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Welcome
to Communicative Writing 2003.
My name is Duncan
Dixon and below is my contact information.
- Office Number: 1204
- Office Phone: 054-261-3793
- Contacting me: Home phone/fax 054-264-3554
- e-mail: dixonfdm@tokoka-u.ac.jp
Communicative Writing is online to:
- Make the course as flexible and useful for you as possible.
- Give you a chance to create your own writing course in consultation
with me.
- Give you the opportunity to request a certain type of composition
in line with your own interests.
- Allow you to keep up with the class if you miss a class. You can
access the class Web site from home and submit compositions electronically
if you wish.
Classroom:
We will meet each class in 318.
Materials:
You will need:
- a cassette tape,
- loose-leaf paper (if you plan to write on paper),
- two notebooks for your journal, and
- a floppy disk if you plan to write using the computer.
Class Organization:
Go here for
information about the organization of the course. I will also give you
this as a handout.
E-mail Addresses:
- We will make a Hotmail e-mail address for this class (unless you
already have a Hotmail address you wish to use.)
- Go to this
page for instructions.
Writing with Computers:
- If you can or would like to do any of your writing on a computer
I would encourage you to do so because it will make revision much easier.
- We will spend quite a bit of time revising and rewriting our compositions
this year so a computer is handy.
- However, You do not have to write with a computer. You may write
with pen/pencil and paper if you prefer.
Overview of the homepage:
- Today we will spend some time exploring the Communicative Writing
Web site, so you can get an idea of where things are and how to navigate.
- You can access the homepage from your home computer or from any of
the Tokoha computers.
- Today, please write down the 6 types of writing you are most interested
in doing.
My Expectations:
This is a graduate level course so I have a number of expectations of
you:
- you should have an idea of at least some things you want to study
or improve in your writing;
- you should be willing to tell me these things, either personally
or in your journal;
- you should be thinking during the year about how you learn to write.
What things help you? Part of my job as a teacher is to expose you
to new ways of learning so that you have more options when you start
to write.
Improving Your Writing
- First, do not expect to see magical improvement in your writing in
one year because of one course. Writing is very complicated and improvement
takes time.
- Write as much as you can. Re-read, revise, rewrite as much as you
can.
- Read as much in English as you can -- newspapers, magazines, anything
that interests you.
- Video tape and watch bilingual news programmes first in Japanese
then in English.
First Assignment
- Read the letter of introduction I've given you.
- Write a response. NB Make sure it looks like a letter.
- All of your compositions should be double-spaced so I can make comments
more easily.
- Usually you should write between one and two B5 size pages double
spaced. Don't feel you have to write very long compositions.
Ask these questions:
a. Who is my reader?
b. What does my reader already know about the topic?
c. What does my reader not know about the topic?
April 26 | May
10 | May 31 | June
14 | June 28 | July
12 | July 19
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