Class 2.1

Deepening Analysis

Last time for HW you wrote two paragraphs discussing one of three educational videos. This time I’d like you to create a 2-¶ sequence where the second ¶ bounces in some way off the first one. I’m especially interested in seeing one of the “Analytic” rather than one of the “Narrative” transitions from our list of ¶ transitions.

To make the discussion more lively, please choose a video to write on from any of the thousands (millions?) of educational pieces on YouTube.

Several guidelines:

  • For clarity of formatting, please put two returns between the ¶s.
  • For clarity of understanding, try to phrase the opening sentence of your new ¶ so as to signal to the reader how it improves on, or complicates, or perhaps even undercuts the point you made in your earlier analysis.
  • Do include a fresh link to the video you’re discussing.
  • Finally, beneath your video link, name the paragraph transition you see between your ¶s.

Class 14.1

4 Stages of an Infographic

  1. Decide on a question of interest.
  2. Data manipulation
    • sorting and deleting rows to isolate groups of interest
    • “countif” function to count the # belonging to each category
  3. Data presentation — generate a map, pie chart or graph
  4. Data explanation — add words, arrows, color to clearly communicate the story you want to tell.

Your choice of question will be limited by the data available. But even with a data set like ours, with four columns, there are a LOT of ways you can slice that data:

  • By isolating one group (just CGS students, or just kids from LA), you can tell a story about who those people are, or where they come from .
  • By isolating two groups and setting them in contrast, you can tell a story about how, say, people in West Campus differ from people in East, or how people from the coasts differ from people in the middle of the country.

Above all, be creative. Come up with a question and a way of slicing the data that speaks to your interests and that’s different from what other people in your section are doing.

For class today, download the new dataset (with state and zip codes) and start work on your infographic. At the very least, I want you to complete stage 1 (above) and paste your question of interest into the Comments below. But if possible, start work on data manipulation (stage 2) and presentation (stage 3). Extra HW credit for generating a graphic and uploading it in a reply to your first comment.

Sites of interest for Stage 3:

We will discuss these sites in class.

Note that I have to leave town Thursday for a family funeral. So there will be no class on Friday. If you want to see me for office hours, come in on Wednesday!

Class 13.2

Hamlet Essay Intro

Write a 1-2 ¶ intro for your Hamlet essay.

Start by re-reading the essay prompt. What character/argument from Shakespeare’s play do you want to focus on? Choose one that will allow you to speak to the very different appeals made by Castiglione and Machiavelli. Then find passages from those two writers that speak to the argument you’ve chosen from Shakespeare’s play.

Open your intro with a tight focus on the character you plan to focus on—or start with something more famous from the play that might serve as an interesting backdrop for the character/passage you’ve chosen. Around the intro’s midpoint, voice some preliminary understanding, then use the final sentences to express your thesis claim as a deeper understanding that complicates or undercuts the prelim U.

Paste the results in the comments section, below.

Class 13.1

A Gift in One Hand, a Knife in the Other

In Social Science this past week you’ve read all of Machiavelli’s Prince. For class today I want to focus on passages that strike you as significant for thinking about Shakespeare’s portrait of court life in Hamlet. Go back through your Soc Sci reading, and then transcribe a short but significant passage from Machiavelli into the comment box below. Then reply to that comment with a 2-¶ writeup. Use the first ¶ to discuss what Machiavelli is arguing in that passage, perhaps clarifying its meaning by reference to the issues and concerns in the larger context of the book. Use the second ¶ to discuss how this passage is relevant for Hamlet.

People not enrolled in Social Science have my permission to do this assignment focusing on JUST the passages I’ve excerpted from Machiavelli on the Unit 4 Assignment Page—look down in the comments. But before doing the assignment, see if you can get someone who IS in Corrin Social Science to give you a brief run-down on what Machiavelli is up to in The Prince.

Finally, as an aid for anyone who doesn’t have the Social Science reader, I’ve scanned a large portion of The Prince and uploaded it to the CourseDocs site.

Lecture 13

First Stab at a Graph

Download the bu-housing-dataset-9-7-16, and open the file in Excel or another Spreadsheet App. Look at the column headings: dorm, class year, school, and home town. What kinds of stories can you tell using a graph to show how those headings correlate with one another? I’m guessing it’s a story about how the student population of dorms differ, but note that you can:

  • focus on just one class year, or
  • group dorms together to focus on, say, West Campus vs. South Campus vs. East Campus, or
  • focus on just 2 or 3 colleges.
  • group hometowns together to distinguish “East Coast” vs. “Middle America” vs. “West Coast” vs. “Abroad”

Do some data wrangling to produce a graph in Excel. Take a screenshot and post the screenshot in the comments below. If you can’t label the axes, give a verbal description in your comment.

Lecture 12

The Rhetoric of Infographics

Last time we touched on how graphics differ from narrative reporting. Here’s an interesting contrast, between a global warming piece published in Rolling Stone Magazine and an infographic based on information in that article.

Skim through the article and then look at the infographic. Write a short ¶ comparing the strengths and weaknesses of each approach. Be specific: if you think the article is effective, identify particular elements that you found impressive and try to say something about how or why. Paste your response in the comments.

Bonus—two more infographics on climate change:

You needn’t write anything about these two graphics, but check them both out and come to class prepared to discuss!

Class 11.2

The Dance of Courtly Graces

In Humanities this week you’ve read Book 1 and part of Book 4 from Castiglione’s Courtier. For class today I want to focus on passages that strike you as significant for thinking about Shakespeare’s portrait of court life in Hamlet. Go back through your Humanities reading, and then transcribe a short but significant passage from Castiglione into the comment box below. Then reply to that comment with a 2-¶ writeup. Use the first ¶ to discuss what Castiglione is arguing in that passage, perhaps clarifying its meaning by reference to the issues and concerns in the larger context of that section of the book. Use the second ¶ to discuss how this passage is relevant for Shakespeare’s play.

People not enrolled in Humanities have my permission to do this assignment focusing on JUST the passages I’ve excerpted from Castiglione on the Unit 4 Assignment Page—look down in the comments. But before doing the assignment, see if you can get someone who IS in Coffman Humanities to give you a brief run-down on what Castiglione is up to in The Book of the Courtier.

Finally, as an aid for anyone who doesn’t have the Humanities reader, I’ve scanned a large portion of The Courtier and uploaded it to the CourseDocs site. Note that my upload includes a brief excerpt from Book 2 that is NOT in the Humanities reader. We will discuss this decision in class.

Class 11.1

Hamlet Takes the Final Exam

Read Hamlet, Acts 4.5-5 (the rest of Act 4 and all of Act 5). (Available online here and here, as well as in the Humanities course book.)

As you read, watch for moments that stand in sharp contrast with earlier events in the play. Highlight your chosen passage and paste it into a comment below. Then reply to that comment with a 2-¶ deepening analysis of your quoted passage. Use the first paragraph to outline the speaker’s rhetorical intent, and the second ¶ to call attention to how the speaker’s words stand in contrast with words or events from earlier in the play. Feel free to briefly quote an earlier line or two in developing this analysis. Be sure to explain what you think the contrast suggests—has a character changed? Has the situation changed?

As you consider what passage to quote for this assignment, take note of what other students have already covered, and try to focus on a passage that no one else has covered. Or, if someone has covered it but you have a different take on the passage, reply to their passage with your (different) account.