Suggestions for Using Journals in
our Foundations Class
What is a Journal?
A place to practice personal expressive writing; an individual record of educational experience; a writing workshop; a technique to reflect upon experience to give it deeper meaning.
Diary-------------------------------Journal -----------------------Class Notebook
(“I”-subjective)
(“I/it”)
(“it”-subjective)
What should I write?
--personal reactions to College 101 readings (one required each week), class, writings, students, teachers,
UVM
--informal notes, jottings, clippings, scraps of information
--explorations of ideas, theories, concepts, problems, paper topics
--reviews of articles, movies, books, CD’s, DVD’s
--descriptions of events, places, people, objects
--records of your thought, feelings, moods, experiences
--whatever you want to explore or remember
What shouldn't I write?
When should I write?
--at least two times a week
--early in the morning, late at night before bedtime
--when you have problems to solve, decisions to make, the need from clarity
out of confusion
--when you need to practice or try something out
How should I write?
--however you feel like it, but legibly
--don’t worry about formal language conventions
--take risks and explore your own voice
--freely, expressively, openly
How do you measure Quality in Journals?
TA’s will review your journal, looking for:
1. Language Features: personal, conversational, informal, emotional,
experimental, candid.
2. Cognitive Activity: observation, speculation, confirmation, doubt,
questioning, self-awareness, connection, digression, dialogue, information,
revision, problem posing and solving.
3. Formal Features: frequency of entries, length of entries, self-sponsored
entries, chronology.