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runonsentence

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Posts posted by runonsentence

  1. That's exactly what I'm trying to put into my SOP.Here's an example of what I wrote:

    <I waited few years since I graduated from university to join graduate studies. During these years I've studied and learnt several skills. I improved my English langauge greatly, learnt computer and IT skills and awarded several international certificates. I learnt several soft skills and I worked in two different fields, medical representation and occupational health.And I became financially independent from my parents.During that period I practiced self study and independent learning of biological sciences>

    What do you think?

    It sounds to me like most of this could either be inferred or put onto a CV. I personally wouldn't waste space on it in the SoP and save space for talking about my research.

  2. To the OP: I'd let the letter stand as is, and if anything, solicit another letter to augment your application. I had something somewhat similar happen, and it didn't seem to really hurt my admissions chances. My mentors told me that committees often expect to see a dud or two mixed into packets and know that sometimes things fall through with letters and that it doesn't reflect poorly on the candidate. If your other letters look good, you'll probably be fine.

    To the forum: Most of my letter writers asked me to look at my letters after they'd written them, and give them feedback/corrections. This seems to be normal with other friends of mine who've gone through the application process, as well. I don't see anything wrong with this, unless I'm missing something here that makes this case unique?

    My understanding of the LoR waiver is that applicants waive their right to review the letter—that is, I've never equated "right to review" with "I promise not to look at my letters, even if they're offered." My understanding is that applicants simply relinquish the right to read all LoRs, with or without permission (and instead can only view letters the writer decides to make available).

  3. One problem I realized from taking a mixed seminar with undergrads (although I wasn't teaching it at the time) is that undergrads tend to look at discussion seminars as a chance to talk about what they liked about pieces, or their own personal experiences related to articles, or (at best) to summarize articles. It takes them a little while to recognize that you're not trying to summarize but synthesize, analyze, extract information from the articles. If you directly state that there are three major themes in such and such piece and then ask them what they think those are, you can start to foster discussion and then it won't come as a shock when you curtail their story about how they went to Hawaii last summer and saw that art piece in their hotel room.

    I always thought that reader response papers - 1-2 pages of reaction to the material that were "lightly graded" in check-minus/check/check-plus fashion - were very useful. Not only did it ensure that you were reading the material, it also gave the professor the heads-up on what people were pulling from the material and how deeply they were engaging with it. Another tactic that a professor used is using our university's Wiki space. We were required to post one 1-2 paragraph response to the readings AND to respond to one other student's response to the readings. Then they read it and had an idea of what we had been thinking about,

    Yes, agreed with both of these!

    I sometimes let students start off by responding quickly to the reading (letting them get their "I didn't like it" responses out of their system) and then tell them that it's time to move on to analyzing, or to putting it in conversation with other texts we've read. Depending on what level you're teaching (freshmen have much more trouble with this than sophomores and juniors, for instance) this can sometimes take some work.

    I like to ask students to respond to one idea in the reading that I call their attention to, or ask them to report back on one or two main ideas/take-aways they got from the reading, on Blackboard and have it due before the start of class. It can be really helpful to know what they already do/don't understand, and where they're coming from, when planning discussion out.

  4. Haraway's Companion Species Manifesto is also very good, and helps her to further disrupt binaries in human/machine.

    THE text to read by Hayles would be How We Became Posthuman, if it's not on your list already. I've also read excerpts from My Mother Was a Computer. Also, if you get multimodal about this, Hayles has a lot of recorded lectures up online, and she's a lovely speaker. Worth checking out.

    I agree with truckbasket about some foundational texts. Lyotard's "Defining the Postmodern" might also be useful in this respect, as would some Marxist readings—some I've read in the context of a women's studies seminar on Feminst Foundations include Fredrich Engels "Origins of the Family" (this connects interestingly to Haraway's cyborg manifesto—ideas of kinship) and Raymond Williams "Base and Superstructure in Marxist Cultural Theory." Post-marxist, there's the classic "Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses" by Althusser.

  5. I'm interested in the fact that the OP seems to be a grad school applicant. Why ask this before entering grad school? If you're preparing applications and wondering if this field/course of study is right for you, grad school may not be the best choice right now. There may be other ways that you can pursue your interests in writing that don't involve investing money, time, and your heart in a graduate degree. (It will also make it much more difficult to get in, in the first place.)

    Now, interests evolve and change, and there are plenty that enter grad school and then discover that their field or course of study isn't for them. This does happen. But if you're applying to grad programs while feeling unsure about your subject area (and looking for potential ways out down the road), a graduate degree may not be what you need to pursue right now.

  6. It's also worth noting, as Neuropsych did that it depends on what the school provides. A lot of SLACs provide excellent grad school preparation and counseling, and have the benefit of very close student-teacher relationships that can lead not only to good networking and advice, but also to really good recommendations.

    This was my experience (I attended a school that was <1400 undergrads).

    I've heard that an insane number of students in grad school come from SLACs—of course I can't remember the numbers, or where I heard this—but the percentage is disproportionate to the percentage of the national undergrad population that is enrolled in SLACs. It makes sense to me, given what these schools can offer.

  7. Three double-spaced pages (about 1.5 single-spaced pages) is about the ideal length. Even if the school doesn't have a state length requirement/maximum, committees are expecting that much material by virtue of the genre's conventions.

    So can you technically go longer than this? Sure...but it's best to get as succinct as possible. As another poster mentioned, committees are reading hundreds and hundreds of these, and providing extra reading material isn't the best way to make a friend in this situation.

    I'd actually suggest you approach it this way, if you're having trouble letting go of the last 200 extra words: for fun/practice, cut your current SoP in half. Make really tough decisions about what needs to be there. Let that now halfed version sit for a day or two, and then (with a fresh pair of eyes) compare it to your original SoP.

    I'll bet you'll be surprised at how strongly you can still communicate your profile in such a short space. Then, you can add back in anything that seems essential from the longer version. I know this seems like a roundabout way of doing it, but I recommend this strategy because it really helps you to realize what is truly an essential detail that is working to communicate a picture of you and your scholarly identity, and what's fluff.

  8. To hedge my last post a bit, I mean, the 5 page piece might not be terrible as a second paper, but my gut still says that it isn't doing the work of the writing sample (showing your capacity for sustained argument).

    But to your most recent questions: I think it's safe to assume that one writing sample is expected if a number isn't specified. Are your programs specifying the number of pages they're looking for? (Most of mine for English last year asked for 15-20 pages.)

    Accessibility: I personally wouldn't worry about an esoteric topic. In fact, it seems like it would be an advantage to submit on this topic, since it's related to your eventual course of study and you can demonstrate your chops. But in any case, your goals are to demonstrate that you write well, to show off your skills at analysis, and to show off your ability to create a sustained argument. As long as the paper does these things well, I wouldn't worry about it being on a well-known topic.

  9. Learning to facilitate discussion well is really, really hard. I finally feel like I'm starting to get better at it myself after three years of teaching, but I still have days when I walk out of the classroom thinking, "Geez, I'm such a loser."

    Anyway, FWIW, some suggestions for planning discussions: one is to try to plan so that you have a short (emphasis on SHORT) list of very, very important take aways that must be covered in some way during the discussion. One, two, maybe three main ideas that you absolutely must either pull out of student responses (and then emphasize and elaborate on) or will lecture on if discussion isn't going the way it should.

    I like this approach personally because it helps me break up the linearity of trying to script one path to the takeaway points. It also helps me feel like we accomplished something; and if the students find other points of interest to talk about, then that's icing on the cake.

    My second suggestion is, I suppose, a reiteration from up above: get students thinking in the direction of your main idea by assigning some kind of directed response for homework, or by asking them to freewrite or jot down notes in response to a question designed to get them thinking in the direction of one of your take-aways. I always feel like I'm on surer footing with this kind of start.

  10. There are some who would tell you that rank matters for some adcom members and would encourage you to look for professors higher up in rank than a lecturer, yes. It's not a hard-and-fast no-no, though, it might depend on the circumstances.

    For instance, one of the directors of the comp program for my MA (which was in lit) is a full-time faculty member but of the "field service" rank (meaning she is not tenured but rather on a long-term renewable contract). My DGS tries to persuade most people not to ask her for a recommendation because of her rank, though he didn't do so for me because (a) I was applying to rhet/comp PhD programs and she was therefore in a position to speak to my preparedness for the field, unlike many other potential recommenders I had from my lit degree, and ( B) and because I had worked closely with both her and the other director as the comp program graduate assistant.

  11. I think it really depends on the situation. For small assignments, professors seem to be more "forgiving" when it is a class full of 1st and 2nd year undergrads. For the class I am TAing right now, the professor has told me not to worry about it so much with the small stuff. Just as long as they at least say where they are getting the information from. For large assignments, like a paper that makes up the majority of the grade, then professors seem to be less tolerant. I haven't had to deal with this yet, but I could see a student getting a zero for the paper if it was obviously plagiarized. What's weird though with some of that plagiarism software is that you will often see high percentages of plagiarism given to papers that weren't really plagiarized. Like the software isn't looking for word for word, but just similarities. So if you're paraphrasing and using similar terms it can look to the software like it was copied.

    robot_hamster brings up a really good point—SmartAssign on Blackboard is pretty sensitive, and will mark quotes as plagiarized (which means a human has to page through and verify) and also similar paraphrases or common phrases.

    I'm not sure if this is exactly what you're seeing (you said you're seeing "blatant plagiarism," so maybe you're seeing something worse than this), but one thing that might make you feel better is that it might not be intentional plagiarism. It may be that students don't understand that they're not doing a substantial enough paraphrase.

    Also, are any of the offenders international students? Plagiarism is a cultural construct specific to Western countries; many Asian cultures, for instance, don't really have a cultural equivalent. Oral traditions are also places where plagiarism is not only okay, but in a way encouraged (e.g., Martin Luther King's speeches are largely remixes of other people's sermons, which actually makes them more powerful).

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