Feedback about my first 2 TESC courses These were both taken July-September 2013.
Leaders in History
Professor Donald Redden
Grade: A (99)
Part 1:
Alrighty, I'm currently doing this course (in Module 3 now) and here is some feedback
There are 2 required books, Certain Trumpets by Garry Wills and Traditional Classics of Leadership (a collection of writings by historical figures) by Wren, Hicks and Price. Modules 1 and 2 are about Certain Trumpets. Modules 3, 4, and 5 are about Traditional Classics. In Module 6, you'll be doing a Final Paper.
The 12-week course consists of 6 2-week Modules. Each module consists of reading (approx. 150 pages) from the assigned book. Then you do a post in the Discussion Forum and respond to at least 2 other posts. I try to keep my posts over 100 words. An average DP length in my class is about 300 words; responses are around 100-150 words. In Module 6 there's no Discussion Forum posting. Every 2 weeks there are 2 papers due—one "Reflection" (250-500 words) and one "Application (500-800 words).
My professor is Donald Redden. He's kind of a slow grader (he hasn't graded any of my discussion posts yet) but he gives really good grades. I had practically no experience writing college level papers before this so I'm thankful I can write papers he likes He's also very involved in the Discussion Forum.
I'm not finding the course hard. To tell the truth, this course has been easier than the Liberal Arts Capstone, which I'm doing at the same time. The hardest part for me is writing about myself! For some reason, I can write fine about others in history but when it comes to "write about how it relates to you" it's harder :p Thank God my papers along those lines have come out good enough to warrant good grades!
Part 2, after finishing the course:
Not much to add to my previous post about this course. This, from what I posted before, is pretty much the workload:
The Reflection papers, where you write on a historical topic, were easier for me. The Application papers were harder because it asked for more personal examples.
In the papers and posts, you're discussing
-any or all of the 16 leaders whose bios are contained in Certain Trumpets, and/or
-the writings collected in Traditional Classics on Leadership, on moral, ideal, and legitimate leadership, followership and challenging authority.
Dr. Redden is a slow but generous grader. He posts a lot on the discussion forums and gives great insights (he's studied this topic a lot) Do make sure your papers are proofread and formatted right!
I got 100s on most every assignment and 99 on the final paper and as a course grade. If you like history, this course is a GREAT option! All reading and writing, learning about leaders from all different time periods and countries.
Liberal Arts Capstone
Professor Steve Ryan
Grade: A (100)
Part 1
Okay...4 weeks into the Capstone now and here are some thoughts
—You'll need to settle on a major question to be answered and develop 3-4 subquestions that relate in some way to the major question.
—Sample projects. PM some people who've done this class and ask to see their completed projects. It'll help SO much to get an idea of what you're aiming for. I've been referring to these projects a lot—like to see what kind of info a paragraph should have or to understand citing better ...
—The required books. Writing the Winning Thesis or Dissertation is the one you'll be using most. Even though it's written for graduate papers and some stuff is different or not applicable, it's pretty helpful in telling you how to write in the format you need to. The other one, Keys for Writers, I've been using like a reference whenever I need help in citing. There are also documents you get access to in the course that give additional info.
—Professors. I have Steve Ryan, and he's fantastic!!! Prompt and generous grader. Easy to reach and encourages emailing if you want to chat. Gives helpful suggestions. Really interested in helping you get a good project done here and gives you a lot of freedom to do it.
—Resources. I took my professor's suggestion and most of my sources for the Literature review were found using Google "advanced search," where I narrowed my searches to find lots of .edu sources. Also, Professor Ryan didn't put that a survey or interview was required, he just said that students enjoyed doing them and found them helpful. After he said that, I communicated with him about possible ways to do that. One thing he said was that you could even post questions on Facebook! I settled on this survey, set it up, and told him about it. He said that he's actually very flexible about this project if he knows you have ideas and are trying them out So, it might help if you email and talk to him about it...that really has been helping me.
—Modules. The 12-week course is divided into 6 2-week modules. Every 2 weeks, you read a few chapters of the Winning Thesis and write a chapter of your Capstone.
Module 1—Introduction
Module 2—Literature Review (gather books & articles about your topic and basically wrote a research paper on it; none of it should be your opinions)
Module 3—Methodology (how you're gathering information and conducting your research)
Part 2, after finishing the course:
Well, I finished the Capstone and got 100 on the final paper and as a course grade, praise God! I got 100s on every module but the Literature Review, on which I got a few points taken off because I'd not alphabetized the resources properly. I don't have much to add to what I put in my last post as far as info on the course and mentor--he (Professor Steve Ryan) was awesome! Here's some more on the last Modules.
Module 3--Methodology. Should basically tell what info you needed, your written sources (titles if you relied on them much) and anything else you did (interviews, surveys...) and how you did it.
Module 4--Results of Study. This is where you write about what your research has said so far. Since my sources were mostly documents, my Prof told me to basically summarize my Chapter 2 (Literature Review). Results of interviews or surveys should go here too--if they were a big part of your research, they should be the main bulk of the chapter. No opinions here either.
Module 5--Summary and Discussion. Finally, opinions!! Just do a recap of the topic, your methodology, and the results of your study on your subquestions. Then discuss!
Module 6--Putting everything together! Revise chapters, proofread. Make a table of contents. Make a bibliography or references page--ask your mentor which. Make an Appendix of interviews or surveys, if applicable. Put everything together and send it off! You really can't go wrong here if you've been fixing/adjusting things according to the mentor's feedback on your chapters and pay attention to including all the necessary info (references, TOC...) and formatting.
And that's it! Get it graded and now you have a research project you can be proud of!
Leaders in History
Professor Donald Redden
Grade: A (99)
Part 1:
Alrighty, I'm currently doing this course (in Module 3 now) and here is some feedback
There are 2 required books, Certain Trumpets by Garry Wills and Traditional Classics of Leadership (a collection of writings by historical figures) by Wren, Hicks and Price. Modules 1 and 2 are about Certain Trumpets. Modules 3, 4, and 5 are about Traditional Classics. In Module 6, you'll be doing a Final Paper.
The 12-week course consists of 6 2-week Modules. Each module consists of reading (approx. 150 pages) from the assigned book. Then you do a post in the Discussion Forum and respond to at least 2 other posts. I try to keep my posts over 100 words. An average DP length in my class is about 300 words; responses are around 100-150 words. In Module 6 there's no Discussion Forum posting. Every 2 weeks there are 2 papers due—one "Reflection" (250-500 words) and one "Application (500-800 words).
My professor is Donald Redden. He's kind of a slow grader (he hasn't graded any of my discussion posts yet) but he gives really good grades. I had practically no experience writing college level papers before this so I'm thankful I can write papers he likes He's also very involved in the Discussion Forum.
I'm not finding the course hard. To tell the truth, this course has been easier than the Liberal Arts Capstone, which I'm doing at the same time. The hardest part for me is writing about myself! For some reason, I can write fine about others in history but when it comes to "write about how it relates to you" it's harder :p Thank God my papers along those lines have come out good enough to warrant good grades!
Part 2, after finishing the course:
Not much to add to my previous post about this course. This, from what I posted before, is pretty much the workload:
Quote:The 12-week course consists of 6 2-week Modules. Each module consists of reading (approx. 150 pages) from the assigned book. Then you do a post in the Discussion Forum and respond to at least 2 other posts. I try to keep my posts over 100 words. An average DP length in my class is about 300 words; responses are around 100-150 words. In Module 6 there's no Discussion Forum posting. Each 2 weeks there are 2 papers due—one "Reflection" (250-500 words) and one "Application (500-800 words).
The Reflection papers, where you write on a historical topic, were easier for me. The Application papers were harder because it asked for more personal examples.
In the papers and posts, you're discussing
-any or all of the 16 leaders whose bios are contained in Certain Trumpets, and/or
-the writings collected in Traditional Classics on Leadership, on moral, ideal, and legitimate leadership, followership and challenging authority.
Dr. Redden is a slow but generous grader. He posts a lot on the discussion forums and gives great insights (he's studied this topic a lot) Do make sure your papers are proofread and formatted right!
I got 100s on most every assignment and 99 on the final paper and as a course grade. If you like history, this course is a GREAT option! All reading and writing, learning about leaders from all different time periods and countries.
Liberal Arts Capstone
Professor Steve Ryan
Grade: A (100)
Part 1
Okay...4 weeks into the Capstone now and here are some thoughts
—You'll need to settle on a major question to be answered and develop 3-4 subquestions that relate in some way to the major question.
—Sample projects. PM some people who've done this class and ask to see their completed projects. It'll help SO much to get an idea of what you're aiming for. I've been referring to these projects a lot—like to see what kind of info a paragraph should have or to understand citing better ...
—The required books. Writing the Winning Thesis or Dissertation is the one you'll be using most. Even though it's written for graduate papers and some stuff is different or not applicable, it's pretty helpful in telling you how to write in the format you need to. The other one, Keys for Writers, I've been using like a reference whenever I need help in citing. There are also documents you get access to in the course that give additional info.
—Professors. I have Steve Ryan, and he's fantastic!!! Prompt and generous grader. Easy to reach and encourages emailing if you want to chat. Gives helpful suggestions. Really interested in helping you get a good project done here and gives you a lot of freedom to do it.
—Resources. I took my professor's suggestion and most of my sources for the Literature review were found using Google "advanced search," where I narrowed my searches to find lots of .edu sources. Also, Professor Ryan didn't put that a survey or interview was required, he just said that students enjoyed doing them and found them helpful. After he said that, I communicated with him about possible ways to do that. One thing he said was that you could even post questions on Facebook! I settled on this survey, set it up, and told him about it. He said that he's actually very flexible about this project if he knows you have ideas and are trying them out So, it might help if you email and talk to him about it...that really has been helping me.
—Modules. The 12-week course is divided into 6 2-week modules. Every 2 weeks, you read a few chapters of the Winning Thesis and write a chapter of your Capstone.
Module 1—Introduction
Module 2—Literature Review (gather books & articles about your topic and basically wrote a research paper on it; none of it should be your opinions)
Module 3—Methodology (how you're gathering information and conducting your research)
Part 2, after finishing the course:
Well, I finished the Capstone and got 100 on the final paper and as a course grade, praise God! I got 100s on every module but the Literature Review, on which I got a few points taken off because I'd not alphabetized the resources properly. I don't have much to add to what I put in my last post as far as info on the course and mentor--he (Professor Steve Ryan) was awesome! Here's some more on the last Modules.
Module 3--Methodology. Should basically tell what info you needed, your written sources (titles if you relied on them much) and anything else you did (interviews, surveys...) and how you did it.
Module 4--Results of Study. This is where you write about what your research has said so far. Since my sources were mostly documents, my Prof told me to basically summarize my Chapter 2 (Literature Review). Results of interviews or surveys should go here too--if they were a big part of your research, they should be the main bulk of the chapter. No opinions here either.
Module 5--Summary and Discussion. Finally, opinions!! Just do a recap of the topic, your methodology, and the results of your study on your subquestions. Then discuss!
Module 6--Putting everything together! Revise chapters, proofread. Make a table of contents. Make a bibliography or references page--ask your mentor which. Make an Appendix of interviews or surveys, if applicable. Put everything together and send it off! You really can't go wrong here if you've been fixing/adjusting things according to the mentor's feedback on your chapters and pay attention to including all the necessary info (references, TOC...) and formatting.
And that's it! Get it graded and now you have a research project you can be proud of!
BA History 2014 - TESC
The Lord is my shepherd. Psalm 23
"I'm going on an adventure!' ~AUJ
"It is our fight." ~DoS
"I am not alone." ~BotFA
"All we have to decide is what to do with the time that's given to us." ~FotR
"There is still hope." ~TTT
"Courage..." "This day, we fight!" ~RotK
CLEP: A&I Lit 74 ~ Am Lit 73 ~ Eng Lit 72 ~ Humanities 75 ~ College Math 77 ~ Western Civ I 63 ~ Western Civ II 69 ~ Natural Sci 64 ~ US History I 76 ~ US History II 69 ~ Sociology 68 ~ Am Gov 69 ~ Social Sci & Hist 71 ~ College Comp 61 ~ Marketing 70 ~ Management 66 ~ Psychology 67
DSST: Supervision 453 ~ Tech Writing 61 ~ Computing 427 ~ Middle East 65 ~ Soviet Union 65 ~ Vietnam War 74 ~[COLOR="#0099cc"] Civil War 68
[/COLOR]Other: College+ Biblical Social Justice B ~ ECE World Conflicts Since 1900 A
TESC courses: Capstone A ~ Leaders in History A ~ Photography 101 A- ~ Games People Play A ~ International Relations A- ~ Mass Communications I A
$5 off IC - 59690
My hair jewelry business
The Lord is my shepherd. Psalm 23
"I'm going on an adventure!' ~AUJ
"It is our fight." ~DoS
"I am not alone." ~BotFA
"All we have to decide is what to do with the time that's given to us." ~FotR
"There is still hope." ~TTT
"Courage..." "This day, we fight!" ~RotK
CLEP: A&I Lit 74 ~ Am Lit 73 ~ Eng Lit 72 ~ Humanities 75 ~ College Math 77 ~ Western Civ I 63 ~ Western Civ II 69 ~ Natural Sci 64 ~ US History I 76 ~ US History II 69 ~ Sociology 68 ~ Am Gov 69 ~ Social Sci & Hist 71 ~ College Comp 61 ~ Marketing 70 ~ Management 66 ~ Psychology 67
DSST: Supervision 453 ~ Tech Writing 61 ~ Computing 427 ~ Middle East 65 ~ Soviet Union 65 ~ Vietnam War 74 ~[COLOR="#0099cc"] Civil War 68
[/COLOR]Other: College+ Biblical Social Justice B ~ ECE World Conflicts Since 1900 A
TESC courses: Capstone A ~ Leaders in History A ~ Photography 101 A- ~ Games People Play A ~ International Relations A- ~ Mass Communications I A
$5 off IC - 59690
My hair jewelry business