
This morning in class, you will receive the assignment for the individual presentation that you will deliver during the exam period. An additional copy is posted on Blackboard, and the directions are also included below.
Overview
As a finalist for a much-sought-after internship in your field, you are required to deliver a concise and engaging presentation that highlights your achievements in English 1103 and demonstrates your ability to effectively assume the responsibilities that the internship requires of you. Among the aspects of the course that you should address are one or more of your major writing assignments and the development of your critical thinking and collaboration skills. You are encouraged but not required to address additional aspects of the course.
Directions for Planning
- Plan a brief presentation of approximately three minutes that highlights your achievements in English 1103 and demonstrates your ability to effectively assume the responsibilities that the internship in your field requires of you.
- Address one or more of your major writing assignments and the development of your critical thinking and collaboration skills. You are encouraged but not required to address additional aspects of the course.
- Include the following in your presentation:
- An opening in which you state your first and last names and your major,
- Details from your experiences in the course that illustrate the development of your writing, your critical thinking, and your collaboration skills
- A close examination of one pertinent passage in your blog, and
- A conclusion that provides closure and invites questions from the interview committee.
Directions for Rehearsing
- In preparation for rehearsing, write your notes on index cards. If your notes are in complete sentences, rewrite them to include only words and short phrases for your key points. If your notes are too detailed, you will risk relying heavily on them and making minimal eye contact with the interview committee. Make as much eye contact as possible and be sure to make eye contact with committee members throughout the room rather than fixing your eyes on one or two people.
- Because you are required to project your blog on the classroom screen, you should familiarize yourself with the presentation station. Demonstrating that you are not adept at using the technology required for your presentation may jeopardize your chances for obtaining the internship. If you have not used the presentation station, I encourage you to devote part of today’s class period to familiarizing yourself with its setup.
- Practice good posture. As you deliver your presentation, your ears should be directly above your shoulders. If you tend to shift your weight from one foot to the other—a distracting habit that’s sometimes called rocking the boat—stand with your feet perpendicular to each other. If you do, you will not be able to shift your weight from one foot to the other.
- Avoid filler words, such as um, like, and you know. If you tend to use filler words, practice pausing at the points where you are likely to use fillers.
- Optional: Rehearse with a classmate. Take turns delivering your presentations and offering feedback. Offer both suggestions for improvement and words of encouragement.
Peer Responses
After we discuss your presentation assignment, you will read a final essay and annotated bibliography written by one of your classmates and compose a response to it.
Directions
- Go to the class blog page, and choose one student’s essay and bibliography for your response. You are welcome to respond to any student in section eight or eighteen whose subject for the project is different from your own.
- Read the student’s essay and bibliography and compose a response (75 words, minimum) that addresses two or more of these elements: the title, the introductory paragraph, the mention of a larger project that could develop from the research and the theoretical framework that would guide it, the bibliography’s commentaries.
- Does the blog post include an image that documents part of the blogger’s writing process away from the screen? (yes or no)
- Does the post include a relevant embedded link? (yes or no)
- Compose your response on the lines below and on the ones on the back of this sheet. Use additional paper if you need more space.
Blog Checklist
If you complete your peer response before the end of the period, use your remaining time to consult the checklist and make any necessary changes. An additional copy of the list, which you will receive in class today, appears below.
Content
- All three major writing assignments—the literacy narrative, the analysis, and the final essay and annotated bibliography—remain published on the blog as three separate blog posts and are accessible to site visitors.
- The posts’ titles are the ones you created for the assignments, not the assignment labels.
- All three posts include an image that documents part of your writing process away from the screen.
- All three posts include an embedded link to a relevant website (a site related to the subject of the assignment).
- The embedded links are not tertiary (background) sources.
Form
- “Hello World” and any other placeholder posts have been deleted.
- The posts’ titles are not enclosed in quotation marks.
- If a title asks a question, it includes a question mark.
- No single line or paragraph has an accidental division, and no other irregular spacing appears in the text.
- Recommended, not required: Headings, including Work Cited, Works Cited, and Annotated Bibliography, are presented as headings (H1 or H2 in the editor), not as paragraphs.
- Recommended, not required: Because of inconsistencies with indentations in the blogging platform, paragraphs are presented in block style
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Next Up
Wordplay Day! To prepare for class, revisit the Dictionary and World Builder pages on the Scrabble website, the Merriam-Webster Scrabble Word Finder page, and review the blog posts devoted to Scrabble tips.