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Citing Electronic Sources

With the popularity of eReaders growing and being offered to college students, questions about how to cite eBooks are being raised.

The problem stems from how a specific location in a ebook is identified. It isn’t a page number. For the Amazon Kindle, locations in the book are identified with location numbers. The location number doesn’t correspond to page numbers. What’s more, an eReader and a copy of the eBook are required to verify that the location is correct.

There are free ways to view Kindle ebooks including Kindle for PC, but there still might be the cost of an eBook. The Amazon Kindle doesn’t allow book sharing beyond a single account. This means that one Amazon account can have several Kindles registered, and the Kindles related to that single Amazon account can share ebooks. But if the Kindles are registered to two different accounts, the ebooks can’t be shared.

This brings us back to the question: what happens when using a direct quote from a source that was published in an ebook?

The APA has already proposed a solution. It is one that can probably be applied to most citation styles.

The references listing is pretty straight forward, but the in-text citation is more difficult. The solution APA proposes can be found here: http://blog.apastyle.org/apastyle/2009/09/how-do-i-cite-a-kindle.html

Red vs Blue vs Electronic


When I grade student papers, I never use a red pen. The color red has negative connotations. Many students see the red ink and think all of the teacher’s comments are negative even though the comments aren’t negative.

Red ink has been compared to blood, and a paper covered in red ink is bleeding. The teacher has slayed the paper, killing it. Would you want a slayed paper returned to you?

Recently, a researcher at California State University, Northridge, released a study that suggested using red ink led the user to be more critical when editing text. In other words, the same paper would be graded a C by those using red ink and a B- by those using blue ink.

The study didn’t use teachers, but instead volunteers and students to determine users were more critical when wielding a red pen.

And so, research supports my tendency, which is why I mostly used green ink when I graded papers. But I learned something. It takes a LONG time to reply by hand to papers. There wasn’t always enough room on the paper, and after a while, my handwriting became more and more illegible, which defeats the purpose of writing comments.

Plus, once in a while, I would jot something down and then realize that what I just said the student needed, they did in the very next line. Or what I thought was a mistake wasn’t a mistake. But the comment was already there, and I couldn’t retract it.

Or could I?

I was teaching online, and in my online classes, my comments were legible, and if I changed my mind, I could delete the comment. I didn’t have to worry about running out of room or finding space near the relevant text. I just highlighted the area I was referring to, and inserted my comment in the margin of the paper.

It took a bit, but I eventually switched my face to face classes to electronic submission, which let me respond to every student using my computer.

There were other benefits. In Word 2003, I was able to use macros. This meant I didn’t have to retype the same comment over and over again. Instead, I could store the most used comments and easily adapt them.

In Word 2007, however, macros were frustrating for me. I was back to keeping a Word document full of comments to copy and paste as needed. I wanted something better.

And I have found it in Annotate! It’s a plug-in for Word 2007, and it has prewritten comments that I can customize and insert with a single click. It lets me create customized comments.

Even better, in addition to a comment, it also provides a link to resources to help students learn about the mistake.

And unlike my messy Word document, Annotate keeps all of my comments organized into categories (argument, evidence, organization, writing style, grammar/mechanics).

When I first loaded the free version of Annotate, I was amazed that some of the comments sounded like something I would have written. It took me a bit, but I realized that they were something I had written. Annotate had integrated those macros that I had created long ago but never quite managed to figure out how to use quickly and easily.

Plus, it gives students so much more information that really improves their writing. When I was writing those hand-written comments, I may have written AWK a time or two. It stood for “awkward,” but it didn’t help the student fix it.

In Annotate, the exact awkward part is highlighted, and the comment begins with a question: “Can you revise this to make it less awkward?” It doesn’t stop there. It follows up with an explanation of what awkward means, “Awkward writing is confusing to your reader and hurts your credibility as a writer. See the general proofreading suggestions in the following link:”

The links automatically direct students to specific pages at one of my favorite resources, OWL at Purdue University, but I can also edit the comment to refer students to the relevant page in their writer’s handbook.

In the free version, there are 70 prewritten comments. The Pro version has about 200 prewritten comments. You can also add customized comments in the Pro version.

The pro version is about $50, and you can buy more than one version for just $10 more. So if you have Word 2010 at school and Word 2007 at home, it will cost just $60. Or the change might be Vista versus XP. It is still just $10.

I downloaded the free version of Annotate, and I love it. I have not yet purchased the pro version because I am hoping to update my laptop this summer. Right now my laptop is Vista, and I will be upgrading to Windows 7 as soon as I can convince my husband. I’m waiting for the laptop upgrade before investing in the pro version, but I will be buying the Pro version. I am thrilled with it.

Now I just wonder about the impact of using computers to offer students feedback.

(This is NOT a paid review. I did not receive any compensation for this. It is a product I discovered and tried on my own and loved. I know others will love it too.)

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

Battle of the Books

Or as my husband likes to refer to it…. Battle of the Nerds.

Of course, it isn’t really a battle of nerds: it is a battle of readers. Teams of 3 to 5 people read 11 books and prepare for about two months or so and then compete in battles. The teams are asked questions about the books, and the answers are always the title and author of one of the 11 books.

Last Saturday was our local library’s elimination battle. It took place on the high school stage and 10 BOB teams participated. (It always throws my husband off when I refer to the competition as Bob. He wonders who the heck I am talking about.)

I coached one of those teams: Book Warriors, which includes 2 fourth-grade girls and 2 fifth-grade boys including my son, Justin.

And the teams met Avi!

The battle takes place in 3 rounds of 10 questions each. After the second round, the Book Warriors were in second place, and I was so impressed with everyone. These kids knew their books, and to be clear, I mean the kids that make up ALL of the teams.

It surprised me to realize that this is a FUN competition to watch even if you haven’t read the books. The answers have to be neat and spelled correctly. It just kills you to watch someone’s correct answer receive 0 points because of a missing letter.

After the third round, three teams moved on to the final competition. It is serious business: Houghton Lake teams will be battling against teams from Gaylord and Lake City. There will be a video performance.

And the Book Warriors? They are moving on! They did great!

But word has it that the competing schools are sending along some tough teams. The final battle is May 22, and we will be ready!

The books for this year includes the following:
The Lemonade War by Davies
The Wednesday Wars by Schmidt
Ragweed by Avi
My One Hundred Adventures by Horvath
Heartbeat by Creech
The Gollywhopper Games by Feldman
A Wrinkle in Time by L’Engle
Who was Eleanor Roosevelt? by Thompson
Sheep by Hobbs
No Talking by Clements
Leepike Ridge by Wilson

Another sad part — all of the kids worked really hard, and some were very disappointed their teams didn’t move on. It is hard seeing those tears, but it also shows how invested the kids get in the competition.

Sample questions:

In which book did a teacher ask a girl, “…how a child with parents as brilliant as yours are supposed to be, can be such a poor student”?

In which book is the main character known by five different names?

For more info on BOB, check out one of these websites:
www.battleofthebooks.com
www.battleofthebooks.org

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Social Media in Learning Examples

This article offers a variety of ways social media can be used to help students learn.

http://c4lpt.co.uk/handbook/examples.html

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