This grading method includes no points and no letter grades and concentrates on the work you put in to complete the assignment.
What is Labor-Based Grading?
Claim-heavy paragraphs need this kind of revision method to build in support.
What is Exploding paragraphs?
This acronym has been used throughout the class and was taught using the example "How do we make really good mashed potatoes?"
What is Aims, Materials, Methods?
While we often think about this part of the writing process as sentence level correction and checking grammar, it can be a reimagining of our topic and paper.
What is Revision?
All materials other than your own monologues are referred to as this in podcasting.
What is tape?
This TV show was used to explain the genre conventions of a research proposal and the five steps in the genre.
What is Scooby Doo?
This rule for paragraphs can be shortened into this acronym: OPOP, and helps keep paragraphs centered on a specific topic.
What is one-point-one-paragraph?
When trying to write good questions to guide our research and writing, we should these three considerations.
What is assumptions, context/scope, word choice?
Marking up a print copy of a source while you read is this kind of reading practice and allows you to be in conversation with a text.
What is annotation?
The speed with which you speak and the audio moves along.
What is pacing?
A type of professional writing used to apply for funding, set issues before committees, implement programs or kickstart larger research projects.
What is a proposal?
This writing move allows a writer to develop their ideas further by adding the ideas or concepts of a source to their own.
What is extending?
The process by which a person is taken up and brought into a discourse.
What is interpellation?
These words are so big and ambiguous they could mean just about anything, so they often mean exactly nothing unless we write meaning into them. Ex: "What I mean by that is..."
What is Weasel Words?
Citing a source in audio format requires this writing move to introduce and explain it.
What is writing in and out of tape?
This kind of supplementary source uses visual rhetorical design to arrange information so it can be easily understood by the audience at a brief glance.
What is an infographic?
This writing moves acts like a seesaw, allowing sentences to interlock and improve paragraph cohesion.
What is given/new?
The study and theory of knowledge, its formation and transmission.
What is Epistemology?
I characterize this type of punctuation as the love child of the comma and the period. It signals that two complete thoughts are so intricately related, they need to be in the same sentence.
What is the Semi-Colon?
When looking for that thing we call 'flow' in our writing our most invaluable revision tool is this practice, which has its roots in our human history of oral storytelling.
What is reading aloud?
A set of principles and range of practices through which research outputs are distributed online free of cost.
What are Open-Access sites?
This type of point of view in writing has the overall effect of asking your audience to identify with the role/situation the writer puts forth in a piece.
What is second person perspective?
A branch of philosophy concerned with concepts such as existence, being, and becoming.
What is ontology?
We learned these three types of audiences.
What is primary, secondary, and gatekeeper?
This kind of source comes from a person considered an authority on a topic.
What is an expert source?