Sunday, June 4, 2017

Week Twelve

Schedule of Last Days

Monday, June 5: 

  • If you did NOT turn in the Research Essay last week, turn it in by the end of class. Otherwise, it will be late. If you use your token, you may turn it in as late as Thursday, June 8 at 2:00PM with no penalty.
  • If you turned in the Research Essay last week: Complete your Wikipedia work.
Your draft will be returned. Decide whether you want to revise it and let me know when you will put it in my box inE103: https://goo.gl/forms/QH69nSvKXSe6t2D22  
Responses here (in case you forget what you told me):
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1cZzaCXRCD4fETRXFNw4QtnHgSE6oaaJ0CEtchHntL4Y/edit?usp=sharing

Monday, June 12: Grades and reflection.

Thursday, May 25, 2017

MLA/APA Help-A-THON


 The Library is offering drop-in workshops for students on both MLA/APA.  These sessions are designed to provide informal one-on-one assistance to students who are in the process of compiling their Works Cited lists. Please announce in your classes.
 
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY!
 
WHEN: Students can drop in anytime during these 2 hour sessions:
 
• Wednesday, May 31st            10 AM-12 PM
• Thursday, June 1st                   2 PM- 4 PM
• Monday, June 5th                    5 PM-7 PM

Monday, May 22, 2017

Technically True: News and Research in the Digital Age
May 30, 11am-2:30pm
Little Theater

Is everything you read fake?! If the current media environment has you concerned, join a conversation with students, scholars, and journalists about media and the news. This half-day conference will include a panel discussion, group activities, and a keynote address. Participants will have an opportunity to discuss and think critically about a variety of topics: 

·         The 21st Century news cycle in contrast with past models 
·         Mainstream media’s relationship to alternative media outlets
·         The role of social media and responsible information sharing
·         General strategies for identifying clickbait and evaluating news online
·         Strengths and weaknesses of crowdsourced knowledge services like Wikipedia

Please RSVP using this form if you intend to bring a class or attend as an individual

Conference Schedule

11am - 12pm, Panel Discussion
Seraphin Santiago, journalism student, LaGuardia Community College
Dr. Cheri Carr, Professor, LaGuardia Community College 
Matthew Chayes, Reporter at Newsday
Barbara Gray, Chief Librarian, CUNY Graduate School of Journalism 

12:15pm - 1:15pm, Breakout Sessions led by LaGuardia faculty (lunch will be served)

1:30pm - 2:30pm, Keynote Speaker
Dr. Alexandra Juhasz, Chair, Film Department, Brooklyn College, CUNY

Sunday, May 21, 2017

Week Ten: Peer Review / Writing the Second Draft

Class

1. Elements of a successful first draft

2. Workshop

-Some of you will work on completing the steps before Peer Evaluation:
  • Proposal (deep trouble)
  • Sentence Outline (trouble)
  • Composing first draft (late, but okay)
-Some of you have a complete first draft, so you will sharing it with classmates and completing the Peer Evaluation Report: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ViHbt-hIJzYYPW3WI1-T_89ii8mtxRlbZu_J0fgWXzM/edit?usp=sharing


Schedule of Last Days


Second Draft of the Research Essay (PRINT COPY) due May 30 to June 2 at 2pm (may be revised); or June 5; or up to June 8 at 2pm with token (no revision). Turn in this draft to my box in E103

Let  me know when you plan to turn in the essayhttps://goo.gl/forms/QH69nSvKXSe6t2D22

Wednesday, May 31: Open Workshop (working on what you need)

Monday, June 5: Complete Wikipedia work. Drafts turned in May 30-June 2 will be returned.

Monday, June 12: Grades and reflection.

Monday, May 15, 2017

Week Nine: Writing the First Draft

Class
Once I approve your Sentence Outline, you may begin fleshing out your ideas. here is a model of how the final draft should look like (also in Class Docs): http://guides.skylinecollege.edu/ld.php?content_id=17039058

For this first draft, we will focus on

a) the proper way to construct an essay
b) the proper way to construct a body paragraph (page 11 of packet)
c) the proper way to use sources (pages 18-18; 24 of packet)

The aim at this stage is getting all the information down as coherently as possible. This draft does not have to be pretty or even complete: you can use disclaimers ("I need a source here") to indicate you understand how the whole will work though it is still in progress.

For next Monday's class

Have a complete first draft ready for Peer Evaluation.

Sunday, May 7, 2017

Week Eight: Writing a Sentence Outline

Class
1. Check the syllabus and figure out your midterm grade. Post your expected grade and explanation in this form: https://goo.gl/forms/YWdA6xYYLfBK45O92


*Now complete these steps depending on where you are in the writing process:

2. Finish or revise your Research Essay proposal for my approval. If I approve it, go to Step 3.

3. Compose your Sentence Outline for my approval. If I approve it, go to Step 4.
4. Begin the first draft of the Research Essay

For next Monday's class
Compose a complete Sentence Outline for my approval. If you finish the outline before Monday and you want me to check it, send me an e-mail at xgallardo@lagcc.cuny.edu. Then you can go on to the first draft of the paper

Sunday, April 30, 2017

Week Seven: Begin Composing

Class

Today we will figure out the Wikipedia research assignment and get on our way to a solid research proposal. Some of you may even begin to do the reading and preliminary writing for the paper itself.

Hour 1: Wikipedia assignment
By the end of the semester (May 29-June 5), you must complete one of these three tasks on WP: create an article, add to an article (this includes adding citations using Citation Hunt), translate 1-3 articles (depending on the length of the originals).

a) Complete Training: (1) Wikipedia Essentials, (2) Editing Basics, (3) Sources and Citations, (4) Translating Articles (if you are planning to do so); https://dashboard.wikiedu.org/courses/LaGuardia_Community_College/ENG103_The_Research_Paper_Digital_Literacy_(Spring_2017)?enroll=uyngidef

b) Choose your project and tell us what it is in this form. Responses HERE.


Hours 2 and 3: Working on your proposal and annotating sources 

Your revised proposal is due Friday, May 5 by 9:00AM for my perusal.

I encourage the following individuals to turn in the proposal earlier than the due date: Lely N, Edyson C, Valerie H, Brian G, Amanda J, Jessica O, Xiaoran Lin, David A, Melanie Q, MD U, Harold P,

Assignments due

Research Essay Proposal due Friday, May 5 by 9:00AM for my perusal. On Monday I will discuss midterm grades with each of you, so make sure you have read the grading requirements on the syllabus.

 Wikipedia Assignment: Depending on your choice, you must have some beginning text in your Sandbox or have created at least 3 reliable citations using Citation Hunt by the beginning of class Monday, May 8. 
Note: Those of you translating articles, please take the 10 min. Translation Training: https://dashboard.wikiedu.org/training/students/translating-articles 

Sunday, April 23, 2017

Week Six: Choosing a Topic; Writing the Proposal


Class
Today we will explore the topics you have chosen for your paper and for the Wikipedia assignment so that by the end of class everyone is ready for the next phase, to write a Research Essay Proposal and to complete one part of the Wikipedia assignment.

1. Research Essay Proposal
Definition: A document written by a scientist or scholar describing the ideas and steps for an investigation on a certain topic. It may be used to request financing for a project or as a required step before beginning a college dissertation.
Individuals who qualify to write a proposal as of now: Shenise, David H., Valerie, Amanda, Soletia, Xiaoran, Juan, Jessica O., Harold

Don't have a topic yet? Check Dr. X's suggested topics:  https://docs.google.com/document/d/19Lh0qy-KJfcy7TPLLyy7ltiuenj20jAy-u9FOw6tKHc/edit?usp=sharing

2. Wikipedia Assignment
You must complete one of these three tasks on WP: create an article, add to an article (this includes adding citations using Citation Hunt), translate 1-3 articles (depending on the length of the originals).

Please join the WP class here:  https://dashboard.wikiedu.org/courses/LaGuardia_Community_College/ENG103_The_Research_Paper_Digital_Literacy_(Spring_2017)?enroll=uyngidef

3. Library Workshop: Finding Appropriate Secondary Sources


4. Individual Work
Decide on a topic and begin writing the proposal. Find two readers to read your proposal this weekend. Those of you translating articles, please take the 10 min. Translation Training:  https://dashboard.wikiedu.org/training/students/translating-articles

Assignments due

1. Research Essay Proposal: The first draft of the proposal is due on Saturday. April 29 by 9:00AM. Then you need to find TWO readers to comment on your proposal by Monday, May 1. Then you need to submit a revised proposal by Friday, May 5 by 9:00AM for my perusal.

2. Wikipedia Assignment: Depending on your choice, you must have some beginning text in your Sandbox or have created at least 3 reliable citations using Citation Hunt by the beginning of class Monday, May 1. 

Note: Those of you translating articles, please take the 10 min. Translation Training: https://dashboard.wikiedu.org/training/students/translating-articles 

Sunday, April 2, 2017

Week Five: Free Culture, Commons-based Peer Production

Class 

PART I

1. Screening the documentary Killswitch: https://archive.org/details/Killswitch_201701.
    For details about the film, see THIS HANDOUT.

2. a) Discuss: Documentary, Open content/Open access, Free culture movement, Commons-based peer production, .
 Examples of Open Access Projects 
Project Gutenberg: a volunteer effort to digitize and archive cultural works. Most of the items in its collection are the full texts of public domain books. The project tries to make these as free as possible, in long-lasting, open formats. 
The Internet Archive: a nonprofit digital library that  provides free public access to collections of digitized materials, including websites, software applications/games, music, movies/videos, moving images, and nearly three million public-domain books.  Its web archive, the Wayback Machine, contains over 150 billion web captures
     b) Watch: Creative Commons, "Get Creative": https://mirrors.creativecommons.org/getcreative/
Examples of Commons-based Peer Production: 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commons-based_peer_production#Examples

PART II



3. Join: Our Wikipedia class  https://dashboard.wikiedu.org/courses/LaGuardia_Community_College/ENG103_The_Research_Paper_Digital_Literacy_(Spring_2017)

4.  Complete: Two Wikipedia training modules "Wikipedia Essentials" and "Editing Basics": https://dashboard.wikiedu.org/training/students


For Wednesday, April 19 at 9:00AM
  1. Complete all Journal Entries in your GoogleDrive document. Remember we are writing these in reverse order. 
  2. Decide on up to 3 tentative topics for your Research Essay (approximately 12 pages) and post them to your GoogleDrive document.
  3. Decide on up to 3 tentative topics for your Wikipedia work and post them to your GoogleDrive document. 

Sunday, March 26, 2017

Week Four: Surveillance, Algorithms, Data Mining, and Profiling


Class

 I. Introduction: The World of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four 
"If one is to rule, and to continue ruling, one must be able to dislocate the sense of reality."
 --Emmanuel Goldstein, The Theory and Practice of Oligarchical Collectivism, "Chapter 1: Ignorance is Strength." 
II. Privacy and Surveillance
III. Algorithms, Data Mining, and Profiling
A taste of what's to come: Killswitch (documentary trailer): https://vimeo.com/104911615

For next class

1. a) Get a Wikipedia account: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page.
    b) Submit your information to THIS FORM.

2. Watch: “Jimmy Wales: The Birth of Wikipedia.” http://www.ted.com/talks/jimmy_wales_on_the_birth_of_wikipedia

3. Read the three texts, but do different work for each:


Sunday, March 19, 2017

Week Three: Reliability and Misinformation

Class

1. The problem: What's legitimate information? What is dubious information? How can we tell the difference? Why does being able to tell the difference matter?

Evaluate and report:

A. Here is a sample of the homepage for Slate.com. Identify which of the numbered items is a news story, and which is an advertisement. https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B_Egjt-4g-yZaUgza0pnTEM0TGs/view?usp=sharing

B. Does this post provide strong evidence about the conditions near the Fukushima Daiichi Power Plant? Explain your reasoning.  http://imgur.com/gallery/BZWWx

What about the original posting? https://twitter.com/san_kaido/status/603513371934130176?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

C. Why this tweet might and might not be a useful source of information?https://twitter.com/moveon/status/666772893846675456?lang=en

More on the Fukushima Mutant Flowers
Discuss (in pairs) and report:

A. What is and is not "fake news"?
  • Satirical news from a site like The Onion (“Dolphin Spends Amazing Vacation Swimming With Stockbroker”) 
  • The daily clickbait in our social media feeds (such as the one written by the "new yellow journalists" Paris Wade and Ben Goldman).
  • Outright invented news, like pieces that claimed, just before the election, that Pope Francis had endorsed Donald J. Trump, or that Donald Trump had once said that “Republicans are the dumbest group of voters.”
  • Erroneous interpretation of a fact that is distributed without fact-checking (as with the  Fukushima Mutant Flowers). 
  • "Native advertising": Advertisement passing as news (as in Slate.com).  
  • News that shows a highly partisan bias. 
 B. Are some of these forms of unreliable news more dangerous than others? Which? Why?

C. What happens when mainstream media is labeled “fake news” by those who see certain stories as hostile to their interests?

2. How do the internet and web help and hinder fake news? 

Reflect, write a journal entry, and report: In a recent letter to the world, Sir Tim Berners-Lee reminded us that he imagined the world wide as "an open platform that would allow everyone, everywhere to share information, access opportunities and collaborate across geographic and cultural boundaries." In what ways do the specific characteristics of the internet and the world wide web, especially in its 2.0, 3.0, and mobile versions contribute to the boom of fake news? Use the readings from the first class (Postman) and second class (Rosenzweig and the rest) as well as Eli Pariser's TED Talk “Beware online ‘filter bubbles’” to support your views.

3. Possible solutions

A. Discuss (in pairs) and report: The different handouts on dealing with fake news we gave you last class (pages 49-53 of your reading packet and C.R.A.A.P handout). What surprised you? What did not?

B. Write, then "Give One, Get One": Of all the advice given by these handouts, what makes most sense to you? Divide a sheet of paper into two vertical columns. Label the left side “Give One” and the right side “Get One.” Write down your ideas on the left-hand column on your paper in list form. Walk around and find a partner to share items from your list. For example, Partner A shares his/her responses until Partner B hears something that is not already on his/her list. Partner B writes the new response in the right column on the paper, along with Partner A’s name. Once Partner B has “gotten” one, your roles switch. Repeat this process with other peers until time runs out.

Other ways to fact check information

Fact-checking sites:
Browser plug-ins:

For next class

George Orwell. Nineteen Eighty-Four. Chapter 1. (in reading packet)

Choose one reading and answer the 6Ws for it:

Sunday, March 12, 2017

Week Two: The Internet and The World-Wide Web

Class

1. The Internet

a. Report (in groups on the whiteboard): The 6Ws for the four books reviewed by Roy Rosenzweig in “Wizards, Bureaucrats, Warriors and Hackers: Writing the History of the Internet.” (And for Rosenzweig himself).

b. Watch: Andrew Blum. “Discover the physical side of the Internet.” (TED Talk) https://www.ted.com/talks/andrew_blum_what_is_the_internet_really

2. The World-Wide-Web

a. Watch: Stuff of Genius: The World Wide Web

b. Define (in groups): What is the web? How does it work? What is
  • a browser
  • a search engine
  • a server
  • a protocol
  • a path
  • an IP address
  • the cloud
  • hyperlink(ing)
  • net neutrality
c. Comprehend: The Development of the Web
  • Web 1.0: Static, hyperlinked pages such as Internet Shakespeare Editions
  • Web 2.0: Interactive pages, such as Wikipedia, Facebook, Amazon.com
  • In the works: Web 3.0: Categorized web that "learns" about itself and its users (see Semantic Web in the next discussion). 
Watch: Michael Wesch. “Web 2.0...The Machine is Us/ing Us.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NLlGopyXT_g

d. Explain (in groups): The Types of Web:
  • The Surface Web
  • The Deep Web/ Invisible Web/ Hidden Web
  • The Dark Web
  • The Semantic Web
  • The Internet of Things

For next class

1. Read/Watch:
2. Complete Journal #2. Instructions HERE.

Thursday, February 2, 2017

Week One: Welcome to ENG103!

Class
  1. Read/Discuss: Syllabus / Class purpose / Schedule and Research Topics / Packets 
  2. Join: Google Drive/Google Groups
  3. Read/Watch/Discuss/Write using the 6Ws (HANDOUT):
For next class

Everyone read/watch:
  1. Roy Rosenzweig. “Wizards, Bureaucrats, Warriors and Hackers: Writing the History of the Internet.” 
    • For this reading ou will also have to write a journal entry on one section of the article. See instructions in this HANDOUT.
  2. "World Wide Web in Plain English." https://youtu.be/0U6Hb3bf_jg 
  3. “Net Neutrality”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l9jHOn0EW8U 
Also, read the specific text assigned to you to report on it for next class:
  1. “How the Web Works-In One Easy Lesson.” http://mkcohen.com/how-the-web-works-in-one-easy-lesson : David A, Edyson C, Nicole C, Shenise C, Jonathan C, 
  2. The Deep and Dark Webs: https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-deep-dark-web-and-how-do-you-access-it Brian G, David H, Valerie H, Brianna C, Amanda J, Eric P, Segundo P, Tatiana V,
  3. Jonathan Strickland. “How Web 3.0 Will Work.”: Soletia L, Xiaoran L, Jessica M, Paulette M, Frank G,
  4. Tracy V. Wilson. “How Semantic Web Works.”: Lely N, Jessica O, MD U, Shaan V,  Ann Velasquez
  5. Bernadette Johnson. “How the Internet of Things Works.”:  Juan N, Harold P, Melanie Q, Joseph T,  Mercedes M,