Archive for » June, 2010 «

Sibling Rivalry Solved!

It has taken me 15 plus years, but I finally figured out how to keep the children from killing each other on a daily basis.

Obviously, I am a parenting pro.

In fact, my house hasn’t heard a single sibling fight All. Week. Long. It has been quiet.

And I didn’t even have to tie everyone up and stuff them in a closet to achieve it.

All it took was to get rid of two of my four children, but the key was to know which ones to ditch.

The oldest and the youngest are the only ones left at home, and I’ve distracted the oldest with things like her job and the internet and chores. The youngest is harder because he keeps whining about being bored, but he has a friend here now, so there is someone who is both invested in him not being bored and interested in entertaining him.

As for the two children that I ditched? It was a temporary ditch. One is away at camp for the week, and the other is away at a friend’s house for the week. The friend’s house was the idea of the friend’s mother because it seems I am not the only one who suffers from children with the goal to drive their mother insane.

I suspect sibling rivalry will commence at my home once more sometime on Friday when one of the two missing children return home. It will continue despite the oldest leaving for camp next Monday.

I suspect my house won’t see this much peace again until sometime in 2015 when a few of them have graduated and gone off to college.

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Staying On Track – Online Teaching


By Linda Sherwood

Without a set day and time, students can easily forget about an online course, but features built into Ferris Connect, and most course management systems, can help professors track down those missing students with just a few clicks of the button.

Instructors can help remind students about the online course with a variety of methods including welcoming e-mails before the class starts and again during the first week and even phone calls. But once the class is in session, tracking down students may be forgotten as instructors and (most) students focus on the current lesson and assignment.

In the past, I have used a Word document form to help me keep track of my online students. The form allows me to list all of the names of the students. I tend to print off my forms, and I write my notes in by hand.
In my online class, discussion is pretty important, and the number of messages can quickly add up. I make it a point to participate in the discussion, but I don’t try to reply to every posting. To make sure that I reply in a fair manner, I make a note of who I respond to each week. It is just a check mark in a column, but it makes it easy for me to look back and see if I’ve neglected any students. The next week I make it a point to read that student’s posts first, which increases the likelihood that I’ll reply to that student.

But the print out of my Word document is clunky, and I was sure there were other instructors with great ideas that I wanted to know about. With that in mind, I queried the Writing Program list-serv offered through Arizona State University.

Some instructors rely on the CMS tracking reports to identify missing students while other instructors create their own documents in either Word or Excel to gather information about classes as well as keep track of information about student habits and needs.

While the tracking system makes it easy to keep track of a student’s attendance, most instructors see the data offers more information than just noting if students are logging in.

A lecturer at California State University, Dave Katherine Ireland used information he gathered from introductions and tracking data to learn more about his students. The information he collects helps him structure his course. For each class he teaches, Ireland creates an Excel document where he records introduction information and access patterns noting which students work in the morning, afternoon, night or late night. From this data, Ireland identified a group of students he calls his “weekend warriors.”

“My weekend warriors are students who work full time, raise families and go to school full time,” Ireland said. “I do not structure my classes so that all the work and class interactions can be done on the weekend, but my weekend warriors always save what they can for the weekend.”

Ireland also uses the “course statistics” function to revise his curriculum. “I can evaluate whether or not I need to collapse or expand the time line for a specific assignment based on how I see the course working through the different parts of an assignment,” Ireland said.

Mary Patricia McQueeney, an instructor at Johnson County Community College in Kansas, finds tracking features have helped her revise the curriculum in both her online and face-to-face courses. “Some of my colleagues have ethical dilemmas about Big Brother tools,” McQueeney said. “I don’t because they allow me to help my students far more than they turn me into a voyeur. “

Tracking tools can help instructors determine when students are logging into class, how long they are spending, and where they are going. These tracking tools can do more than help instructors make sure students are attending their virtual classrooms. Analyzing student patterns can help instructors improve delivery and organizational methods.

McQueeney said, “I use the tools for both online and on-campus students to make sure that what they think they are doing they are, indeed, doing.” She also finds the tools helpful for her “to try to figure out how in the heck confused students are rambling around the course shell.”

An English professor at Collin College, Sonja Andrus has figured out the best times to track student participation based on research and experience. She noted the first two weeks are important to make sure everyone understands how the online course works. Andrus calls or e-mails any student who fails to sign in or has signed in only once. “[R]esearch shows that online students who feel disconnected in the first week or two will drop later at a rate of 3 times higher than those who were clued in at the beginning,” Andrus said.

“I check back in on this at about week 4 or 5 and contact any students who have missed major elements of the course,” Andrus said. “I usually check against those logging in and viewing some things but not turning anything in, too.” She notes that weeks 4 and 5 are when face-to-face and online students tend to stop coming to class. “Students tire of the class schedule or get bored or think the class is too hard/too easy and they ‘stop out’ and later drop or get an F. If I contact those students before it’s too late, I can usually get them interested in class again.”

Derek Mueller, a doctoral candidate at Syracuse University, uses a one-page Excel document to keep track of grades, attendance and missing work. “I appreciate that in the spreadsheet I can see the full roster along with email addresses, geographic locations, programs of study, and so on. In the various columns, I am able to input notes that pop-up on a mouseover action (using Excel’s note feature), and I can enter alphanumeric values and add highlights or color-coding to keep track of a particular assignment.”

While most of the respondents taught English, one instructor, Ilene Frank from the University of South Florida reported how she handles her online classes including one with a cap at 100 students. “It’s a short course on using library/internet resources,” Frank explained. She noted many of the assignments are set up to grade automatically, but she still tries to e-mail students quite often.

“I send welcome messages via e-mail to get started – and then about a week in, send a reminder of what we are supposed to be doing – and after that, send e-mail only to students where work seems to be missing,” Frank said. She relies on the statistics available for the discussion threads to help indicate who is logging on, but she said the biggest signal of a problem is when “there are no grades in the grade book.”

Editor’s Note: This article was written for and published in Ferris State University’s online writing newletter called L and L onLine, which is published by the Language and Literature department. It was published in the April 2009 edition, which is available here: http://www.ferris.edu/htmls/administration/academicaffairs/online/OTC/apr09.pdf

Catching a Plagiarist — what next?

This is a presentation I gave as part of a panel I was part of at the English Articulation Conference, University of Illinois at Urbana – Champaign in 2008 (ish).

The very first time I taught English composition, I unintentionally caught a plagiarist. I was grading papers, and as I read one student’s introduction, I noticed a generic reference that I felt needed to be more specific. Before committing my comment permanently to the margins of the student’s paper, I checked my facts with a quick Google search. I clicked on the first search result, and I read my student’s introduction all over again.
I’d caught a plagiarist and like the dog that chases cars, now that I had caught one, I didn’t know what to do. My undergraduate degree is in journalism, and I fell back on my journalism training. I began interviewing people and gathering information including a copy of Richard Harris’ The Plagiarism Handbook from the college library.

When confronted with proof of the plagiarized paper, my student’s reaction was a textbook response – the student blamed me. I was the teacher, and it was my fault that my student hadn’t learned to avoid plagiarism. It was a text book reaction, but I couldn’t stop wondering – what if my student was right?
Colleges and instructors expect students to understand plagiarism, presenting plagiarism as an academic policy in student handbooks and syllabuses as if the issue was clear-cut. But we know better. Richard Harris notes, “plagiarism is a complex issue ” (vi), Rebecca Moore Howard calls plagiarism “inherently indefinable” (“Sexuality” 473) and Elaine E. Whitaker recognizes “plagiarism means different things to different people” (509).

It isn’t just students who don’t understand the definition of plagiarism. Just last week, I went with two other people to explain to the college president why the word “ideas” needed to be included in a proposed definition of plagiarism that will be brought before the college’s board of trustees. In January of this year, CNN reported Jerry Seinfeld and his wife, Jessica, are being sued for plagiarism (it was copyright infringement not plagiarism). More recently, an honors code at the University of Texas has been flagged as being plagiarized.

How can colleges and instructors expect students to understand the definition of something that we, as teachers, hotly debate in our scholarly journals? We’ve punished students, we’ve debated terms and definitions, but when do we teach students about not just plagiarism but other issues that closely resemble plagiarism? It is almost as if we expect students to arrive to our institutions and classrooms inherently knowing what plagiarism is and how to avoid it.

To start, we need to change how students view citation. Citation is not a way to prevent being charged with plagiarism. Citation provides a map of the research we conducted about a topic and what influenced our thinking as we developed our own ideas and thoughts on the matter. It also helps others reading our research decide if we used credible sources or left out any important information from our research.

Before we can punish students for plagiarism, we need to educate students not only about how to cite sources in an academic setting, but to understand how citation happens in other settings and genres beyond academics as well as discussing intentional versus unintentional plagiarism in academic settings.

As I have worked the last two years to educate myself about plagiarism and invoke some changes at the college where I work, I have encountered a number of barriers including:
1) difficulty in developing a definition of plagiarism that everyone agrees with
2) teachers being unwilling to give up the ability to be flexible in how to handle student plagiarism;
3) programs with ethical issues/requirements such as nursing and law enforcement where plagiarism can mean being expelled from the program permanently;
4) navigating beyond the “gotcha” mentality, identified by Margaret Price, that is inherent in most plagiarism policies;
5) failing to recognize citation standards can differ across genres;
6) failing to address professionally accepted behaviors (ghostwriting, boilerplating, etc.) that can closely resemble plagiarism; and
7) as the discussion and awareness of plagiarism grows at the institution, you can expect accusations of plagiarism aimed at the college and/or faculty members, which is why it is important to discuss acceptable practices that can seem like plagiarism.

Works Cited
A Plagiarized Honor Code? Oops. The Chronicle of Higher Education. 31 Mar. 2008.
Seinfeld, wife sued for plagiarism, defamation. CNN.com. 8 Jan. 2008
Harris, Robert A. The Plagiarism Handbook. Los Angeles: Pyrczak Publishing, 2001.
Howard, Rebecca Moore. “Sexuality, Textuality: The Cultural Work of Plagiarism.” College English. 62.4 (Mar. 2000): 473-491.
Whitaker, Elaine E. “A Pedagogy to Address Plagiarism.” College Composition and Communication. 44.4 (Dec. 1993): 509-514.

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Plagiarism Throughout the World

When I talk to students about plagiarism, I make it a point to discuss how the US thinks of plagiarism differently than other cultures. A great article about this was published in Slate, The Copycat Syndrome: Why we care about Plagiarism? by Meghan O’Rourke.

I feel it is also important to discuss what some may mistakenly think is plagiarism. I discuss terms such as ghostwriting and boilerplating so students understand when and why these things are acceptable and aren’t really plagiarism. [NOTE: I also make it clear that boilerplating and ghostwriting are NOT acceptable in academic contexts.] One article that talks a bit about a form of boilerplating is Cut and Paste is a Skill Too, which appeared in The Washington Post.

And this article talks about the complexities of plagiarism and the internet in forms other than writing.

I make it clear citation is NOT done to prevent being charged with plagiarism. Instead, I explain other reasons for citation including explaining what research you used when conducting your own research, establishing credibility and allowing others to understand what may have influenced your thinking.

One of my favorite discussions is asking students when and how different genres require citation. I include fiction in this discussion, and I like to ask how citation might happen in a work of fiction. I provide examples where it is done well (Jodi Picoult), and I provide examples where it was done so badly, it became national news and even led to awareness about an endangered species.

I learned about the Meerkats and Cassie Edwards, a romance novelist accused of plagiarism the same way I learned of the following YouTube video: SmartBitchesTrashyBooks.com.

And to see the video, which is hilarious and educational, use the closed caption option:

Other great YouTube videos include:

Plagiarism: Don’t Do It!

And a related one, Before he Cheats, a teacher parody.

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Cone Carnage

Yesterday, my oldest daughter took the test that qualified her to get a REAL driver’s license. Or as real as it gets for a 16-year-old, which means she can drive places all. by. herself.

*sniff*

*FEAR!*

The test began with a quick inspection of her vehicle. The daughter INSISTED she would drive the truck and not the van, and I had tried to discourage her from driving the truck, but I gave into her wishes because I wanted her to be comfortable during her test.

I also made this deal: she passes, I pay; she fails, she pays.

I climbed out of the truck, and Autumn was left alone to run through the cone obstacles. It involved pulling to within 2 feet of a line (she was a bit short – one point), backing into what is about the size of a parking space and then pulling out and parallel parking.

Her dad was worried about the parallel parking, but I was just worried.

When she pulled up short to the line (although we had just practiced it, and I had mentioned she look to the side to help judge), I was worried for her. She would be disappointed if she failed.

But then she went to back up into the spot, and she moved slowly and hit a cone on the far right side. She stopped and looked at us for guidance, but she was on her own. She decided to keep moving backwards, and as she did, the cones fell one by one. By the time she put the truck in park and beeped her horn, she had four cones under the truck, and she had crossed the rear line at the back of the parking area.

OK, I admit it. I was laughing. I was probably also a little bit relieved — if she failed the test, she would have more time to practice before she was off on her own and that isn’t a bad thing. I grabbed my phone and snapped a couple of pictures — I had to do it.

Autumn put the truck in drive, pulled forward and finally straightened it out and backed into where she needed to be. Despite all of the knocked down cones, she only lost one point for pulling forward. The test is designed so you lose points only when you have to change directions to adjust your position. She only did that once, and so she only lost one point.

When it was time for her to parallel park, I couldn’t watch. I was laughing, and I didn’t want to distract her. I walked out of her line of sight and looked out toward Houghton Lake. She did a great job, getting the parking on the first time.

I made my way back and the driver’s testing lady asked me how she did driving, and I responded she did a good job. It was time for the road test.

The lady directed me to sit behind Autumn, which meant I couldn’t see very much. I was quiet throughout almost the entire test. There was one point where Autumn was at a crossroads of M-55, and she was supposed to turn left. The traffic on M-55 wasn’t stopping, and the traffic across the way had two vehicles — one turning left and one going straight. Autumn pulled out, and without even thinking about it, I said her name out loud.

I didn’t gasp, and my tone wasn’t excited, but I had broken my vow of silence. The driver’s ed lady assured me Autumn was not going to turn in front of the truck, and I tried to go back to being quiet.

It’s hard. Just a little ways down the road, another vehicle did a knuckle head move and basically pulled out in front of Autumn. I gasped, which is something I would do pretty much anytime. Autumn was fine, and my gasp was NOT in reaction to her move. But I was supposed to be quiet. Both Autumn and my husband had lectured me that I could not gasp or talk during the test, and I had done both, and I had started off so well.

I clamped both hands over my mouth and stopped watching the road. Instead, I once again looked out towards the lake to get control of myself. The driver’s testing lady was great. She said she understood my reaction and that it was natural. The rest of the test went smoothly, and Autumn did great.

The lady filled out Autumn’s certificate, and we were going to be on our way. Autumn wanted to go to the Secretary of State’s office immediately.

While sitting behind the wheel with the truck in park and running, Autumn spotted a friend with a skateboard. I was getting out of the seat behind her, and Autumn leaned out the window to yell at her friend. She was excited to tell someone she had just passed, but as she did so, she hit the gas pedal, and the truck revved up big time.

I yelled. So much for staying quiet.

The testing lady was just entering her motor home, so I don’t know what her reaction was, but I was not amused.

Still, after a quick trip home to pick up her sister for a softball game, Autumn and I went to the Secretary of State’s office to apply for her driver’s license. I emphasized she was still inexperienced and needed practice. I doubt Autumn heard me. The actual application process was pretty ho-hum. There weren’t any glitches, and she was soon smiling for the camera and walking out with her temporary license.

After the game, both girls asked if I would ride home with my mom leaving the two of them alone. I agreed, and the girls were off. They were very excited. They made a stop at my in-laws (with my permission) on the way home.

And that is how I became the mom of a teenage driver.

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