![]() |
This is the course blog for Ryan Meehan's online section of ENC1102 at the University of South Florida. Follow @usfenglsh on Twitter. |
Periodically this semester, I will ask you to collect permalinks to your past assignments into one blog post so I can cross-check your work against what I have recorded in my gradebook thus far.
Week 2 (Role of Wikipedia; Say Hello.)
Week 3 (Kairos; Examples of Ethos, Logos and Pathos.)
Week 4 (Dan McCarthy’s Art)
Week 5 (Podcast 1:Look at your own face(book))
Your post will wind up looking quite a bit like what I have written above, except where my links take you to the blog where the assignment can be found, your links will take me to your completed assignments on your blog or elsewhere.
Tag this post “englsh link collection”. Oh, and if you are forgetting what permalinks are, here.
For more info on what constitutes “academic sources,” please review this short web page from Mid Michigan Community College (link).
I enjoyed listening to them. I will say that the ones that were most successful were the ones that were “written” or “scripted.” Podcasts thats employ a stream-of-consciousness approach can be difficult to follow and tend to be overly long.
If you believe that podcasts that are scripted tend to feel overly formal, you might employ a hybrid approach next time: Create an outline that prompts you to discuss certain points. It does not need to be a word-for-word script, but it may provide you with some guidance with regards to how you’d like podcast to flow.
Happy President’s Day. This week’s announcement will be posted later tonight.
(Source: Library of Congress.)