Today in class you will plan and compose a midterm reflective essay that documents your work in the first half of the semester, focusing on two or three assignments or aspects of the course that have contributed to your development as a writer and a student. Since you have already written a reflection devoted solely to your literacy narrative, your midterm reflection should focus primarily on other assignments or aspects of the course, including the following:
- Keeping a journal
- Studying one of the readings examined class, including “Me Talk Pretty One Day,” “The Day Language Came into My Life,” “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” the excerpt from Chapter One of To Kill a Mockingbird, “The School,” “Back Story,” and the excerpt from “The Falling Man.”
- Reading and editing samples of student writing
- Creating and maintaining a WordPress blog and writing for an online audience beyond the classroom.
- Collaborating with your classmates on in-class writing assignments
- Playing Scrabble and collaborating with your teammates on Wordplay Day
- Writing longhand
- Limiting screen time
Include in your refelective essay the following elements:
- A title that offers a window into your reflection
- An opening paragraph that introduces your focus and presents your thesis
- Body paragraphs that offer concrete details from your work to support your claims
- One relevant quotation from one of the readings listed above or from Writing Analytically
- A signal phrase and a parenthetical citation for the quotation. Consult your class handouts for models. If you include the author’s name in the sentence, include only the page number or the abbreviation par. and the paragraph number in the parenthetical citation. If you do not name the author in the sentence, include his or her name and the page number or the abbreviation par. and the paragraph number.
- A conclusion that revisits the thesis without restating it verbatim
- A work cited entry for the text that you quote
Sample MLA Works Cited Entries
Barthelme, Donald. “The School.” The Best American Short Stories 1975, edited by Martha Foley, Houghton Mifflin, 1975. pp. 8-11.
Junod, Tom. “The Falling Man.” Esquire, vol. 140, no. 3, Sept. 2003, pp. 176+. Gale Academic OneFile Select, https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A106423422/EAIM?u=hpu_main&sid=bookmark-EAIM&xid=ce48797f.
Keller, Helen. “The Day Language Came into My Life.” https://janelucas.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/a0461-3.thedaylanguagecameintomylife_keller.pdf
King, Martin Luther, Jr. “Letter from Birmingham Jail.” California State University, Chico. https://www.csuchico.edu/iege/_assets/documents/ susi-letter-from-birmingham-jail.pdf.
Lee, Harper. Chapter One. To Kill a Mockingbird. Lippincott, 1960. pp. 9-19.
Lewis, Michael. “Back Story.” The Blind Side. 2006. Norton, 2009. pp.15-23.
Rosenwasser, David and Jill Stephen. “‘Interesting,’ ‘Revealing,’ ‘Strange.’” Writing Analytically, 9th edition. Wadsworth/Cengage, 2024. p. 24.
Rosenwasser, David and Jill Stephen. “On Keeping a Writer’s Notebook.” Writing Analytically, 9th edition. Wadsworth/Cengage, 2024. pp. 157-58.
Rosenwasser, David and Jill Stephen. “Seems to Be About X, But Could Also Be (Or is ‘Really’) About Y.’” Writing Analytically, 9th edition. Wadsworth/Cengage, 2024. pp. 104-7.
Sedaris, David. “Me Talk Pretty One Day.” Me Talk Pretty One Day. Little, Brown, 2000. 166-73.
Note that unlike the works cited entries above, the one on your midterm reflection will have a hanging indent, as will all of the works cited entries in the Microsoft Word files and PDFs that you post to Blackboard.
The complete midterm reflection assignment, along with the grade criteria, is included on the assignment handout that you will receive in class.
Next Up
At the beginning of class on Wednesday, I will return your handwritten analyses drafts with my notes, and I will conduct a check of your journal exercise on the first paragraph of Tom Junod’s “The Falling Man.” Afterward, you will have the remainder of the class period to begin revising on your laptops and tablets. The due date for posting your revised analysis to Blackboard and to your WordPress blog is Wednesday, March 4 (before class). The hard deadline is Friday, March 6 (before class).
















