Finding some texts, some housekeeping
In order to begin exploring the ways in which written language
works, we're going to need some examples to consider. In order to
make it clear that we can use a wide range of real examples as
objects of study, I'm going to do what I'll do fairly regularly in
this course: invite you to find some examples, and choose one, or
a few, to focus our attention on. To begin with, I want to attend
to a fairly common kind of language, one that allows us to look at
a number of different ways language is constructed. For this, a
really useful source is reporting of current events, especially
current events that are controversial (non-controversial ones,
like traffic accidents and announcements of public policies, will
work as well for this, but usually most people find them much less
interesting).
So, here's what you need to do between now and class time Tuesday.
Go to any of the following sources:
Any newspaper found in the library's "Press Display - Newspapers from Around the World" page (you can get there by clicking on www.lib.unb.ca, then Journals & Newspapers, and then Newspaper Packages)
Select one item that you find of interest, and which reports on
or deals with an issue or event about which people you know might
have different opinions. The only rule is that anything you bring
back should should be substantial -- more than a couple of
paragraphs -- but not more than a couple of pages. And, most
important, it needs to be from a professionally edited
publication, not simply a Web posting by an individual. Make sure
it's at least a couple of hundred words long (yes, count them to
be sure; less than that will give us too little to work with).
Print it out (you can print using any of the University's public
printers: if you have a problem, ask the folks at the Help Desk.
Make sure your name's at the top, and make sure you know exactly
where it comes from -- that is, where to find it again. Bring it
to class Tuesday afternoon.
Keeping house
Moodle profile: By the end of this week, everybody's profile in Moodle should have their STU address (in the form hijkl@stu.ca) rather than an off-campus one. You can change this by clicking, from the main Moodle page, "Settings," and then "My profile settings," and then "Edit profile." Check yours; if your profile has an off-campus email address, change it. Do this by Sunday night. (While you're at it, make sure everything else in the profile is as you want it.)
Email handling: You need to make sure you can
receive and send email from your STU address. This is because the
email list for this course will have only STU addresses on it, and
in order to post to it you'll need to be identified as hijkl@stu.ca
(with your ID, of course), since the list is set up to handle mail
only from those addresses. The staff in the lab in Dunn Hall can
help with this if it's a problem.