Reading Responses

Objective

Rather than me trying to determine and assign a grade to how much you’ve learned from the reading assignment, you should just tell me what you thought about them. I’m interested learning in WHAT YOU THINK ABOUT THEM, not just getting a recap summary of the readings.

Basics

Questions to think about

Reflect more than summarize

I’m much more interested in reading about YOUR PERSONAL LEARNING EXPERIENCE than reading a summary of the assignment. Of course in describing what you found most interesting or what you disagreed with the most you’ll end up restating some ideas from the reading. That’s important! But this exercise is NOT about just regurgitating the readings or identifying the “most” important points—everyone will learn something different from them.

Don’t forget your learning assessment (1-3)

At the end of your post, evaluate your own effort for that day’s readings using the following scale. Individual points seem like they don’t matter all that much per each assignment, but they add up over the month!

You can use half points! (.5, 1.5, 2.5); but don’t do other fractions (1.8, 2.4, etc) because it leads to too much nit-picking.

Remember that you are evaluating your effort for the assignment, not the absolute “quality” of your final response. If you spent a lot of effort learning from the readings, even if you feel your response doesn’t sound particularly sophisticated, you can give yourself a 2.5 or 3.

Typically, over the course, students report mostly 2s with a bunch of 2.5s, some 3s, and a few 1s sprinkled in—and an occasional 0 for when life was unusually busy that day and an occasional 4 when they got really into something.