Throughout my educational
experience I’ve had few things that I have had issues with. I’ve never been strongly
suited for the sciences, measuring substances and identifying rocks are not my
thing; mathematics never really caught my attention, invisible numbers and
letters as numbers should not be a thing; but social studies and English that’s where I
shine a little brighter. (semi-colon as a super coma?) I never
had to put too much effort into the areas that already caught my attention because (because at the end without a coma) they
already came a little more naturally than the other subjects. Writing as a
whole is something that has come naturally to me throughout my education, but it’s
the little issues in my writing that have slid by. I sometimes over look the
distinctions between there, their and they’re or you’re and your, though I know
there different purposes and uses, without a second glance. (though used to insert a side note) I
naturally slide comas in where they don’t belong as well as forgetting to put them where they should be and my
sentence variance isn’t always as strong as it should be. Because (start the sentence with because) the
basics never really became habits for me, I am finding it more difficult to
make them habits now. As
a writer, over the course of this semester this is what I want to focus on; as
a writer I want the basics to become habits. (Semi- colon used as a mirror?)
Another thing I would love to get a better
handle on over the course of this semester is creating a greater sense of
variation in my in punctuation. As I sit
here reflecting on the work I have done up until this point in both my
educational career and personal writing a lot of it is very one dimensional in
a sense. Most of this I understand has been my lack of desire to do so, but I also
don’t ever really recall being told or taught what my options were. Now I am
not using that as an excuse because like I said I haven’t put in the strongest
effort to learn something new and put it to use in this area, but now I
seemingly have the perfect opportunity to do so. I want to be able to incorporate
semicolons, dashes, and parentheses to give my sentence structure something
different; to give it depth. (semi-colon used for connection to a short
sentence)
Monday, September 30, 2013
Monday, September 16, 2013
blog #5
Re-Visiting Dora (again)
While
reading the Dora article there were a few things that caught my attention when
it came to the teachers teaching methods and how Dora applied what she was
being told. Reading through the lens of
the day to day contact, focusing on what the learning steps were for Dora and
better understanding why it was necessary for the steps to happen the way they
did made understanding what works a lot easier.
When it
came down to the teacher’s day to day actions with Dora they made sure that
they respected and acknowledged the natural progression of what it would take
to get Dora on the right path for her writing development. The teacher
also does a good job of complimenting her natural progression and encouraging
her to move forward(COMPOUNDED SUBJECT WITH TWO OR MORE PERSONAL
PROMOUNS. ALSO IM NOT SURE IF IM RIGHT HERE) Even when she was just
acknowledging that letters go together to make words and sounds was a step in
the right direction and allowed her to naturally progress to the next stages on
her own without being stifled. From what I saw when the teacher did step in,
she did so in a fashion that asked for the student to observe what it is she
needed to work on next. The teacher, who is to encourage and cultivate a learning environment
were the students are able to rely on one another to help build their own
skills with collaboration, does so by providing her students with different
tools, such as a mentor text, for guidance. Not only did this interaction
better the teachers ability to assess the point they’re at in their writing
development it allows them the ability to asses theirs as well. Dora and her classmates were given enough
freedom to explore their sentence syntax while still having some guidance and a
steady frame work to help make themselves better. The teacher then follows that up by reassuring them when
something is done correctly making for a very strong writing technique in my
opinion.
When
it comes to how Dora picks up these concepts I think it’s natural that she had
some difficulty with it. Turning sentence fluency and production and creating
your own syntax into something that becomes a habit for you is something that
takes time and practice. It’s hard to be able to pick up on the proper use of
where punctuation should be placed and its
purpose and the fact that Dora always keeps trying to push forward is a success
in itself. Another way to look at how long it took her is that the teacher
never truly gives her a direct “rule” she has to follow but instead encourages
her to observe and build those writing rules for herself, which makes the time
it takes her acceptable when she’s developing something from scratch(IT
ALSO SEEMED TO BENEFIT DORA THAT SHE WAS NEVER GIVEN A DIRECT “RULE” SHE HAS TO
FOLLOW BUT INSTEAD IS ENOURAGED TO OBSERVE AND BUILD THOSE WRITING RULES FOR
HERSELF. BEING ABLE TO DEVELOP THISE RULES TAKES TIME MAKING IT FAR MORE
ACCEPTABLE IN MY EYES THAT SHE MAY NOT BE CATCHING ON ALL THAT QUICKLY.)
Instead of being given an archetype to follow, she’s given the opportunity to
build her own and test out the boundaries making her ability to latch on to
these concepts a little stronger or so it seems to me.
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