Friday, October 29, 2010

Friday, October 29, 2010


Greetings, Information for Packets 6 and 7 below.
Happy Halloween weekend.
:-)


PACKET 6 (ONE READING)
"Top 10 Pros and Cons--What are the Solutions to Illegal Immigration?"
http://immigration.procon.org/view.resource.php?resourceID=000842


PACKET 7 (TWO READINGS)
"Immigration--Linked Prostitution Cases Pose Challenge
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/06/AR2008030603665.html

"Immigrants tell of forced prostitution and slavery as trafficking gang is jailed"
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2005/nov/02/immigration.ukcrime

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Tuesday, October 26th

Hello!
A few reminders and other notations...
1. Be sure when you do check the blog, which should be daily, that you look for previously posted blogs you may have missed.
2. I originally noted on the assignment for Essay 2 that the last possible day to submit a rough draft was Monday, November 1st. That due date still stands. However, if you are on campus on Friday, the 5th and can pick up your rough draft from me then, you may submit it as late as Wednesday the 3rd. (Your reviewed draft will be on the small bulletin board to the left of my office door (Calaveras 149) after 8am on Friday the 5th.)
3. Reminder, all seven episodes of Breaking Bad are on reserve in the library.
4. Please be prepared in class tomorrow having completed Packet 5. There will be a journal writing (#3) as well as Group Work #2.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Saturday evening, October 23

Hello!

The following link will take you to Packet #5, due to be read, and in the case of the first of the two assigned, listened to as well, by Wednesday, October 27th.

The first required reading is a 4 minute and 50 second interview that was recorded on National Public Radio in June of this year.

1.) "Tackling America's Drug Addiction"
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=127937271

Reminder: After you listen to the interview, please print out the transcript of the interview and bring to class on Wednesday.

2.) "Confessions of a Mom (and a Former Teen Pothead)
http://www.npr.org/blogs/tellmemore/2010/10/19/130677774/confessions-from-a-mom-and-former-teen-pot-head

Reminder: After reading this blog posting, please print and bring to class on Wednesday.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Wednesday evening, October 20

Hello, if you attended class today, you have this handout and your notes from my mini lecture about reading critically. This is a "just in case" you were unable to attend class or if you happen to misplace it and are desperate to have another copy. :-)


English 20, College Composition II
C. Fraga

How to Critically Read an Essay

Educated adults exist in a delusional state, thinking we can read.

In a most basic sense, we can.

However, odds are, some of us cannot read, at least not as well as we would like.

Too many college students are capable of only some types of reading and that becomes painfully clear when they read a difficult text and must respond critically about it.

Intelligence and a keen memory are excellent traits and most students have learned to read in a certain way that is only useful for extracting information. Thus, students are often fairly well skilled in providing summary.

However, the act of reading to extract information and to read critically are vastly different!

The current educational system in American primary schools (and many colleges) heavily emphasizes the first type of reading and de-emphasizes the latter.

In many ways, THIS MAKES SENSE.

Reading to extract information allows a student to absorb the raw materials of factual information as quickly as possible. It is a type of reading we all must engage in frequently. However, each type of reading calls for different mental habits. If we do not learn to adjust from one type of reading to another when necessary, we cripple our intellectual abilities to read critically.

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN READING TO EXTRACT INFORMATION AND READING CRITICALLY.

1. They have different goals. When students read to extract information, usually they seek facts and presume the source is accurate. No argument is required. On the other hand, when students read critically, they try to determine the quality of the argument. The reader must be open-minded and skeptical all at once, constantly adjusting the degree of personal belief in relation to the quality of the essay’s argument.
2. They require different types of discipline. If students read to learn raw data, the most efficient way to learn is repetition. If students read critically, the most effective technique may be to break the essay up into logical subdivisions and analyze each section’s argument, to restate the argument in other words, and then to expand upon or question the findings.
3. They require different mental activity. If a student reads to gain information, a certain degree of absorption, memorization and passivity is necessary. If a student is engaged in reading critically, that student must be active!!! He or she must be prepared to pre-read the essay, then read it closely for content, and re-read it if it isn’t clear how the author is reaching the conclusion in the argument.
4. They create different results. Passive reading to absorb information can create a student who (if not precisely well read) has read a great many books. It creates what many call “book-smarts.” However, critical reading involves original, innovative thinking.
5. They differ in the degree of understanding they require. Reading for information is more basic, and reading critically is the more advanced of the two because only critical reading equates with full understanding.

ULTIMATELY, WHAT WE WANT IS THE CONSCIOUS CONTROL OF OUR READING SKILLS, SO WE CAN MOVE BACK AND FORTH AMIDST THE VARIOUS TYPES OF READING.

FIVE GENERAL STAGES OF READING

1. Pre-Reading—examining the text and preparing to read it effectively (5 minutes)




2. Interpretive Reading—understanding what the author argues, what the author concludes, and exactly how he or she reached that conclusion.




3. Critical Reading—questioning, examining and expanding upon what the author says with your own arguments. Skeptical reading does not mean doubting everything your read.



4. Synoptic Reading—putting the author’s argument in a larger context by considering a synopsis of that reading or argument in conjunction with synopses of other readings or arguments.



5. Post-Reading—ensuring that you won’t forget your new insights.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Monday evening, October 18th, 10:15 pm

Just a quick note...

when you are accessing the two required readings for Wednesday, please make a note that the article titled
"Middle class struggling with health care costs, report finds" is the one I want you to read. It is an article by David Templeton from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. It is the link I gave you, but just in case you notice another listing when you google this title, it may be the entire PDF of the report. I do not want you to read the entire report, just the article ABOUT the report.

See you Wednesday.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Sunday, October 17 at 7 pm

Hello,

The following TWO readings about U.S. health care are due to be read by Wednesday, October 20th and are considered READING PACKET #4. The issue of health care certainly rears its head in the Breaking Bad episodes. It seems fitting that the series features an ordinary high school chemistry teacher whose health care benefits do not cover his treatments for lung cancer. He is desperate to get money for his treatments and to leave money for his family in the event of his death.

(Walter's former business partner, Elliott, was willing to pay for Walter's entire treatment. This "private sector" option was rejected out of jealousy and spite toward his friend's success. White, who quit the company before it went big, believes his friends ripped him off. One of his friends is the current wife of the company's CEO and also White's ex-fiance, whom he left. His resentment toward their success drives him to reject their offer.)

"Middle Class Struggling with Health Care Costs, Report Finds"
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10077/1043764-84.stm

"Why Does Health Care Cost so Much?"
http://www.newamerica.net/node/8920

See you tomorrow in class. We will be viewing episode six of Breaking Bad.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Friday, October 15, 2010--around 4 pm

Hello...heads up...
CORRECTION...
if you wish to get a rough draft to me for out of class essay assignment #2, the last possible date listed on the assignment is incorrect. You have UNTIL Monday November 1st and no later. (I had originally indicated that October 25 was the last possible day to submit a draft.)
Please make the correction. Thanks! :-)

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Tuesday, October 12th

Greetings: Below is copy of Out of Class Essay #2 which was assigned on Monday, the 11th.

Also, there has been discussion in class about the use of numbers in essay writing. Here are the "rules".....

SPELL OUT:
1. Numbers that take only one or two words (nine....twnety-seven....two billion)
2. Numbers that begin a sentence (One hundred and four years ago the ship sank.)
3. Numbers that form a compound word (a two-year-old baby)
4. Fractions (one-half)
5. Times using o'clock, half past and quarter (two o'clock....half past four)

USE NUMERAL FOR:
1. Numbers that require three or more words (1,889....162)
2. Dates, page references, room numbers, statistics, addresses, percentages, and dollars and cents (May 6, 1974....7,500 residents...99.44%....page 2....221B Baker Street....$5.98
3. A list or series of numbers
4. Exact times (2:00 p.m......my 8:30 class)
5. Numbers in papers on scientific or technical subjects

As far as using apostrophes with years...you don't. With a few exceptions, just use apostrophes for contractions and possessives. (the 1980s....six CDx....three dogs....Greek gods....five families....)




English 20, Fall 2010---Sections 7, 15 & 17---C. Fraga

Date assigned: Monday, October 11
Rough draft (optional): due no later than Monday October 25 (sec. 15 & 17) OR Wednesday October 27 (sec. 7)
Final draft due: Monday, November 8
(you have three weeks to research and write this essay)
Details:
1. MLA format
2. At least 3 outside sources on your Works Cited page
3. Please, no Wikipedia

OUT OF CLASS ESSAY ASSIGNMENT #2
Among many things, the series Breaking Bad focuses on the family entity and what happens when something quite extraordinary occurs—how do members of the family cope, adjust, and/or “deal” with the event/situation? (In the case of this series, obviously it is Walter’s cancer that is the ‘event’).

I am not referring to the everyday bumps in the road that occur for all families. Instead, I am asking you to consider the family unit when faced with an especially challenging situation. These situations could include but are not limited to:
• death
• birth
• infidelity
• serious injury
• dementia
• serious illness
• divorce
• unemployment
• new employment
• moving to a new home/state/area/country
• the return of a war veteran
• moving BACK home after initially moving OUT
• alcoholism
• drug abuse

Select ONE situation that you are most interested in exploring. You will conduct research (and possibly personal interviews, if possible) in order to write an essay that offers the reader background on the topic and makes an assertion about what elements impact a family in the most challenging of ways and supports it logically and interestingly.

Your thesis might read something like this:

When a family member develops dementia, the challenges are often devastating, yet the disease definitely impacts family members more than the dementia patient.

Or…

When a couple divorces, it most certainly impacts the children still living at home; however, it is the older children who have already moved away that are most affected by the split.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Thursday, October 7th

Greetings...sending you wishes for an enjoyable and safe weekend.

The following link will lead you to...Reading Packet #3, due to be read by Monday.

"Assessing and Managing Depression in the Terminally Ill Patient
http://focus.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/abstract/3/2/310

It is an article published in the spring of 2005 in The Journal of Lifelong Learning in Psychiatry.

It APPEARS at first glance to be very "academic"--however--do not fret. It is actually very readable and quite interesting. It offers case studies to consider which always aids in a rather academic topic such as this one.

Walter is obviously affected by his knowledge that he is terminally ill and so it is rather interesting to follow this idea further from television "land" to reality.