This component is about talking with professors, instructors, and teachers at a …
This component is about talking with professors, instructors, and teachers at a professional level of communication. The importance of effective communication with educators is discussed along with examples, case studies, and actionable items for students.
What intervention strategies can you align to this lesson? Time Management
Author: Tyler Laughlin
The Academic Success Center at Texas A&M University operates with a mission to provide comprehensive resources that help all Aggies achieve their academic goals and realize their academic potential. This award-winning organization specializes in intervention strategies geared specifically toward academic success for all learners. Their knowledge base derives from attending nationally and regionally recognized conferences, serving on university-level committees, and conducting ongoing professional development, all in the area of diversity and inclusion. Their vision is to be a state and national model of excellence known for inspiring academic success through innovative collaboration, cutting edge research, and efficient and inclusive student-centered programming.
This component is about time management. The importance of effective time management …
This component is about time management. The importance of effective time management for students is discussed along with examples, case studies, and actionable items for students.
What student success intervention strategies can you align to this lesson? Time Management Active Study Techniques Note-Taking Reading Strategies
Author: Tyler Laughlin
The Academic Success Center at Texas A&M University operates with a mission to provide comprehensive resources that help all Aggies achieve their academic goals and realize their academic potential. This award-winning organization specializes in intervention strategies geared specifically toward academic success for all learners. Their knowledge base derives from attending nationally and regionally recognized conferences, serving on university-level committees, and conducting ongoing professional development, all in the area of diversity and inclusion. Their vision is to be a state and national model of excellence known for inspiring academic success through innovative collaboration, cutting edge research, and efficient and inclusive student-centered programming.
This site includes samples of thesis statements for literary criticism essays, as …
This site includes samples of thesis statements for literary criticism essays, as well as thesis patterns that students can experiment with while practicing thesis statements.
Some words may not cause a particular emotional reaction whereas other words …
Some words may not cause a particular emotional reaction whereas other words with similar meanings may fire up anger, joy, fear, or other emotions. Authors may choose to use more emotional words to convey a particular tone in their writing, and critical readers need to be aware of this literary device to maintain an objective view of the topic and not be subtly swayed by the author’s attitude.
In this worksheet, students will evaluate groups of words and identify the choice that suggests a more emotional response. The objective is for students to hone their ability to assess tone, connotation, and denotation through word choice.
Author: Sharon Haigler Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This section is designed to build confidence about what Generative Artificial Intelligence …
This section is designed to build confidence about what Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) means for the future of education by closely studying the operations, limitations, and theoretical value of a Large Language Model (LLM) like ChatGPT. To this end, this section seeks to explain what language modeling is and how this process contributes to an LLM’s tendency to generate inaccurate information. Additionally, this section considers how the design of an LLM—specifically, the collective knowledge it is trained upon—can contribute to the perpetuation of biases. Lastly, this section encourages critical thinking about the value of an LLM from a theoretical standpoint regarding the writing process and collaborative learning. By the end of this section, you should be able to articulate how an LLM like ChatGPT operates, as well as the value and limitations of this design within the evolution of learning.
Author: Mary Landry Contributors: Gwendolyn Inocencio, C. Anneke Snyder, Jonahs Kneitly Designers: Irene AI, Shweta Kailani Supervisors: Terri Pantuso, Sarah LeMire
This two-part unit provides instructors with materials to encourage student development of …
This two-part unit provides instructors with materials to encourage student development of information literacy skills. The unit can be understood as supplemental materials for the OER textbook Informed Arguments: A Guide to Writing and Research with particular focus on the research aspect of writing and argumentation, or the materials could be useful on its own, for instructors who do not teach with the Informed Arguments textbook. It addresses, most specifically, how to find and evaluate source material. It covers things like types of sources, biases, peer-review processes, and other information literacy skills helpful for successful college writing. It includes 1) general instructor notes, 2) an online discussion activity, 3) a quiz about evaluation of sources, 4) a Research Journal (short essay) assignment, 5) a rubric for the short essay, and 6) a further information resource guide for faculty about information literacy and the college classroom.
Part 1: https://pressbooks.library.tamu.edu/engl1301/chapter/research-and-argumentation-teacher-facing-lesson/ Part 2: https://pressbooks.library.tamu.edu/engl1301/chapter/research-and-information-literacy-student-facing-assignment/
Author: Michael Gardin Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This two-part unit provides instructors with materials to encourage student development of …
This two-part unit provides instructors with materials to encourage student development of information literacy skills. The unit can be understood as supplemental materials for the OER textbook Informed Arguments: A Guide to Writing and Research with particular focus on the research aspect of writing and argumentation, or the materials could be useful on its own, for instructors who do not teach with the Informed Arguments textbook. It addresses, most specifically, how to find and evaluate source material. It covers things like types of sources, biases, peer-review processes, and other information literacy skills helpful for successful college writing. It includes 1) general instructor notes, 2) an online discussion activity, 3) a quiz about evaluation of sources, 4) a Research Journal (short essay) assignment, 5) a rubric for the short essay, and 6) a further information resource guide for faculty about information literacy and the college classroom.
Part 1: https://pressbooks.library.tamu.edu/engl1301/chapter/research-and-argumentation-teacher-facing-lesson/ Part 2: https://pressbooks.library.tamu.edu/engl1301/chapter/research-and-information-literacy-student-facing-assignment/
Author: Michael Gardin Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This peer review resource is part of the Digital Design for Student Success …
This peer review resource is part of the Digital Design for Student Success (D2S2) project, a collaboration between Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board (THECB), Rice University, Texas A & M University, and The University of Texas. Peer review materials are designed for use in any course that uses writing--particularly writing flag (writing intensive) courses in the undergraduate curriculum.
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - create a well-organized …
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - create a well-organized personal narrative essay that includes all the essential components of a story, such as an introduction, setting, characters, plot (rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution), and conclusion. - apply descriptive writing techniques, including the use of vivid diction and dialogue, to paint a clear picture in the reader’s mind and maintain an authentic writer’s voice. - evaluate the effectiveness of their drafting by seeking feedback from peers and revising for clarity, organization, tone, and audience awareness.
Author: Kimberly Stelly Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - define and distinguish …
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - define and distinguish the various types of phrases and clauses. - analyze sample texts to recognize and label what phrases and clauses are present. - construct sentences that incorporate specific types of phrases and clauses.
Author: Pujarinee Mitra Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - prepare for reading …
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - prepare for reading a text by analyzing its title through the 5W1H (Who, What, When, Where, Why, and How) questioning technique.
Author: Christopher Manes Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
Upon successful completion of this lesson, students will - analyze a text …
Upon successful completion of this lesson, students will - analyze a text by completing a graphic organizer that identifies an author’s use of evidence and rhetorical devices. - evaluate the impact of these devices on the target audience.
A PowerPoint lesson is included
Author: Brandi Morley Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This handout serves as a tool for introducing students to textual analysis, …
This handout serves as a tool for introducing students to textual analysis, encompassing its definition, objective, significance, various approaches, and considerations for analyzing text.
Authors: Brandi Morley, C. Anneke Snyder Editor: Mary Landry Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
In this section, you will gain insights about privacy and confidentiality concerns …
In this section, you will gain insights about privacy and confidentiality concerns related to a form of Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) known as Large Language Models (LLMs) and, specifically, OpenAI’s policies about ChatGPT.
The full extent of privacy and confidentiality risks in relation to ChatGPT, which relies on collective intelligence for information gathering and dissemination, has not been fully realized. Users should be mindful of OpenAI’s terms of use, particularly as those terms are subject to change. Though OpenAI claims to not share private user information, the language around such statements is vague and contradictory, and there is a strong possibility that personal information may be monitored by human proctors. Moreover, educators who are bound to the legal obligations outlined in FERPA should be particularly concerned about how student privacy could be potentially violated by using ChatGPT and other GenAI technologies.
After reading this section, you should be able to articulate and discuss OpenAI’s significant terms of use and privacy policy, consider the potential privacy and intellectual property violations contained within the collective intelligence paradigm, and communicate your own concerns about privacy and confidentiality in relation to GenAI technologies.
Author: C. Anneke Snyder Contributors: Gwendolyn Inocencio, Mary Landry, Jonahs Kneitly Designers: Irene AI, Sweta Kailani Supervisors: Terri Pantuso, Sarah LeMire
This handout provides definitions and examples of media propaganda techniques, including Name-Calling, …
This handout provides definitions and examples of media propaganda techniques, including Name-Calling, Glittering Generalities, Transfer, Testimonials, Plain Folks, Card-Stacking, Bandwagon Appeals, Half-Truths, Loaded Words, Obfuscation, Straw Man Arguments, and Deliberate Manipulation.
Authors: Sharon Haigler, C. Anneke Snyder Editor: Mary Landry Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
With this graphic organizer, students can delve into questions about role, audience, …
With this graphic organizer, students can delve into questions about role, audience, format, and topic (RAFT) as part of their exploration of audience and purpose. Specifically, working through the writing RAFT strategy can help a student understand their role as a writer and how to most effectively communicate their ideas.
Author: Brandi Morley Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - formulate a researchable, …
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - formulate a researchable, open-ended question on a current and controversial topic that has two clear sides. - construct a well-structured research proposal that includes credible sources and follows APA format guidelines, including a cover page, in-text citations, and a references page.
Author: Kimberly Stelly Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This folder contains assignments related to the researched position paper and annotated …
This folder contains assignments related to the researched position paper and annotated bibliography used at Texas A&M University for freshman composition.
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