact science. We work in a community where we understand what it takes for some
of our students to even show up each day is incredible. We know, mainly from
our own past experiences, that life often fails to follow the most intricately
laid out plans you have for it. There
are always exceptions to the rule, but they should be that. Exceptions.
And they should be warranted. I
don’t think it’s a matter of instructors being heartless or even unyielding so
much as what an instructor feels is a warrant for an extension and what a
student feels should be one are sometimes two drastically different things, and
like it or not, it’s the instructor who gets to decide if an extension is
warranted, not the student.
However, as Brooks admits, deadlines are there to teach
responsibility. Is teaching
responsibility really part of my job?
There certainly are days when I wish I could say no. I’m just there to teach content. My job would be so much easier if all I had
to do was teach content. My students’
lives would be so much easier if all they had to worry about was learning
content. I know that’s not true though. For either of us. Brooks oversimplifies the issue,
though. Instructors don’t generally set
deadlines for the purpose of teaching students responsibility. However, students often learn lessons
associated with responsibility as a result of them. In the coming days, some of my ENGL 101 students will be learning
those lessons. Some will learn (hopefully) not to put off drafting their papers
until the night before because they don’t like the experience of having to sit
all night in front of a computer instead of doing something more interesting on
a Thursday night, or they don’t like the feeling of panic they experience when
trying to locate an open lab to print their papers at the last minute because
someone used all the ink in their printer at home. Others will come in ten or
fifteen minutes late to class and learn that when I said the beginning of class
was when I collected assignments, that’s what I meant and their assignment is
late. A few may wake up suddenly in the
wee hours of Saturday morning, startled awake by the realization that they
forgot to submit their drafts to turnitin.com. Still more will learn a
completely different set of lessons.
They will learn that they could get themselves out of a corner they’d
backed themselves into. They’ll learn
that even 48 hours ago they sat in class complaining about how hard the
assignment was or how confused they were or (insert an appropriate internal
struggle here), they survived.
Better yet, they triumphed. They overcame. Still others will learn the
invaluable lesson that they belong here.
Many students already know they do.
Many, though, do not. There are likely to be doubters in both camps at
this point in the semester. That’s how
it works. Writing makes doubters of the
best of us—but just as assuredly it makes believers of us as well. Writing teaches us as much about ourselves
as it does the world around us. College is often that way, too, and we learn
more than we sign up for. Ironically,
so is the real world which Brooks would have you believe is so foreign to your
college experience.
Four Fired-Ohio Elections Chief Misses Deadline
350 New Jersey School board Members forced to Resign after Failing to Meet Background Check Deadline
County Circuit Clerk Ordered to Pay 9.5K to Reimburse Law Firm when She Fails to Meet Filing Deadline
Sunday, September 2, 2012
Some Not So Urban Musings Part 1
The blog, The Urban Muse, recently published a post
titled, “College Writing Lessons You Can Discard in the Real World.” The
author, Stephanie Brooks, is a self described education blogger who feels
online education is “the future,” and evidently spends her time (according to
the accompanying author blurb) researching the top online colleges and
universities and handing out advice to online students in her digital version
of Lucy Van Pelt.
Given the title of her post, you might think I’m going to
take offense, or at least exception, to her underlying premise that there
are indeed lessons from your college writing classes that you can simply
dismiss once you are in the “real world.” Believe
me, I was more than ready to. However,
reading through her list of insights, I found there really wasn’t much I
disagreed with. At least not at face
value. Here is what she says you can
forget:
- Fill up on jargon.
- No late passes.
- Praise the grammar gods.
These points don’t seem to be anything I’d take issue with
so much as things to make me wonder when was the last time Brooks was actually
in a writing classroom. These all seem to be legitimate concerns of students
and discussion topics of instructors on a fairly regular basis.
It would seem that we would agree and leave it at that, but then a funny
thing happened…I started thinking about the examples she provides, her logic,
tone, and overall characterization of writing classes and instructors…and then
I started to try to figure out why she has this attitude…and then, of course, I
found myself not only disagreeing with most of what she says but the fact that
she’s posted this at all (which we’ll get to...eventually).
In defense of her first point she says, “In business, clear
and concise writing is preferred to jargon-filled, intellectual-sounding
arguments. In the real world, clarity is king, whether you’re writing an email
or a blog post.” News flash, Ms.
Brooks, but in composition classes, we really prefer clear and concise writing
as well. In fact, this is one of the
biggest issues I see in freshman writing.
Getting students to understand that everything—every single word,
phrase, sentence, etc. in the draft needs to have a clear and specific purpose
for being there. It needs to be there
as a result of a concrete choice the student writer has made. Jargon, filler, and fluff are not hallmarks
of good writing. I don’t know anyone
who teaches writing who would say they are.
In fact, we just had this discussion in my ENGL 102 class
the other day. My students had read an excerpt
from a book on 21st century literacies and were feeling like I’d
pushed them into the deep end of the academic pool. With nary an intellectual lifeguard or floatie in sight. At the end of our discussion, one student asked which I thought
was better, to be clear and to the point, or to go on and on and on as the
students felt this author had done. I took the opportunity to turn this into a
“teaching moment” and tie the question back to our earlier discussions on how
language is used to create and maintain power, that different discourse
communities present us with different rhetorical situations which have their
own sets of criteria, and that to really be literate in the 21st
century requires us to be able to decode those criteria, move among the different
discourse communities we find ourselves in, and operate within their
constraints. Only then can we use
language for our own power or resist it being used against us in ways we might not want it to be. Part of the
responsibility for clarity falls to the author, a good part of it, to be
sure. However, part of it also lies
within the reader and his or her ability and willingness to navigate a
text. Therefore, I told my students,
being clear and to the point is always preferable, but (and this is a big but)
what is defined as clear and to the point depends upon the particular
rhetorical situation, and academic journal writing and similar types of writing are not going to appear "clear and to the point" for most students who encounter them the first time or even the first 57 times, maybe; however, to people who are
fluent in that discourse community, they are. (And it is my sincere hope and belief that as they learn to tread the academic waters, it will become clearer to my students as well.)
This brings me back to Brooks’ point about academic
jargon. One definition of jargon refers
to language, particularly vocabulary that’s used by a certain group or
profession. (Discourse communities,
anyone?) In this sense, I would say her
point of academics preferring academic jargon is true—when we are discussing work
that shows you belong to a particular academic discipline. Yes, that’s what we
expect you, as a student, to demonstrate to us through your writing. You understand. You belong. You know the verbal equivalents of the secret handshake. (Well, one
thing, anyway.) However, what that "preferred academic jargon" consists of depends greatly on the
discipline (sciences vs. humanities) and the level of the students’ education
(undergrad vs. grad student). I certainly would not expect someone in one of my freshmen composition classes to write on the level of a peer who is writing in an academic journal, or even with the same level of discourse knowledge as a grad student or upper division English major. If I tried to demand that standard, it would be painful for everyone involved. Conversely, though, "hey sup w tht txt idk brd u?" might be clear and to the point if someone is texting or IMing a friend concerning a recent class reading assignment, but isn't really acceptable (or clear) for an in class response to that assignment. That, too, becomes painful for everyone involved.
Contrary to what Brooks implies, this lesson in
understanding and using the appropriate jargon to show you belong to a particular community is justified. Instead of jargon of this nature falling
under the other definition of the word (pretentious vocabulary, confusing
syntax, vague meaning, gibberish, meaningless discussions) as her logic and
tone indicate all academic jargon is, the lesson taught to students by having
to navigate the world of academia and learning to use appropriate jargon and
rhetoric to be successful in that world underscores the fact that whatever job
the student obtains after graduation will require him or her to learn,
understand, and use the vocabulary, syntax, etc. that is used in that
particular world as well.
Not only do medical professions have their own set of vocabularies that most of us outside of them don't understand, they also have their own syntax or way of which words are arranged to convey a particular meaning. For example, let's assume Mr. Smith goes into the hospital to receive treatment for a condition. The treatment doesn't alleviate the condition as Mr. Smith and his doctor expected it would. Most of us, as medical laymen would describe what occurred with words such as, "The treatment didn't work." In this construction, it's clear that the treatment was expected to do something that it did not. However, a note in Mr. Smith's chart would more likely say, "The patient failed to respond to the treatment." In this case, the responsibility of failure has shifted from the treatment to Mr. Smith, the patient. All as a result of syntax. Studies have shown this is common medical lexicon, to shift responsibility from personnel and medical treatment and on to the patient. Whether or not that's good, bad, or otherwise (or why it occurs) is another discussion, but it does happen, and it does illustrate the need to understand how different communities in the real world use language differently. If Mr. Smith, or a member of his family, stumbles upon this remark in his chart, they may take offense; however, it may be that no one is really "blaming" Mr. Smith so much as the medical personnel doing the charting have just learned this is how writing is done in this field. There may be no judgement at all involved .
Ironically, too, this same chapter that my students read discussed how academic writing is being reshaped by the concerns of other literacies. Academic writing is not a stagnate, immutable form mired in the past, irrelevant to and uniformed by other communities as Brooks would have her readers believe. Nor is her claim that academic writing and jargon is the only type accepted in writing classrooms a valid one. More and more composition curriculums are including multimodal texts which require students to navigate a variety of rhetorical situations and present their assignments in a variety of formats some far from the traditional essay or “scholarly” paper. There is a genuine concern on the part of instructors that the students they teach find their discipline and it’s skills applicable beyond the confines of the classroom, and most of us understand the need to help students increase the fluidity with which they move between the academic and non-academic worlds.
Ironically, too, this same chapter that my students read discussed how academic writing is being reshaped by the concerns of other literacies. Academic writing is not a stagnate, immutable form mired in the past, irrelevant to and uniformed by other communities as Brooks would have her readers believe. Nor is her claim that academic writing and jargon is the only type accepted in writing classrooms a valid one. More and more composition curriculums are including multimodal texts which require students to navigate a variety of rhetorical situations and present their assignments in a variety of formats some far from the traditional essay or “scholarly” paper. There is a genuine concern on the part of instructors that the students they teach find their discipline and it’s skills applicable beyond the confines of the classroom, and most of us understand the need to help students increase the fluidity with which they move between the academic and non-academic worlds.
Your Professor Tweets More Than You
More proof that truth is stranger than fiction, perhaps...that digital divide between you and your professor may not be as wide as you think...
http://dailyinfographic.com/your-professor-tweets-more-than-you-infographic
http://dailyinfographic.com/your-professor-tweets-more-than-you-infographic
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Fall 2012 Tutor Hours
Another semester is once again upon us. The WR is open from now until the last day of regular classes (December 10, 2012). We are closed for all college holidays and breaks. Also, if classes are cancelled due to weather or other emergencies, the WR will be closed even though other offices at DACC may be open. The WR is located on the second floor of Clock Tower toward the east end of the hallway in CT 205 and CT205A. Along with tutoring services and information about writing, the WR also has a small computer lab that students can use for academic purposes. The lab is open the same hours that tutors are available. Your instructors may also ask you to come to the WR to make up a quiz or test. If you are coming for a make up exam, please be sure to bring a picture ID and to arrive in plenty of time to finish your test before the WR closes. If you wish to make an appointment or have a question, please contact us at 217-443-8877. Our hours for the Fall 2012 semester are:
Monday-Thursday 9:00 AM-3:00 PM
Friday 9:00 AM-12:00 PM
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