Endorsed D2S2 resources were developed by faculty at Texas A&M University and The University of Texas at Austin for faculty of high-demand introductory courses.
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - analyze the tone …
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - analyze the tone of a given text by evaluating its diction, imagery, details, language, and structure through the DIDLS strategy
Author: Lenora Perry-Samaniego Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - analyze a chosen …
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - analyze a chosen concept through various strategies, such as its connotations, denotations, and more. - create a well-organized essay that explains and defends a proposed definition for their chosen concept through reasoning strategies, evidence, and credible sources.
Author: Kimberly Stelly Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This resource contains a facilitation guide, class notes, and an activity handout. Students …
This resource contains a facilitation guide, class notes, and an activity handout. Students play the game “Let’s Make a Deal” to explore the underlying probability that guides the optimal strategy for contestants. This activity aligns with MATH 1332 Learning Outcome 4: Demonstrate fundamental probability/counting techniques and apply those techniques to solve problems.
This resource contains a slide deck and a facilitation guide. Students are …
This resource contains a slide deck and a facilitation guide. Students are guided to consider how mathematics can help us understand the phenomenon of a pandemic and inform our responses. Students work in groups using the NCTM’s browser pandemic app to manipulate four factors that influence the spread of a virus to see the how changing these variables creates different outcomes. They learn and explore how a log curve is used in this model. This activity aligns with MATH 1332 Learning Outcome 6: Demonstrate the ability to choose and analyze mathematical models to solve problems from real-world settings, including, but not limited to, personal finance, health literacy, and civic engagement
This worksheet is designed to help students develop the ability to identify …
This worksheet is designed to help students develop the ability to identify unclear pronoun usage in their own writing. To achieve this ability, students are shown examples of demonstrative determiners and unclear antecedents as well as strategies to help them avoid these mistakes in their own work. This worksheet is designed to supplement previously generated lessons rather than as a stand-alone lesson.
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - create a well-organized …
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - create a well-organized essay that describes in vivid detail a significant person, place, event, moment, or object that has impacted their life or perspective. - evaluate the effectiveness of their drafting by seeking feedback from peers and revising to improve clarity, organization, and impact.
Author: Kimberly Stelly Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This resource contains a student activity handout, class notes, and a facilitation …
This resource contains a student activity handout, class notes, and a facilitation guide. Students work together to discover one-to-one correspondences between various infinite sets of numbers and the set of natural numbers. At the end of this activity the compiled results of their group work form a list of infinite sets that all have the same cardinality as the set of natural numbers. Instructors may take this lesson further by discussion countably infinite versus uncountably infinite sets. This activity aligns with MATH 1332 Learning Outcome 1: Apply the language and notation of sets
This assignment asks students to take bibliographic data and generate a properly …
This assignment asks students to take bibliographic data and generate a properly formatted APA citation. After completing questions #1-8, they are then asked to create 3 properly formatted in-text citations in APA style. Finally, they are asked to take the first 8 citations and turn them into a properly formatted reference sheet, attached to the end of the worksheet. Depending on skill level, the instructor may choose to allow them to use an aid (like Purdue Owl) to construct the citations or do them from memory. This assignment is best used to assess students’ understanding of APA and provide them with low-stakes practice of these formatting skills.
This assignment asks students to take bibliographic data and generate a properly …
This assignment asks students to take bibliographic data and generate a properly formatted MLA citation. After completing questions #1-8, they are then asked to create 3 properly formatted in-text citations in MLA style. Finally, they are asked to take the first 8 citations and turn them into a properly formatted reference sheet, attached to the end of the worksheet. Depending on skill level, the instructor may choose to allow them to use an aid (like Purdue Owl) to construct the citations or do them from memory. This assignment is best used to assess students’ understanding of MLA and provide them with low-stakes practice of these formatting skills.
Upon successful completion of this activity, students will - evaluate the reliability …
Upon successful completion of this activity, students will - evaluate the reliability of a source by assessing the credibility and objectivity of its author, research methods and sources, publishing source and date, and more.
Author: Kimberly Stelly Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - evaluate a given …
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - evaluate a given text against a predetermined rating system (unsatisfactory, needs improvement, meets expectations, exceeds expectations, and outstanding). - compose an evaluation paper that integrates textual evidence, quotes, and paraphrases from the essay to support their ratings and overall assessment.
Author: Christopher Manes Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This unit is designed to support instructors as they guide students through …
This unit is designed to support instructors as they guide students through the complex analytical, rhetorical, and research skills required to write advanced argumentative essays in a class setting similar to English 1302. Students will need these skills to succeed in most college courses, no matter what their major field of study may be. Content-wise, this unit first focuses on foundational research skills. Students will develop an open-ended, researchable question that guides them through a research proposal and an annotated bibliography, all while attending to source credibility. Building on this research, the unit then moves through the three core forms of argument: the Classical Argument, the Toulmin Argument, and the Rogerian Argument. Lesson presentations, assignments, and other instructional resources are included for each argument type.
Author: Kimberly Stelly Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This unit is designed to support instructors as they guide students through …
This unit is designed to support instructors as they guide students through the complex analytical, rhetorical, and research skills required to write advanced argumentative essays in a class setting similar to English 1302. Students will need these skills to succeed in most college courses, no matter what their major field of study may be. Content-wise, this unit first focuses on foundational research skills. Students will develop an open-ended, researchable question that guides them through a research proposal and an annotated bibliography, all while attending to source credibility. Building on this research, the unit then moves through the three core forms of argument: the Classical Argument, the Toulmin Argument, and the Rogerian Argument. Lesson presentations, assignments, and other instructional resources are included for each argument type.
Author: Kimberly Stelly Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This resource contains a news article about using algorithms to stop gerrymandering …
This resource contains a news article about using algorithms to stop gerrymandering and a lesson plan to pair with the article.Students make predictions, calculator confidence intervals, and discover the Law of Large Numbers via simulation. This lesson can be closed with a discussion of the Central Limit Theorem. This activity aligns with MATH 1342 Learning Outcome 5: Examine, analyze, and compare various sampling distributions for both discrete and continuous random variables and Learning Outcome 6: Describe and compute confidence intervals.
This resource contains a news article and a facilitation guide. Students play …
This resource contains a news article and a facilitation guide. Students play the game “Let’s Make a Deal” to explore the underlying probability that guides the optimal strategy for contestants. This activity aligns with MATH 1342 Learning Outcome 4: Explain the role of probability in statistics.
This resource contains a news article, probability table, statistical study skill, and …
This resource contains a news article, probability table, statistical study skill, and facilitation guide. Students investigate the role of statistics and mathematical modeling in football analysis. This activity aligns with MATH 1342 Learning Outcome 1: Explain the use of data collection and statistics as tools to reach reasonable conclusions.
This resource features two lesson plans: "Reading Critically for Bias and Tone" …
This resource features two lesson plans: "Reading Critically for Bias and Tone" and "Reading Critically for Propaganda Techniques." Both of these lessons are designed to help students analyze authors' viewpoints and biases, as well as the general use of persuasive tactics in texts. Through group work, activities, and individual essays, students learn to identify and analyze elements such as word choice, tone, omissions, and propaganda techniques (i.e. straw man arguments, bandwagon appeals, etc.). The resource includes detailed assignment expectations, learning objectives, lesson preparation guidelines, and downloadable worksheets to support classroom implementation.
Author: Sharon Haigler Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This resource contains activity handouts, a rubric, a facilitation guide, and tex …
This resource contains activity handouts, a rubric, a facilitation guide, and tex files. The material is meant to be used for those teaching a college algebra course. The activities are meant to provide a deeper understanding (than a traditional course offers) of some of the topics covered in a college algebra course. The activities are intended for group activities and options exist for use in a single class or multiple classes.
This resource contains activity handouts, a rubric, a facilitation guide, and tex …
This resource contains activity handouts, a rubric, a facilitation guide, and tex files. The material is meant to be used for those teaching a college algebra course. The activities are meant to provide a deeper understanding (than a traditional course offers) of some of the topics covered in a college algebra course. The activities are intended for group activities and options exist for use in a single class or multiple classes.
This assignment asks students to answer various formatting questions related to MLA …
This assignment asks students to answer various formatting questions related to MLA style. Depending on skill level, the instructor may choose to allow them to use an aid (like Purdue Owl) to construct the citations or do them from memory. This assignment is best used to assess students’ understanding of MLA and provide them with low-stakes practice of these formatting skills. All highlighted areas are the correct answers of the multiple choice questions; highlights should be removed from the worksheet before giving to students.
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