Mmm-hmm satisfyin'!Dr. Medulla wrote:Brief update about my class last night and the Beatles book. A couple students were pretty vocal about their hostility to the book—and I appreciated that, just being passionate about assessing an author—but one guy totally got the argument and intent. Just completely, even suggesting aspects that I hadn't considered. Afterwards he told me that reading it was a revelation in terms of our relationship with history. He was already one of the best two students, but, damn, that was satisfying. If nothing else happens in the class the rest of the way, one person had that too-rare "holy fuck" intellectual moment (two others were basically in his camp, but I don't think they appreciated the significance quite as profoundly). There's a basic truism that if you can reach 10–15% of the students, that's a success, and I've found my 3 or 4 in a class of 24.
Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
"Suck our Earth dick, Martians!" —Doc
Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
Just thought I'd dump a gripe here.
Dear English composition courses of ten years ago that I still remember,
You know, a lot of actual essays don't conclude the introductory paragraph with a thesis statement. Often they add a transitional sentence. Sometimes they postpone it until the second paragraph, which is shocking, I know.
I understand why composition is taught in a mechanical, schematic fashion, but it probably wouldn't hurt to indicate that good English literary criticism does not adhere to that formula. It probably makes grading easier, and I know grading is a horror, but isn't the end of all this supposed to be good writing?
Thanks again,
- Gene
P. S.
T. S. Eliot began a lot of essays with "It is" or "There is" and similar constructions, which as I recall you weren't too fond of either.
Dear English composition courses of ten years ago that I still remember,
You know, a lot of actual essays don't conclude the introductory paragraph with a thesis statement. Often they add a transitional sentence. Sometimes they postpone it until the second paragraph, which is shocking, I know.
I understand why composition is taught in a mechanical, schematic fashion, but it probably wouldn't hurt to indicate that good English literary criticism does not adhere to that formula. It probably makes grading easier, and I know grading is a horror, but isn't the end of all this supposed to be good writing?
Thanks again,
- Gene
P. S.
T. S. Eliot began a lot of essays with "It is" or "There is" and similar constructions, which as I recall you weren't too fond of either.
I feel that there is a fascistic element, for example, in the Rolling Stones . . .
— Morton Feldman
I've studied the phenomenon of neo-provincialism in self-isolating online communities but this place takes the fucking cake.
— Clashy
— Morton Feldman
I've studied the phenomenon of neo-provincialism in self-isolating online communities but this place takes the fucking cake.
— Clashy
- Dr. Medulla
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Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
The advice I give: Present your thesis within the first 10% of the paper. If you have ten pages to work with, get it in by the end of page one. It's a real estate matter. The more time you spend on set up, no matter how brilliant and helpful it is, you're taking away pages from proving your case. I'd like to think that that approach is a useful medium between rigid first-paragraph thesis statement and endless rambling, still allowing the writer some freedom to be creative while being responsible to the reader.
"Ain't no party like an S Club party!'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
Exactly. You gotta have it in the beginning, or else you're lost in a pathless wood as a reader, but insisting on the final sentence of the first paragraph is stifling. Moreover, the whole first couple of paragraphs should have a sense of things coming gradually into greater and greater focus. Diffusion at that stage is often deadly, unless one is doing what I'd call a survey essay. Even in the latter case, which isn't terribly common in writing for coursework anyway, you want to have some criteria or guiding lights marked out at the beginning, though you needn't do it in a heavyhanded way. Some of the best essays are able to do that without the reader consciously registering it.Dr. Medulla wrote:The advice I give: Present your thesis within the first 10% of the paper. If you have ten pages to work with, get it in by the end of page one. It's a real estate matter. The more time you spend on set up, no matter how brilliant and helpful it is, you're taking away pages from proving your case. I'd like to think that that approach is a useful medium between rigid first-paragraph thesis statement and endless rambling, still allowing the writer some freedom to be creative while being responsible to the reader.
I feel that there is a fascistic element, for example, in the Rolling Stones . . .
— Morton Feldman
I've studied the phenomenon of neo-provincialism in self-isolating online communities but this place takes the fucking cake.
— Clashy
— Morton Feldman
I've studied the phenomenon of neo-provincialism in self-isolating online communities but this place takes the fucking cake.
— Clashy
Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
A lot of Rexroth's essays are survey essays in that sense. You don't necessarily get a strong thesis statement at the get-go, but the temper of the writing together with small specific statements throughout the beginning give you a strong sense of the lines along which the essay will unfold. By the end, you've absorbed the argument without being as conscious of where the thesis is placed unless you reread it.
That kind of writing, though, is a bit of a high-flying exercise and should be reserved for very good writers. It doesn't fit in academic contexts for the most part.
Unless it's the essay under examination in a lit class, of course!
That kind of writing, though, is a bit of a high-flying exercise and should be reserved for very good writers. It doesn't fit in academic contexts for the most part.
Unless it's the essay under examination in a lit class, of course!
I feel that there is a fascistic element, for example, in the Rolling Stones . . .
— Morton Feldman
I've studied the phenomenon of neo-provincialism in self-isolating online communities but this place takes the fucking cake.
— Clashy
— Morton Feldman
I've studied the phenomenon of neo-provincialism in self-isolating online communities but this place takes the fucking cake.
— Clashy
- Dr. Medulla
- Atheistic Epileptic
- Posts: 116721
- Joined: 15 Jun 2008, 2:00pm
- Location: Straight Banana, Idaho
Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
The thing is, most academics (let alone grad student TAs) are not good writers let alone self-conscious writers. It's easier to default to The Rules because at least they have something to fall back on for justification. I don't think the answer is much more involved than that. If I'll grant some leeway to them, most students aren't good writers either, so forcing them into that box might be beneficial. However, I don't think you encourage good writing—thoughtful, expressive, involved—by handcuffing them. Give students room to work and critique the work on its effectiveness.eumaas wrote:Exactly. You gotta have it in the beginning, or else you're lost in a pathless wood as a reader, but insisting on the final sentence of the first paragraph is stifling. Moreover, the whole first couple of paragraphs should have a sense of things coming gradually into greater and greater focus. Diffusion at that stage is often deadly, unless one is doing what I'd call a survey essay. Even in the latter case, which isn't terribly common in writing for coursework anyway, you want to have some criteria or guiding lights marked out at the beginning, though you needn't do it in a heavyhanded way. Some of the best essays are able to do that without the reader consciously registering it.Dr. Medulla wrote:The advice I give: Present your thesis within the first 10% of the paper. If you have ten pages to work with, get it in by the end of page one. It's a real estate matter. The more time you spend on set up, no matter how brilliant and helpful it is, you're taking away pages from proving your case. I'd like to think that that approach is a useful medium between rigid first-paragraph thesis statement and endless rambling, still allowing the writer some freedom to be creative while being responsible to the reader.
"Ain't no party like an S Club party!'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
Yeah. That's exactly what I meant by knowing why schematic, mechanical essay writing is drilled into students' heads. Trust me, I've read the shit these little fuckers write, and it is godawful. My only qualm is that people can continue to write that way well past undergrad and not feel free to develop. Some room a little earlier on may be beneficial for certain students; if they can't hack it, just tell them at that point to use the formula until they've developed a better sense of the form.Dr. Medulla wrote:The thing is, most academics (let alone grad student TAs) are not good writers let alone self-conscious writers. It's easier to default to The Rules because at least they have something to fall back on for justification. I don't think the answer is much more involved than that. If I'll grant some leeway to them, most students aren't good writers either, so forcing them into that box might be beneficial. However, I don't think you encourage good writing—thoughtful, expressive, involved—by handcuffing them. Give students room to work and critique the work on its effectiveness.eumaas wrote:Exactly. You gotta have it in the beginning, or else you're lost in a pathless wood as a reader, but insisting on the final sentence of the first paragraph is stifling. Moreover, the whole first couple of paragraphs should have a sense of things coming gradually into greater and greater focus. Diffusion at that stage is often deadly, unless one is doing what I'd call a survey essay. Even in the latter case, which isn't terribly common in writing for coursework anyway, you want to have some criteria or guiding lights marked out at the beginning, though you needn't do it in a heavyhanded way. Some of the best essays are able to do that without the reader consciously registering it.Dr. Medulla wrote:The advice I give: Present your thesis within the first 10% of the paper. If you have ten pages to work with, get it in by the end of page one. It's a real estate matter. The more time you spend on set up, no matter how brilliant and helpful it is, you're taking away pages from proving your case. I'd like to think that that approach is a useful medium between rigid first-paragraph thesis statement and endless rambling, still allowing the writer some freedom to be creative while being responsible to the reader.
Of course, the real elephant in the room is that many students just don't grow up reading all that much good writing, and don't really absorb work on that level in college either. As Tim Seibles says, reading is writing with your eyes--the best way to learn good writing is to read a lot of it and let yourself interalize it. Then practice it.
I feel that there is a fascistic element, for example, in the Rolling Stones . . .
— Morton Feldman
I've studied the phenomenon of neo-provincialism in self-isolating online communities but this place takes the fucking cake.
— Clashy
— Morton Feldman
I've studied the phenomenon of neo-provincialism in self-isolating online communities but this place takes the fucking cake.
— Clashy
- Dr. Medulla
- Atheistic Epileptic
- Posts: 116721
- Joined: 15 Jun 2008, 2:00pm
- Location: Straight Banana, Idaho
Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
That's something else I tell students. When you're doing your research, pay attention to how your guy writes. Look at the style. How does he/she organize material? I told my current class about how, in my 3rd year as an undergrad, I tried to write like Hunter Thompson. It was short-lived (thankfully) and mostly unsuccessful, but the point is that I was self-conscious about what I was trying to do. It's about developing a split personality where you learn to read your own writing and become more demanding of the writer. At it's most crude, it's about fucking trying.eumaas wrote:Of course, the real elephant in the room is that many students just don't grow up reading all that much good writing, and don't really absorb work on that level in college either. As Tim Seibles says, reading is writing with your eyes--the best way to learn good writing is to read a lot of it and let yourself interalize it. Then practice it.
"Ain't no party like an S Club party!'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
-
Silent Majority
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Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
I'll say this about my studies: I'm greatly looking forward to being challenged by them once we get through this entry level stuff.
- Dr. Medulla
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Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
Unless things are different in the UK, that you want to be challenged will make your instructors love the fuck out of you. Students who want to engage are what make the job satisfying. It's like meeting someone who shares your interest—it just makes it all the more enjoyable.Silent Majority wrote:I'll say this about my studies: I'm greatly looking forward to being challenged by them once we get through this entry level stuff.
"Ain't no party like an S Club party!'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
Dear Dr and eumaas,
Thank you for reminding me why I prefer math and science.
I don't mean that in a negative way.
Thank you for reminding me why I prefer math and science.
I don't mean that in a negative way.
- Dr. Medulla
- Atheistic Epileptic
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Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
No offense taken. Humanities people think the purpose of questions is to ask more questions; science people think the purpose of questions is to obtain answers. That's a bit crude and brutal, but mostly true and eliminates any kind of ranking.revbob wrote:Dear Dr and eumaas,
Thank you for reminding me why I prefer math and science.
I don't mean that in a negative way.
"Ain't no party like an S Club party!'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
- Dr. Medulla
- Atheistic Epileptic
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- Joined: 15 Jun 2008, 2:00pm
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Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
Tonight we're discussing a Marxist interpretation of punk and alt music. Based on the summaries they've submitted, they all love the book. I'm gonna call them a bunch of dirty Commies tonight. I might also mention Kulaks and the Khmer Rouge.
"Ain't no party like an S Club party!'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
-
Silent Majority
- Singer-Songwriter Nancy
- Posts: 18757
- Joined: 10 Nov 2008, 8:28pm
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Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
Having Toby running round the house, I decided this morning that if I get a dog of my own, he'll be called Bones McCarthy. "The only rabid thing about my dog, sir, is his aggressive anti-communist stance." And if he makes a mess in the house, I'll be able to say things like "At long last, Bones, have you no sense of decency?"Dr. Medulla wrote:Tonight we're discussing a Marxist interpretation of punk and alt music. Based on the summaries they've submitted, they all love the book. I'm gonna call them a bunch of dirty Commies tonight. I might also mention Kulaks and the Khmer Rouge.
Toby had me up early. I should really go back to bed.
- Dr. Medulla
- Atheistic Epileptic
- Posts: 116721
- Joined: 15 Jun 2008, 2:00pm
- Location: Straight Banana, Idaho
Re: Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School
I have, on my fur, 205 communist fleas.Silent Majority wrote:Having Toby running round the house, I decided this morning that if I get a dog of my own, he'll be called Bones McCarthy. "The only rabid thing about my dog, sir, is his aggressive anti-communist stance." And if he makes a mess in the house, I'll be able to say things like "At long last, Bones, have you no sense of decency?"Dr. Medulla wrote:Tonight we're discussing a Marxist interpretation of punk and alt music. Based on the summaries they've submitted, they all love the book. I'm gonna call them a bunch of dirty Commies tonight. I might also mention Kulaks and the Khmer Rouge.
Toby had me up early. I should really go back to bed.
"Ain't no party like an S Club party!'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft