Okay, so as it turns out, I'm not all about torturing my students. I kind of knew that, but then it became true when the assignment fairy sprinkled me with fairy dust this morning when I thought, "Yeah, I don't want to create a quiz." Instead, the assignment fairy's (man, I have to find a Flickr image for him/her, don't I?) powder - not to be confused with the powder Dave Chappelle jokes about, mind you - magically revised that thought into, "You know, I won't quiz them; I'll give them some way to show their genius. They all read what I asked them to *cough cough cough* so this will allow for their creativity and knowledge to shine." A quiz would almost be too easy for them and for me. I mean, sure, I could "allow" them to fail and "allow" me to pass of the quizzes to my work study to assess. This way, they have to re-read the material *cough cough cough* and learn something. Quizzes don't always cause learning; I think that option has a 15% rating of knowledge-induced activity. Anyhow, if you weren't in class, you missed the lil' half page sheet detailing what to do with P4 Doc Sharing readings for Wednesday. Too bad, Chad. If you're nice, I may give you one pre-Wednesday classes. Stop by my office or just ask a classmate what the options were.
Speaking of Wednesday, in all its middle-of-the-week glory, we'll hand in those P4 options (students were asked to complete 2 of the 4 on the halfsie handout) and start the P4 Presentations. Friday concludes the P4 Presentations. On both days, I hope I'm able to announce what we'll be doing with David Sedaris' book next week (starting Monday). P5, the happy PPT MusicVideo of FUN, begins next week. Oh, and for those waiting patiently - because patience is a key virtue - I should have P3 wrapped up/assessed/yadda yadda by tomorrow evening. Yep.
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