Choose one piece of writing that you want feedback about. Post it in the blog. Comment on three classmates' writing.
Use this format for your feedback:
Monday, October 3, 2016
Genius Hour
Blog Post Instructions:
Read the following information about the Genius Hour Project. Make your first blog post about your project.
The Genius Hour: Autonomy, Mastery, and Purpose
Documenting the Process
Project Pitch Presented _____
- Three-Slide Presentation
- Motivation
- Timeline and resources
- Goal
- Three minutes. Be prepared with an effective/refined script and delivery.
- A three to five sentence typed explanation
- Q & A
Blog (Minimally Six Entries): Due by ________
- blogger.com (share your blog address with me so I can add it to the class page)
- Do not include last names in the blog
- Measurable Goals: Must be part of your first blog
- What are your goals?
- How will you measure your progress/achievement?
- Document your time and your readings, which should encompass at least twenty-five percent of your time
- Include citations from specific sources
- Provide an explanation of how these have informed your project
- Discuss your discoveries and setbacks.
- What have you learned about your project?
- What have you learned about yourself?
- Where do you go from here?
- Other: pictures/graphs/charts, videos, links, etc.
- Establish your voice …
- Comment on three other people’s blogs. Be sure to indicate on your own blog where you left comments.
Video Blog Due by ______
- An additional entry …
- Use Vimeo. Embed in Blogger.
- Two minutes
- What/who has inspired you?
- How have your readings/resources informed your approach?
- Anything else?
Ted Talk Week of ___________
- Four to five minutes
- Visual component
- PPT, Prezi, other?
- Creative and supplemental. You drive the presentation, not the visual.
- Content:
- Inspire through your passion
- Show your product
- Explain your process
- What is your purpose? What should your audience take away from your project?
- Organization: hook, transitions, logical order, effective conclusion
- Delivery: refined, poised and enthusiastic
The Ted Commandments
Dream big. Strive to create the best talk you have ever given. Make the complex plain. Don’t try to dazzle intellectually. Connect with people’s emotions. Make us laugh! Make us cry! Feel free to comment on speakers’ talks. Controversy energizes! Rehearse your talk in front of a trusted friend… for timing, for clarity, for impact.
Show us the real you. Be vulnerable. Don’t flaunt your ego. Don’t boast. No selling from the stage! Don’t read your talk. Notes are fine. End your talk on time.
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