perfecting your portfolio
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Perfecting Your Portfolio. Value. Apply what you have learned. Reflect on your progress . Demonstrate your writing competence. Contents. Revised versions of all of your projects 300-500 word summary of: The changes you made to each project What you’ve learned about writing. Grade. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Perfecting Your Portfolio
Value
Apply what you have learned. Reflect on your progress. Demonstrate your writing competence.
Contents
Revised versions of all of your projects
300-500 word summary of: The changes you made to each project What you’ve learned about writing
Grade
The portfolios are graded holistically. Brief evaluation of strengths and
weaknesses. The portfolio may help balance your
grade in the course.
Evaluation Quality and Thoroughness of
Revisions▪ Did you address each issue mentioned in your
grade sheet and proofread each document carefully?
General “sheen▪ Do the essays in your portfolio represent A, B,
C quality work? ▪ Are you prepared for the writing tasks ahead
of you?
Collaborative Work It is not necessary to work with the
same group if you’d rather work alone.
Do not start a new project.
Depth Compute your revisions with the
following formula: Percent of Revision Needed: 50 – Grade
Received multiplied by 2. So, if you scored a 40, the percent of
revision you’d need to score an A would be 20%.
The lower you scored on your original essay, the more changes you should plan to make for your portfolio version.
What if I don’t revise at all? You will receive an F.
Even if you scored highly on your essays, the point of the portfolio is to revise and improve them.
Consider adding more sources, fine-tuning some sentences, and adding more examples.
Reviewing
Plan to spend considerable time reviewing your portfolio.
Consider these two areas: Global Concerns ▪ Focus, Organization, Development
Lower Level Concerns▪ Grammar, Mechanics, Style
One Minute Prompt #1
What are some things you have learned about writing this semester that will help you improve your essays?
Global Questions Will readers understand my reasons for writing?
Have I provided the specific examples, concrete language, careful reasoning, and supporting evidence that they need?
Have I provided enough background? Can I make my manuscript more enjoyable to
read by incorporating more images and metaphors, by offering more creative examples?
Have I clarified the credibility of my sources? Have I provided sufficient evidence for my claims?
Audience Awareness Questions
Have I used any terms or concepts that need clarification?
What additional examples or concrete, sensory details can I provide to help readers understand my message?
Can I revise any passages to make them less emotionally charged and more sympathetic to my readers' feelings about the matter?
Are any of the examples and illustrations unnecessary, given the audience's level of knowledge? Are any examples and illustrations redundant?
Tone Questions Is the tone appropriate, given my intended
audience and purpose? Do I sound like an informed expert, an inquiring
scholar, a technocrat, a concerned citizen, a crank?
Is this the voice I really want? Would presenting a different persona allow me to convey my meaning more effectively?
Am I presenting a consistent voice throughout the text? If there are variations in the tone of the document, are they intentional and effective?
Organization Questions Does my introduction hook my readers'
interest? Does my document accomplish what the introduction promises?
Throughout the document, have I offered my reader a deductive overview of my purpose and forecast any organization?
Design Questions
Could I use a picture, a graph, or a table to visually represent my meaning?
Can I make my work more scannable by using headers, bullets, or lists?
The Right Attitude About Revision
Take PRIDE in your work and put some energy into it.
Remember, the idea is really show off your new skills as a writer.
Apply what you’ve learned!