We’ve made it to the end of another semester! Yay! I was going to have you do some reading this week about the role of reflection and portfolios in the writing classroom, but since our class has one of the earliest “exam” periods (which is what I use to determine the portfolio due date), let’s not do extra reading.
In addition to working on your portfolios/late work, I just have one more assignment for you this semester, and it’s a throwback to our very first assignment: the imaginary resume. This time, though, I’m going to ask you to be creative in a different way. More on that in the instructions. 🙂
Optional Zoom Class Monday (12/7) at 10:50! While this is technically our last class period, I’ll also be available on the morning of 12/14.
Due Dates
- Writer’s Resume, Due by the end of the day on Sunday, 12/13, but probably you’ll want to do this sooner than that.
- Portfolio, Due by the end of the day on Monday, 12/14
- All Late Work, Due by the end of the day on Monday, 12/14
Goals for This Week
- Reflect on your skills and learning as a writer
- Showcase your work in a portfolio
- Catch up on late/missing work to the extent that you want to/are able to
Overview of Tasks
- Using the genre of the resume, create a “writer’s resume” where instead of jobs, you list writing skills or genres you feel proficient in! I’ll write an example for you.
- Finish the last steps of your final mini-project.
- Complete your portfolio! If you haven’t created a site yet, go here.
- Analyze your missing work/grades in Blackboard to determine a plan of action
- Complete any missing assignments/late work
- When you’re finished, share your portfolio with me.
Grading
Writer’s Resume– 2 pts, completion + thoroughness (goes in the “Beginning/End of Semester” part of your grade)
Mini-Project– graded as part of your portfolio
Portfolio— Worth 20% of your final grade
Detailed Instructions
Step 1: Create a Writer’s Resume
On a normal resume, you list your educational qualifications, job experience, and any other experience (for example, volunteering or special skills) that are relevant to the job you’re applying for. The purpose of a regular resume is to show your qualifications in an easy-to-skim format.
For this resume, instead of listing job experience, you’ll list writing experience, from this class and from past classes/other aspects of your life where you do writing. Click here to see an example I made. I used the Comments feature on Word to add additional commentary/annotations to my example, so you may have to download the file to view those. If you can’t see them, let me know and I can send it to you another way!
I formatted mine as a list of genres I have experience writing (and there are many more I could have included, but didn’t). But maybe a list of genres doesn’t feel right to you. Maybe you want to include a list of writing skills, with examples of things you’ve written that used or built those skills. Maybe you want to do something else!
What I’ll be looking for:
- It is formatted/designed like a resume (follows the genre, except about you as a writer instead of you as an employee)
- It is detailed + thorough, stays focused on yourself as a writer
Aside from that, the guidelines are flexible! Mine emphasizes academic writing, but I’m an English teacher! I’ve done a lot of that! Yours doesn’t have to.
Step 2: Finish Your Final Mini-Project
Last week, you should have completed Steps 1-3 of your project. Now, it’s time to take the last step and make your own piece of writing/creation in the genre you chose. Whatever form that takes for you, please include it (or a link to it) in your portfolio!
Reminder: This project is following the SAME STEPS we’ve done for every single unit all semester:
- Read a bunch of examples of a genre
- Ask yourself, “What are the rules/patterns of this genre?”
- Write your own thing within that genre
Step 3: Complete Your Portfolio!
If you haven’t created a site for your portfolio yet, go here.
Make sure you include each required component, or as many as you can/have written. Almost half of the portfolio grade is just based on having all of the things!
WordPress Help Videos
If you have questions on how to use a particular feature of WordPress/how to make certain changes to your portfolio, check out my videos below, or look up instructions on YouTube.
Intro to the WordPress Dashboard
Posts and Pages, Block and Classic Editor
Themes, Customizing, and Home Page Settings
Menus
Uploading/Embedding Files
Privacy Settings/Sharing
How WordPress Is Different On Your Phone
Steps 4 and 5: Analyze Your Missing Work in Blackboard and Complete Late Work
It may not be possible for you to complete all of your missing work. This section is to help you determine how to boost your grade in the most mathematically efficient way possible.
Your final grade is calculated in the following way:
Unit 1 (News Reporting): 15% (30 possible points)
Unit 2 (Humanities Criticism): 15% (30 possible points)
Unit 3 (Natural Science): 20% (30 possible points)
Unit 4 (Social Science): 20% (25 possible points)
Beginning/End of Semester Assignments: 10% (8 possible points)
Portfolio: 20%
I’ve created columns in your Grade Center to show you the points in each of those individual categories. When planning your work, look at these columns to determine which category you’re missing the most points in. This is where you should start when completing your missing assignments.
**The exception is for the assignments I’ve nullified 0s in (see Blackboard announcement from last night). This means your total possible points for a unit may be different than those listed above.**
To find instructions for each activity + supplementary materials, go to the Home Page of this site. On the Home Page, I’ve listed links to each week’s instructions, sorted by Unit.
If you’re not sure which unit to work on, or you’re missing a similar number of points in each one, mathematically, Units 3 and 4 are worth the most, and because Unit 4 has fewer possible points, each point is worth more.
Late work is due December 14, by the end of the day. If you need additional time on a particular assignment, please email me.
Step 6: Share Your Portfolio With Me
How to do this depends on the privacy settings for your portfolio site.
If your site is viewable to the public or viewable to logged in members of the Commons: Just email me the link to your site when you’re ready for me to look at it!
If your site is private to members or admins only: you’ll need to invite me to become a member of your site by going to the Users tab on your Site Dashboard and clicking Add New. My Commons username is oawood, or you can add me via my email address.


