January 9th

I am so happy to back at school. No, really. I love having a routine!

We previously talked about existentialism when we read Rhinosceros in 1301, but we are going to look at it a bit more with The Metamorphosis.

We are creating a collaborative group document where each person will answer one question so that we can use this document on the quiz tomorrow.

When you are done, you may finish yesterday’s activity if you still need to do that.

 

1/8/24

I am not here today, but I have left legitimate work for you to do. I want you watch this lecture over Marxist Criticism and revise/edit the transcript into fully accessible sentences and paragraphs (you can find this file in Schoology). You can either listen to the lecture or just simply read the lecture to find the the pauses and breaks.

Why are we doing this? Because just taking notes or answering questions is passive. I want you to actively manipulate the text and words because it forces you to read in a different way.

1/4/24

LSC payment is due on Saturday the 6th! Remember, this is a college class. You paid for your first semester clas (1301), but now you need to pay for 1302. Make sure you log in my.lonestar.edu to make your payment.

The assignment today is Wheel, Poem, Dice in Schoology. Using the poems that we read yesterday as a model, we are going to write a poem to celebrate the new year!  However, I am going to give you a few parameters. Thw two poems yesterday were centered around rain and fire. You will center your poem about a random nature element that you can get here. Write your nature element in the gray field.

See the red, white, and blue section? That’s where you are going to roll my dice and encorporate those words into your poem.

 

 

1/3/24

Happy New Year, Panthers! 🐾

Welcome to 1302, Comp and Rhetoric II.

Today, the BDTH involved creating a New Year’s Intention.

We talked a little about New Year’s tradition (grapes, cabbage, black eyed peas, jumping, fireworks, and money in cakes are some of the interesting things that I can remember at the end of the day).

We used those traditions to talk about the catharsis of purging, cleaning, and getting ready for the new year by reading two poems: “Rain, New Year’s Eve” by Maggie Smith and “Burning the Old Year” by Naomi Shahib Nye.

Then, for each of the two poems, we did four squares over them on a sheet of paper.

And lastly, we listed out what we want to TAKE into the new year and what we want to LEAVE. I collected all of the leave it baggage and plan on burning them this weekend in my firepit.

I am not going to be here on Monday because I have a podiatrist appointment, so I’ll be leaving some kind of Gimkit as an assignment for you background on Kafka’s Metamorphosis.