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      • The Last Thesis Proposal Guide Your Students Will Ever Need
      • YOU CAN’T FISH WITHOUT BAIT: Teaching for Sticky Learning — Part 2
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The Last Thesis Proposal Guide Your Students Will Ever Need

Posted on March 3, 2020 by Richard Newton

 Pssss…over here.

Are you thinking about or currently advising a student thesis project? If so, did you give your student a list of what should be included in their thesis proposal?

No student in the history of the world has refused such a list. And even though the list makes advising a whole lot more productive, I bet you can name some profs who have been holding out.

At the request of frustrated students everywhere, I’ve created a little guide for you to revise and share as you deem fit.

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Filed Under: SemClass Tagged With: academic writing, advising students, mentoring, pedagogy, research paper, research question, richard newton, seminary, thesis proposal, thesis statement, writing center, writing process, Writing with a Point Series

Integrating by Parts

Posted on February 11, 2014 by A+ Brooke Lester, Curator

swirls of color looped together

Something there is that doesn’t love a silo. A curriculum is divided into fields are divided into courses are divided into units are divided into assignments. Ever review a student’s final paper for a course and find that, somehow, she didn’t succeed in using the knowledge and skills that she _actually did develop_ throughout the course? That final paper was constructed in a silo. There are a lot of factors from which the silo problem has been constructed and maintained. But, it’s pretty disheartening to imagine our learners going into their vocations and building silos around the challenges they find there…silos with high walls that keep out all the knowledge, intuition, skills, and habits that they’ve poured themselves into developing.

My institution’s response-in-progress to the silo problem is a capstone project to the M.Div program, the “Final Integrative Paper…”

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Filed Under: Curator, SemClass, SemTrends Tagged With: academic writing, assessment, Biblical Studies, capstone, critical thinking, integration, MDiv, project-based learning, seminary, writing

ACE Series Part V: A Call to ACE Critical Reasoning for the Last Time

Posted on August 21, 2013 by Richard Newton

We are at a pedagogical turning point. Once we could impress students with our powers of memorization and recall. But that day is ending. Fast thumbs and fine-tuned algorithms can replicate the same thing.

Sure, you can hold onto the belief that no one lectures quite the way you do. But what will you teach when your school uploads your lectures to iTunes University?

Our task is becoming less about just transmitting content. Whatever our respective domains, we are increasingly called to train students in application, access, and analysis….

 

 

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Filed Under: SemClass Tagged With: academic writing, ACE, ACE Matrix, ACE model, ACE Series, assertion, assertions, citation, commentary, composition, critical, critical thinking, Critical writing, Evaluation, evidence, Humanities, Jonathan Osborne, richard newton, scientific method, Shamini Dias, writing, writing center

ACE Series Part IV: Writing ACE Commentary, or Everything I Need to Know About Arguing I Learned from Billy Madison!

Posted on August 13, 2013 by Richard Newton

My research deals with the scriptures people use to orient their lives. This interest may have begun in adolescence. Much to the chagrin of my youth group directors, my friends and I had a wider canon than the authorized version of any denomination out there.

Our central text was the Adam Sandler film, Billy Madison (dir. Tamra Davis, 1995). To us it was a cult classic to be quoted chapter and verse. This movie made those awkward teenage years some how more bearable. For every situation, there was some line from the film available for application. And for whatever reason, when I think of ACE commentary, this film clip comes to mind….

 

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Filed Under: SemClass Tagged With: academic writing, ACE, ACE Series, Archive, assertion, assertions, Billy Madison, citation, commentary, composition, critical, critical thinking, Critical writing, evidence, library, peer review, richard newton, skepticism, Thomas Jefferson, writing, writing center

ACE Series Part III: Good Evidence Must ACE the BS Test—It’s the Law!

Posted on August 6, 2013 by Richard Newton

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal…

Some of my students think that they are Thomas Jefferson. They will write paragraphs with assertions they hold to be self-evident. And while I laud their desire to write revolutionary words, they must first learn that no one, not even the Founding Fathers of the United States of America, can get away with offering evidence-less assertions.

Mock academic politics all you want, but higher education at least claims the democratic notion of fair criticism. It’s a place where anyone should be able to call BS on an unsupported assertion at any time. And its participants should get the opportunity to challenge a point’s validity and qualify it with amendments—the 13th, 14, 15th, and 19th in Mr. Jefferson’s case….

 

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Filed Under: SemClass Tagged With: academic writing, ACE, ACE Series, Archive, assertion, assertions, citation, commentary, composition, critical, critical thinking, Critical writing, evidence, library, peer review, richard newton, skepticism, Thomas Jefferson, writing, writing center

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