We are almost finished with Paper #2: Rhetorical Analysis! I'm looking forward to reading these papers; I anticipate that there will be much improvement since the first paper, and you should be proud of your hard work to improve your writing skills. If you need an extension, remember to request one via email at least 24 hours before the paper is due (Sunday night at 11:59PM in the d2l dropbox).
Today we edited each other's papers for clarity, applying the rules that each of you studied. We discussed how it went and concluded that it would be better next time to have fewer editing groups and more time with each paper. Duly noted!! :)
For Monday:
Over the weekend, look at the grading rubric for this assignment in Google Docs and suggest improvements. Are there items missing? Could any item be made more clear? What percentage should each section contribute toward the total? We will go over the suggestions as a class Monday and finalize the rubric.
On Monday, we will also preview the third project: Making a Public Argument. This is going to be fun!!!
WELCOME TO ENGLISH 109H!
I'm Dr. Mary Bell, and I'm your instructor for this course. I will conduct course communication via this blog. Please check daily! mebell@email.arizona.edu
Friday, October 23, 2015
Thursday, October 22, 2015
Paper of the week: Laura Shoemake

The draft's strengths: Laura makes insightful points about the text in well-formed, fluid prose. Pay attention to her fourth paragraph and her use of determiner pronouns ("this, each") and transitional phrases ("furthermore, similarly, in contrast") to connect her thoughts. The points she makes in each paragraph are clearly stated and supported with appropriate examples from the text, although she could perhaps go into more detail at times, and they need citations. The draft could be improved by indicating the audience more specifically, especially in the thesis statement, and by making sure the topic sentences of each paragraph refer to the thesis in some way. In conference we noted that often the explanatory sentences at the end of each paragraph do this, and might make strong topic sentences.
Wednesday, October 21, 2015
For Friday: Study Rules for Writers section on Clarity
FOR FRIDAY:
- Review Rules for Writers section on Clarity (pp. 112-178)
- ==>Sign up for one topic in the section on Clarity and study it closely. There should be one other classmate who also signed up for the same topic if you want to study together. Make sure you work through the exercises in your section so you learn how to apply the rules to actual writing. Be prepared to act as an editing expert for that section on Friday.
- Bring Rules for Writers to class.
- Bring a printed copy of your latest draft to class.
Blog Post 28: Seek feedback about your paper
Blog Post 28 - (By Friday) -
- Post a link to the Google Document that contains your paper. Make sure to set the permission so that others at the UA with the link can comment.
- Give helpful criticism on two classmates' Google documents (NOT classmates in your editing/feedback group). Post a link to those papers.
- Seek feedback from some outside source you have not yet consulted: a roommate, a friend, a parent, or go to a walk-in session at Think Tank.
- Write about who you consulted, what feedback you got, and how you intend to implement the feedback in your paper.
- Consider focusing the feedback you get by asking one of these questions:
- What's the one most important thing I could do to improve this paper?
- How can I structure my argument more effectively?
- Can you think of any points I'm missing in my argument?
- Which paragraph needs the most work, and how can I improve it?
- What is one thing I could do to improve my prose? (clarity, conciseness, grammar)

Friday, October 16, 2015
CONFERENCES NEXT WEEK!
Class is canceled on Monday; conferences are scheduled instead
on Monday and Tuesday. Sign up HERE for a conference slot. Bring a
printed, complete draft to your conference appointment!
Deadlines to note:

Deadlines to note:
- The blogs and Google documents required for this week must be completed by Saturday at 11:59 PM.
- Paper # 2 is due a week from Sunday at 11:59 PM.
Wednesday, October 14, 2015
How to see my comments on your QRG in dropbox
Dear Students,
I had not realized that some of you might not know how to see my comments on your QRGs in the dropbox. Login to d2l, go to the dropbox, and you will see a link to your paper and the grade assigned. There is a small feedback icon that leads to my general overall comments about the paper. But there is also be a small icon labeled grademark. Click that icon and your paper will come up, with my comments marked in comment bubbles. If you mouse over the bubbles, my comments should show. I apologize for not explaining this, and I will demonstrate it in class on Friday as well.
Dr. Bell
I had not realized that some of you might not know how to see my comments on your QRGs in the dropbox. Login to d2l, go to the dropbox, and you will see a link to your paper and the grade assigned. There is a small feedback icon that leads to my general overall comments about the paper. But there is also be a small icon labeled grademark. Click that icon and your paper will come up, with my comments marked in comment bubbles. If you mouse over the bubbles, my comments should show. I apologize for not explaining this, and I will demonstrate it in class on Friday as well.
Dr. Bell
Monday, October 12, 2015
Week Eight Overview (Blogs 25-28)
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(U.S. National Archives and Records Administration) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons |
In-class work will focus on elements of rhetorical analysis. By a show of hands in class today you indicated that no one is choosing to write about Girl Culture or on a self-chosen topic, so the examples in class will be regarding HONY or #LikeAGirl.
Outside of class, you should be engaging in at least one of the pre-writing activities you found helpful in the last project (free-writing, idea map, outline). Also, you should have written a SOAPSTone, and an observation/inference chart for your text.
==>Timeline: By the end of the week you should have a thesis statement and an outline to at least 2 levels of detail. By next Monday in class, you should have a complete first draft ready to workshop.
We reviewed the rhetorical triangle:
- speaker/author
- audience (primary and secondary)
- message/purpose
Wednesday: Discussion of rhetorical strategies/appeals
- Ethos - appeals to credibility and character
- Pathos - appeals to emotion
- Logos - appeals to logic or rational decision-making
Friday: Introductions and rhetorical analysis thesis statement.
Google Document work: You should have two Google Documents going by the end of the week:
- By Wednesday: Your prewriting document. Copy all your prewriting activities about your chosen text (SOAPSTones, observation/inference chart, idea maps, etc) into a single Google Document called lastname_prewriting (substitute your last name). Make sure you've made it open for comments to anyone at the UA who has the link. Link to this document in Blog 26.
- By Friday: Your thesis statement and outline. Write your thesis statement and an exploratory outline at least 2 levels deep in a Google document called lastname_overview(substitute your last name). Make sure you've made it open for comments to anyone at the UA who has the link. Link to this document in Blog 27.
Blogs:
- Blog Post 25 (By Wednesday) - Personal Response:
- Explain which text you have chosen to analyze, and why. How do you personally react to the text you have chosen?
- Comment on two other posts suggestions about how the writer could use this reaction as a lens for writing the introduction or focusing the analysis.
- Blog Post 26 - (By Wednesday) - Prewriting activities: -
- write a paragraph describing what pre-writing activities you are using for this paper, and why.
- Add a link to the Google Doc lastname_prewriting that shows your pre-writing activity (see description above).
- Go to this link on at least two other blogs, and give helpful criticism about the pre-writing activity you see there.
- Blog Post 27 - (By Friday) -
- Post your thesis statement to your blog
- Include the link to the Google Document lastname_overview that includes your thesis statement and preliminary outline (see description above)
- By the Saturday night deadline, give helpful criticism on three classmates' Google documents.
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