Exercise 13
How are you doing on your activity analysis? I hope it’s coming along well. By now, I hope you’ve made some progress on collecting your data and starting to take some notes. For this assignment, provide an update on your progress so far by answering the following questions:
Try to be specific in your responses. If your report mentioned six people you planned to interview and you have completed three interviews and have arranged two of the others, provide those details.
Rubric:
A successful report will include the following features:
Total possible score: 15 points.
Exercise 14
Assignment text description:
Make a list of the genres you use or encounter in your various and numerous roles (student, friend, worker, writer, soccer player, social media participant, club member, blogger—whatever roles you play). Spend at least 10 or 15 minutes making this list. You might be surprised by how many genres you add to it! (Try to be as specific as you can. You can get really detailed. You might list, for example, “news articles” and “news article comments.”)
After making your list, choose five that you use frequently. Highlight these genres in your list. Below your list, explain how these genres help “mediate activity” and “get stuff done.” Finally, describe how they can (or do) prevent “stuff from getting done” or create other problems when used incorrectly.
Rubric:
A successful report will include the following features:
Total possible score: 20 points.
Journal 16
Respond, with 200-600 words, to the following prompt: Discuss some of the groups you are a part of and the specialized language—from slang to formal terminology—that you use in those groups. It may help to consider the following, and similar, questions:
Include the total word count of your response with your entry. Include only your response, and not the prompt itself, in your word count.
Journal 17
Respond, with 200-600 words, to the following prompt: Reflect on what you’re learning (or struggling to learn) so far in this unit. It may help to consider some of the following terms and concepts:
Include the total word count of your response with your entry. Include only your response, and not the prompt itself, in your word count.