28 Feb 2006
Portfolio 1
A collection of your informal responses to the assigned readings. Keep up with the agenda items and reflection papers for each class meeting, and this assignment will be easy and rewarding. Fall behind, and this assignment will feel... otherwise.
Examples of portfolios from previous classes have included a no-nonsense list and a more personal essay. Either format is fine, but however you present your work, it's important to me that you specify where each of your posts falls amongst the categories listed below. The same post can count for more than one category, but if you keep re-using the same handful of posts that's probably a sign you can do a little better next time.
Submit your portfolio by using MT Quickpost from this page, or by pasting the URL of your portfolio entry into a comment on this page.
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The Cover Entry: Post a blog entry that contains links to all the entries that you plan to submit for your portfolio. For the benefit of an outside reader (that is, someone who doesn't know what a blogging portfolio is), introduce each of these links and explain why they are significant. (For example, see "Favorite Blog Entries: Journaling Mode.")
The Collection: Your blogging portfolio is supposed to be a collection of your best weblog entries. For the purposes of this class, a "good" blog entry is one that demonstrates your intellectual engagement with the assigned readings and student panels, and/or the questions raised by your peers. I will accept a bulleted list of entries, but please write for an audience that does not know or care about your homework requirements.
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Coverage. Ensure that you have blogged something for each of the assigned readings (for a C-level grade, at least brief agenda items for each assigned reading; for a higher grade, demonstrate your intellectual involvement with the assigned readings). The first Frost poem we looked at, "Desert Places," got its own separate page on the course website, so I consider that one reading. The next two Frost poems ("Mending Wall" and "After Apple-Picking") shared a page, so you don't need a separate entry on each poem; you can choose one or the other, or a single entry that responds to both works. I have assigned several different chapters in Roberts, and given a separate page to many different chapters; therefore, I'm looking for at least a brief response to each separate assigned reading. (If you have any questions, please feel free to ask me.)
Depth. Some of the "coverage" entries you selected above should demonstrate your ability to examine a concept in depth. Do some original online research, and link to the precise pages where you got ideas that helped you formulate your ideas. If you prefer to use a library book, quote a passage that you found interesting. Here are a few examples of a blog entry that goes above and beyond the standard "what I thought about the book" blog entry: Fitting in in the Diamond Age and Forced Reading-- Beloved Character.
Interaction. Of the "Coverage" blogs entries included above, some should demonstrate your ability to use weblogs to interact with your peers. For instance, you might disagree (politely) with something a peer has written; link to and quote from the peer's blog entry, then carefully (and respectfully) explain where you disagree. Rather than hurl accusations in order to make the other person look bad, cheerfully invite the other person to explain their perspective. Quote passages from the texts your peer has cited, or do additional research that helps unveil the truth. (These may or may not include some entries you have already included among your "Depth" entries.)
Discussions. Blogging feels lonely when you aren't getting any comments; you will feel more motivated to blog if you enjoy (and learn from) the comments left by your readers. Your portfolio should include entries (which may or may not overlap with either the "Interaction" or "Depth" entries) that demonstrate that your blog sparked a conversation that furthered your intellectual examination of a literary subject.
Timeliness. A timely blog entry is one that was written early enough that it sparked a good online discussion, before the class discussion. A timely blog entry might also be an extra one written after the class discussion, if it reacts directly to something brought up in class. The blog entries that you write the night before the portfolio is due won't count in this category. And don't try to change the date in your blog entries -- I know that trick! ;)
Xenoblogging. "Xeno" means "foreign," so xenoblogging (a term that I coined last term) means the work that you do that helps other people's weblogs. Your portfolio should include three entries (which may or may not overlap with the ones you have already selected for "Coverage") that demonstrate your willingness to contribute selflessly and generously to the online classroom community. Examples of good xenoblogging:
- The Comment Primo: Be the first to comment on a peer's blog entry; rather than simply say "Nice job!" or "I'm commenting on your blog," launch an intellectual discussion; return to help sustain it.
The Comment Grande: Write a long, thoughtful comment in a peer's blog entry. Refer to and post the URLs of other discussions and other blog entries that are related.
The Comment Informative: If your peer makes a general, passing reference to something that you know a lot about, post a comment that offers a detailed explanation. (For example, the in the third comment on a recent blog entry about the history and culture of print, Mike Arnzen mentions three books that offer far more information than my post did.)
The Link Gracious: If you got an idea for a post by reading something somebody else wrote, give credit where credit is due. (If, in casual conversation, we credited the source of every point we make, we'd get little accomplished. But since a hyperlink is so easy to create, it's not good practice -- or good ethics -- to hide the source of your ideas.) If a good conversation is simmering on someone else's blog -- whether you are heavily involved or not -- post a link to it and invite your own readers to join in.
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/mt/mt-tb.cgi/5533
Excerpt: Portfolio 1 -- Jerz: American Lit II (EL 267)...
Weblog: LisaRandolph
Tracked: February 27, 2006 02:14 AM
Excerpt: Portfolio 1 -- Jerz: American Lit II (EL 267)...
Weblog: JenniferDiFulvio
Tracked: February 27, 2006 10:19 AM
Excerpt: Portfolio 1 -- Jerz: American Lit II (EL 267)...
Weblog: MelissaLupari
Tracked: February 27, 2006 10:37 AM
Excerpt: Portfolio 1 -- Jerz: American Lit II (EL 267)...
Weblog: MatthewHampton
Tracked: February 27, 2006 12:54 PM
Excerpt: Portfolio 1 -- Jerz: American Lit II (EL 267)...
Weblog: TerraStumpf
Tracked: February 27, 2006 08:54 PM
Excerpt: Portfolio 1 -- Jerz: American Lit II (EL 267) Coverage http://blogs.setonhill.edu/ShanelleKapusta/2006/01/the_world_trade.html (Very first blogging experience - poetry analysis The World Center by David Lehman) http://blogs.setonhill.edu/ShanelleKapust...
Weblog: Shanelle Kapusta
Tracked: February 27, 2006 09:10 PM
Excerpt: Portfolio 1 -- Jerz: American Lit II (EL 267)http://blogs.setonhill.edu/BrendaChristeleit/2006/02/index.html...
Weblog: BrendaChristeleit
Tracked: February 28, 2006 10:04 AM
I am not sure how to post the wesite so that you can get to it by clicking on it from my portfolio page. I hope this makes sense and you understand what i am stuck on. Hopefully someone can help me
Thanks,
Melissa
Posted by: Melissa Lupari at February 24, 2006 03:24 PMHm... Melissa, I'm afraid I'm not sure what you mean. Do you mean you want to create a link from your portfolio cover entry to an older blog entry?
Posted by: Dennis G. Jerz at February 24, 2006 03:30 PMHow do I Highlight the blog entry to the portfolio?
Posted by: Melissa Lupari at February 24, 2006 04:11 PMI wish I could be more helpful, Melissa, but I'm not sure what you mean by "highlight the blog entry to the portfolio."
Do you mean you want to turn the words The Adding Machine into a link that your reader can click on in order to load the page on which you wrote something about The Adding Machine?
Try looking at steps 3 and 4 of this handout.
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/nmj/tutorial/blogging.htm
If you're asking me something else, try again, and I'll see what I can do.
Posted by: Dennis G. Jerz at February 24, 2006 04:30 PMDr. Jerz, I'm having the same problem and read the steps you are referring to but I still can't figure this out. I am trying to do as you said, "turn the words Adding Machine into a link". Do I use MT quickpost or a new blog entry? It seems with a new blog entry I keep losing my work each time I try to go look for a new link.
Posted by: Jennifer DiFulvio at February 25, 2006 03:05 PMMT Quckpost does create a new entry each time you use it.
If you want to edit an existing blog entry, step 3 of the handout I mentioned describes how to do that.
You can also open two different browser windows -- one in which you can look for URLs you want to use, and the other to dispay the editing screen. If you'd like to come by during my office hours, I'd be happy to show you.
Posted by: Dennis G. Jerz at February 25, 2006 04:12 PMDennis,
I'm not sure I did the Porfolio right since there were not any instructions on how to pull up the URL's and so not sure what I am doing and the info that you have on line did not explain how to go from your quickpost link to a blogg and I did copy and past and it isn't working. Not sure what to do or how to do it since there were no instruction. It would be easier to print out a porfolio than this. Many people in class have no idea what you want to what to do.
Lisa, I'm always happy to help if you ask in advance. I do realize that everyone won't get it right on the first try, but that's why there's more than one portfolio that's due over the semester. (Once you get the hang of doing it this way, printing all this stuff really is a waste of time and paper.)
Until you get the hang of it, you can just paste the URL of the page you want to link to, and don't bother making it into a link. Thus, you would write, "Some of my students are writing blog entres in blank verse (http://blogs.setonhill.edu/AndrewLoNigro/2006/02/entry_in_blank.html)". (This example actually turned the URL into a link that you can click on, but that's something that happens automatically when this blog finds a web address in a comment.)
Posted by: Dennis G. Jerz at February 27, 2006 09:14 AMHere's my First Blogging Portfolio. By comparing my submission with the examples, I fear I may have gone over the top.
Furthermore, a few of the early entries were submitted as comments since I hadn't learned the ins and outs of this blogging software. Now I'm a bit smarter about it.
Finally, I tried to correct a couple of past mistakes I ran across. For example, I forgot to give the William Carlos Williams entry a title. My effort to fix that oversight might have changed the entry's date.
Posted by: Matt Hampton at February 27, 2006 12:23 PMHere's a link to Below Zero's Weblog Portfolio.
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/ChristopherUlicne/coursework/014970.html
Posted by: ChrisU at February 27, 2006 09:03 PMHere's the link to my Blog Portfolio
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/SeanRunt/2006/02/blogging_portfo.html
Posted by: Sean Runt at February 27, 2006 09:50 PMhttp://blogs.setonhill.edu/OnileeSmith/2006/02/portfolio_one_e.html
Professor Jerz
I am not very sure that this is correct. I didn't understand how to creat links for certian ones which is obvious. I am hoping that maybe you could help me fix it at the end of class this week.
Posted by: Onilee Smith at February 28, 2006 06:33 PMHere she is.
I hate technology. I thought it was supposed to make life simpler instead of more complicated. But this was a nie look back.
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/MeganRitter/2006/03/portfolio_one.html#more
Posted by: Megan Ritter at March 1, 2006 05:28 PM