Sunday, April 12, 2009

Transitions

Last week we worked on transition strategies.  It's really the first time I've done more than show students a list of transitions words - the most basic form of transition.  After doing some research on rhetorical strategies for coherence, I think I put together a decent PowerPoint.  I'm still not sure about the activity.  My morning class was phenomenal, identifying and implementing each transition strategy except transitional paragraphs (which wouldn't have made sense in the example essay anyway).  They even picked up on a few ordering problems I hadn't paid any attention to in the past.  Needless to say, I left that class elated.  I love it when my students awe me like that.  My afternoon class, however, had trouble engaging with the activity.  It's not as if I planned the most exciting activity, but I don't know that I could have made it any more interesting.  I enjoy making lesson plans that are fun and interesting, but not everything can be.  Sometimes you just have to buckle down and set yourself to the task at hand because it is important foundational information.  Half the class treated the activity as gossip hour.  I should have just thrown them out of class.  Next time.

Anyway, I hope to develop this activity more before I use it again.  Since I'm teaching this class over the summer, I'll use it as an opportunity to do that.  Perhaps I'll get some suggestions from my students.  They usually have good ideas.

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