Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
Handout for ECE11 & 29 July Wksp
1. We write to work out what we think: Embedding “writing workouts” in researching – Resources
for Writing as a Researcher, Responding as a Researcher, Writing and Responding as a Supervisor
Ilene D. Alexander, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Communication
Information, Exercises, Resources for Writing, Dissertation Development, Working with Peers
& Professors, Professional Development and Funding: http://www.grad.umn.edu/gradwriting/
CG/
Active Listening - http://www.breakoutofthebox.com/active.htm
Feedback - http://www.breakoutofthebox.com/doesmost.htm,
http://www.breakoutofthebox.com/feedback.htm
Thinking
Ladder of Inference: http://www.systems-thinking.org/loi/loi.htm
Reflective Writing Cycle: www.careers.salford.ac.uk/cms/resources/uploads/File/Reflective
%20Writing.pdf
“What I Know” / KWHLAQ graphical organizers: http://www.ontarioecoschools.org/forms
%26resources/downloads/sec_sci_grade10_KWHLAQ_Strategy.doc, and
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/graphicorganizers/KWHL/
Generative Writing / “Flash” Writing
Reverb http://www.reverb10.com/the-prompts/
Flash Fiction/Prose http://flashfiction.net/ and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_prose
100 words http://www.100words.com/about.php
“One a Day” Projects http://www.flickr.com/groups/oneaday/ (photos),
http://oneadaybloggers.wordpress.com/ (blogging)
Prose Styling
Ask the Professor (writing) and Ask the Librarian (research):
http://review.mai.ac.nz/index.php/TK/issue/current
Academic Phrase Bank - http://www.phrasebank.manchester.ac.uk/introductions.htm
Writing Down the Bones - www.breakoutofthebox.com/NatalieGoldberg.pdf and
http://mrbchs.wikispaces.com/Action+of+a+Sentence
Responding
Summary of Ways of Responding from Peter Elbow’s Sharing & Responding (1989) Compiled
by Herb Budden & housed at http://budden.wikispaces.com
Writing with Intention, Power and Comfort; Peer Mentoring and Creating Writing Groups
that Work; and Seeking Feedback while Writing Your Dissertation housed at
http://slideshare.net/alexa032
Anything by Peter Elbow - http://www.google.com/search?tbo=p&tbm=bks&q=inauthor:
%22Peter+Elbow%22
On Reading as a Scholar – all google-able
Carillo, Ellen C. “Making Reading Visible in the Classroom.” Currents in Teaching and Learning
1.2 (Spring 2009): 37-41. [Writing passage-based responses]
Christensen, Leah M. “Legal Reading and Success in Law School: An Empirical Study.”
University of St. Thomas Legal Studies Research Paper (2006) No. 06-29. [Moving from
default reading to reading as a practitioner, scholar]
2. Saltmarsh, David and Sue Saltmarsh. “Has anyone read the reading?” Using assessment to
promote academic literacies and cultures.” Teaching in Higher Education 13.6 (December)
2008: 621-632. [Writing critical reviews of individual and linked readings]
Scholes, Robert. “The Transition to College Reading.” Pedagogy: Critical Approaches to
Teaching Literature, Language, Composition, and Culture 2.2 (2002):165-172. [Putting oneself
“in” before “removing“ self from a text]
Watson, Jinx S. and Susan Wilcox. “Reading for Understanding: Methods of Reflecting on
Practice” Reflective Practice 1.1 (2000): 57-67. [Reading reflectively as and with
practitioners/researchers]
On Building Resilience
Robert Boice’s First Order Principles for College Teachers (1999), adaption at
http://www.uky.edu/TASC/ED/boices_principles.php
“The healthiest, most creative, most productive work comes with moderation – not, as tradition
would have us believe, with pressure for high rates of work and ever more output. Efficiency
practiced efficiently requires patience and tolerance, not greed and intensity.” Practicing the
habits described above, with their emphasis on patience, moderation, and mindfulness, will lead to
this habit. In addition, try these actions:
• Monitor yourself for inefficiency, such as allowing too many external distractions
(noise, visitors, etc.); overreacting to distraction; working to fatigue; procrastinating;
and bingeing.
• Redirect efforts to more efficient ways of working, such as taking intentional pauses,
creating outlines in brief sessions, and creating opportunities for interaction.
• Take care of yourself in practical ways such as sleeping adequately, exercising, and
eating nutritionally.
Closing Rule for Writers in Robert Boice’s How Writers Journey to Comfort and Fluency
(1994):
Rule #30: The six distinctive habits of resilient writers are:
(1) regular, constant practice of adaptive habits connected with writing;
(2) clear and realistic plans combined with repeated feedback about progress
toward goals;
(3) anticipation of blocking points by way of noticing problems, tracing them
back to origins;
(4) inventing new behaviors to prevent their recurrence;
(5) seeing connections for writerly rules to other, broader activities; and 6) occasional
flexibility in bending or breaking this and all other rules stated here.
Fredrickson, B.L. and Losada, M.F. (2005), "Positive affect and complex dynamics of human
flourishing", American Psychologist, 60.7: 678-686.