Please read this announcement carefully. Unless linked here, please ignore all other information dated before this post.
First things first,
Logistics
Assignments
Please see the Course Assignments wiki page for an overview. Basically, you will have one due date for all assignments each week: End of the day Tuesday (midnight in your timezone). Generally, creative exercises and work will be submitted on the wiki; critiques and reflections will be posted to your individual blogs.
Small Groups
Each week, you will also be expected to critique two peers’ work, and they yours. This will be your small group for the week (groups are listed on the course assignments page and consist of three people). After you submit your creative work on Tues, you will have the next week to critique and comment on your small group’s work at the same time you are continuing to write your own work. Each small group is responsible before the end of the week (end of the day Tues) for meeting in real time either via chat, Skype, or conference call, at a time that works for all three persons. We are all in the pacific, central, or eastern time zones.
Small groups will discuss each other’s feedback and discussion questions/topics for the week.
Logic of course structure
I understand that some of you might think it a bit silly to have this course blog in addition to the course wiki pages. I think the logic behind a blog for each of us is this: Since we do not meet physically in person, the blogs are our personas online. I am asserting myself via this blog, just as I would assert myself in a physical learning space. This blog is my identity online; please consider your own blogs in the same way. In future iterations of this course, we hope to have a more sophisticated and stream-lined way of accomplishing things, so we are open to any and all ideas for improvement!
All blogs are automatically aggregated via OCN the Wire, so you can read your peers’ posts in one place. If you have not created a blog and posted your introduction yet, please comment on this post with your P2PU blog address and I will have you added to the wire.
In that light, the course wiki pages function just like a course syllabus and outline would for physically present courses. I will refer to them, but will post here about changes and updates, as nothing on the Internet (or physically present courses either, for that matter) is ever set in stone!
Now, for week one’s announcements and assignments!
Week 1: Laying the Groundwork for your “Take Away” Narrative
Welcome to day one and week one of Open Creative Nonfiction! Course announcements will always be made on Wednesday! giving you the week and the weekend to write. Things you should already have done:
You should have already been invited to create a course blog. Please do not create your own blog, but wait for the invite from the site administrator so that your blog address is something like http://blogs.p2pu.org/NAME. Once you have a blog, you should have posted a short introduction about yourself, what you do, where you’re from, why you’re taking this course, a picture of your pet goldfish, etc. Then you should have commented on my first blog post with a url to your blog. All blog posts aggregated at OCN THE WIRE, linked at the right of this blog under “Links”. You should also have subscribed to the course blog to receive any announcements the instant they are posted.
This week, you will be laying the groundwork for your “Take Away” Narrative. Please see Week 1 on the wiki for explanation, resources, and further instructions.
Specific Assignments (due midnight Tues 9/15):
1. Watch the three introductory videos on the wiki. (They are embedded via YouTube on the Week 1 page.) Write a response on your blog.
2. Write and submit your six page narrative (double-spaced) to the assignments page, where indicated. Don’t forget to include your photo of the place you chose inside the document. You can get as creative as you want!
- Please see my Terms of Use post to see how to preface your creative works.
- If you can, I suggest using an Open Office format so that others with different word processors can easily edit and comment directly on your manuscript. Future critiques will require a one page response to the work and in-line edits, so we want to make it easy as possible for different word processor formats to interact with each other. However, I understand prefaces for different processors, so as long as we can communicate with each other, use the word processor, style, and font that you think aids your creative process best.
3. Read the discussion questions. This week, there are no small groups, but you are free to muse at will on your blog and comment on others.
That’s all for this week. Remember, choose the place you will visit this week well, as you will have to revisit it for the next six weeks! Please comment on this post with any questions you have.