Sunday, October 30, 2011
Graffiti
I personally think that graffiti could be considered both vandalism and art. Some forms of graffiti can tell stories about life and personal situations. In other conditions, such as graffiti on school desks, I consider it vandalism.
Chrystal Eady
The Importance of Proofreading
However, when a writer publishes their work and a reader notices obvious grammatical errors or evidence of poor spelling skills, the reader will automatically assume the writer doesn't fully understand what they are talking about. This may be a false assumption, but when presented with sloppy writing, it is an easy assumption to make. A researcher may spend hours finding credible evidence to support their claim, but if they don't spend the same amount of time editing their draft, all that time and energy will be for naught. This is why I always re-read my drafts several times over, and even ask others to read my drafts for me in case I let anything slip by. I'm not trying to imply that everyone need be an exceptionally skilled writer. Everyone has their own talents and interests, and writing research papers is certainly not everyone's forte. That doesn't mean that as writers we should all be satisfied with producing carelessly proofread material. Try your hardest to produce the best papers you can every time, and as you practice honing your writing skills, you will become that much more trustworthy as a writer and researcher.
Emily Manno
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
The Use of Research Headings
For example, discussed in the rubric for Paper 2, the introduction was required to include, in addition with the researcher’s thesis statement, the research problem, significance, and research questions, which were expected to be clearly and explicitly stated. Throughout our high school years, we were familiar with generating research papers without headings. As a class, including headings in our papers threw most of us off, while confusing the way we, as researchers, generated our papers. Our writing techniques had to be adjusted in order to effectively meet the requirements, and it made most of us feel as though the paper was not a “real” research paper. Headings provide clarity, allowing the reader to clearly understand issues, as well as important points in which the researcher is trying to address.
-Jeffrey Fyock
Acknowledgments and Responses
In today’s class we discussed chapter ten in Craft of Research. The chapter dealt with Acknowledgments and Responses and how we as researchers must acknowledge and respond to our audience’s point of view. We then broke up into our five individual groups and discussed the importance of each part of the chapter to clearly explain acknowledgments and responses to our classmates. Group number three explained answering questions you can’t answer.
Group number three felt that not every researcher has the answer to all unanswered questions. Stating that it’s better to redefine or rebuild your argument or problem. Rather than discount your problem hoping that your audience will not notice. Another way to tackle this was to turn your disappointment into a victory. It may sound a little farfetched but you can turn the claim you at first desired into a hypothesis that your audience might think is sensible. Lastly every experienced researcher and professor will understand that everyone’s version of the truth is a confusing one, but they will acknowledge you for understanding your limits.
By Joseph Givens
Sunday, October 16, 2011
The Top 10 Inventions of all Time
Group one felt that electricity was the most important invention of all time, because you use it every day. Another reason we discussed was that a lot of inventions on our list would not be possible without electricity. Each group could reasonably argue if the top picked inventions were critical or not. In each group there were different ideas and opinions pertaining to the most important inventions. Possible research questions: How do I keep electricity going?How do I transfer electricity?How do I make different forms of it?How do I experiment with electricity?
Kristi Eileen Quinn
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Josh Readshaw said:
I really liked the point made about writing a research paper is being liek having a vebal argument with friends or family. In a verbal argument, you try yo persuade your opponent to believe that you stance on an issue is right and thier privious stance was wrong. This is what you do in a research paper except you don't get to see your opponent face to face. You have to try to convince them to believe your stance without you ever seeing them or them ever seeing you.
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
On assembling reason and evidence
The same is true when having a verbal argument with friends or family. If you have no factual backdrop to support your claims you will lose and look like a fool. We can think of research and writing our papers as a matter of winning or losing an argument. The more evidence you have for your reasons makes you a much more persuasive person. Or in terms of writing, you will be able to prove your point (thesis statement) in your paper.
William Coyle