Another day past.
I felt skittish in my Calc I classes today, and awkward. I felt elsewhere, out-of-place, out-of-sync.
MATH 280 made up for it, though. I was definitely at home in Karpen 033 this afternoon.
This afternoon, I started thinking about what I'd like to talk about at a Writing Across the Curriculum conference.
What do I have to say?
What am I qualified to say?
Hey, even if I have to say so myself, I think I'm pretty damned good at teaching math students how to write math...but is that enough? I don't know how hardcore into the scholarship of teaching and learning I'm expected to be in order to "have something to say."
I'd like to talk about my rubric-building exercises: how does one set out to teach math students to teach themselves what to look for most in quantifying quality in math writing? How does one teach them that, given a few ground rules and a little practice, they are as qualified as I am to render an assessment of a proof's goodness?
Good enough?
Hmmmm...there's a kernel of irony here, isn't there?: maybe I've just got to teach myself that I am as qualified as anyone else is to render an assessment on the goodness of my own writing-instruction methods, at least in the context of my own classroom.
Is it that easy, or is that just a bunch of relativistic hooey?
Ah, fugeddaboutit.
I'm going to go rustle up something to eat.
To be continued, for sure.
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