Teaching Resources

Resources for students and teachers of writing and literature.


Athletes writing

One of the dream classes that I’ve always wanted to teach is a class for student-athletes about identity writing: writing yourself as an athlete. In the past, I’d planned to look at all of the genres that athletes might go on to write: box scores, autobiographies, text interview replies, letters, etc. And of course over the years, I’ve added blog posts, Twitters, and Facebook profiles to that list.

Today I find two new sources for my planning pleasure: Jockipedia and TheJockosphere.

Jockipedia is a site where athletes can make their own profiles and link to all of their own social media, including their personal web site, their blog, their Twitter feed, Facebook and MySpace pages, video and photo sites, and even their foundation or charity’s web site. There’s a brief bio of the player and even some stats on the site. The bio links out to the original Wikipedia article.

TheJockosphere is a collection of reviews of athlete’s blog posts. The editors of the site pick interesting posts and condense them, linking the original blog from the post. This is a great way to surf and find fantastic athlete-writers. Their tag line is: “TheJockosphere - Because how many blogs can you read on your own?”

Please please help me find a department that wants this class taught!

Research Channel

Today’s Wired Campus newsletter from the Chronicle of Higher Education sent a link to Research1, a new hub-based website that allows researchers to share their work in a topic-related environment.  But that link, largely still beta and favoring quantitative studies, led me to their base website, The Research Channel, which looks like a great place to find and discuss breaking results.

F’r'instance, if you click the Arts and Humanities link, you’ll find a 28-minute video called, “Are Journalists Ethically Challenged? Plagiarism and Fabrication” featuring Thomas Kunkel, a dean of Phillip Merrill College of Journalism at U Maryland, and Rem Reider, an editor of American Journalism Review, that looks fab.

Citation styles megalist at Zotero


Zotero Style Repository

Updating my Firefox add-on Zotero this morning, I found a link in the new Preferences pane to a list of citation style installs for the application.

But the coolest thing is that you don’t have to have the app installed to see the citation style formats. And I’ve never seen such an amazing list: 15 “public styles” and 65 journal-specific styles. I mean, who knew that the Water Research Journal had its own style system? (Well, outside of water research studies, that is.)

JournalSeek

This site searches by journal titles or has a directory of disciplinary categories listed. It might help to start with a journal title or to check titles that you find useful, as College Composition and Communication is listed in the Linguistics: Misc category; Rhetoric Review is in both Humanities and Philosophy; Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication is in Social Sciences: Communication category.

But each linked title then links to current website (but be wary: it says that Karios does not have a website! nor apparently a category designation on the Seek site) and organizational affiliation.  Also says that full-text articles are available online when you have to have the subscription to see them, so work cautiously.

Genamics JournalSeek - A Searchable Database of Online Scholarly Journals

MerckMedicus

From RefDesk’s Site of the Day: a free medical resources site. Articles, email alerts, information. This is the site that doctors use; consequently, access to some materials is restricted. But you can’t beat it for finding article citation info about particular topics.

MerckMedicus
http://www.merckmedicus.com/pp/us/hcp/hcp_home.jsp

Welcome to MerckMedicus, one of the most innovative and comprehensive medical resources on the Internet. This advertising-free medical portal for today’s healthcare professional combines breaking medical news, a wide variety of online learning resources, cutting-edge diagnostic tools, and even the patient’s perspective on the world of medicine.

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