English 251 Portfolio Assessment

Instructor Bryan Fry

Requirements

The portfolio must include at least 10 pages of revised work from this semester. These pages should include writing from at least two genres. You may use any work from daily journal entries, writing prompts, or workshops.

In addition to these 10 pages, you will include a 6-8 page cover letter that reflects on your writing and development as a whole (see the assignment for the cover letter on the following page).

Place your entire portfolio in a folder with your name, section, and term on the front and hand it into Avery 451 on Wednesday, May 4th by 5:00.

Assembling Your Portfolio

The portfolio should present a selection of work that demonstrates your progress and represents your best writing from this term. Just as architects select their best designs or photographers select their best photographs to put into a portfolio to show a potential employer, so, too, should you assemble your best writing to demonstrate what you have learned and accomplished during the term. You might consider three general guidelines as you review your writing and select work for your portfolio presentation.

·  Variety: Choose work that exhibits your versatility—your ability to write effectively in different genres.

·  Course readings: Include work that showcases your application of the reading assignments.

·  Personal investment: Consider which pieces of writing best reflect your personal investment and interest. Which pieces are you proudest of? Which were the most challenging or satisfying to write? Which pieces did you invest an enormous amount of time revising?

Grade

The Portfolio is worth 30% of your entire grade.


English 251 Cover Letter

Instructor Bryan Fry

The 6-8 page cover letter is perhaps the most important part of the portfolio. In the cover letter, you reflect on your writing and development as a whole. Most importantly, it is a place for you to present what you are accomplishing in the Portfolio; your cover letter is where you make your claims, and the Portfolio is where I look for the evidence. In other words, your cover letter is a road map that tells me where to look in your Portfolio for your comprehension of voice, style, and overall craft of at least two genres. Therefore, if you write about diction in poetry, you will want to ensure that you have worked on diction in each poem included in your portfolio. The object here is not to promote your writing as perfect (especially since few writers, even professional writers, ever declare their writing to be “finished’), but to recognize that, as writers, we all have areas which are strong and areas which we continue to work on.

There is no standard format for a portfolio cover letter, but you should include your name, class, and the date. You will be expected to discuss the following in 6-8 pages.

·  A description of yourself as a writer of craft and your development over the semester—what did you learn about yourself? What are your strong areas? What are your weak areas?

·  Address your improvement as a writer based on what you have read this semester. You should incorporate passages from your reading assignments as well as passages from your own writing.

·  You’ll need to consider the following reading assignments when revising the work in your portfolio:

“Voice and Style” in PC,

“The Particular Challenges of Creative Nonfiction” in TS,

“The Basics of Good Writing in any Form” in TS

“Play it Again Sam, Revision” in WF.

You may also draw on any other readings from this semester.

·  Address your comprehension of craft in at least four of the following areas (two for each genre):

Poetry: Subject Matter, Diction, Point of View, Syntax and Grammar, Form, Imagery

Nonfiction: Cueing, Scene, Specificity and Detail, Developing Character, Dialogue,

Image and Metaphor, Rhythm of Sentences, Diction

Fiction: Significant Detail, Dialogue, Character Presentation, Place and Atmosphere,

Point of View, Image and Metaphor, Sentence Variation, Diction

·  Address what you will continue to work on as a writer in the future.

Be sure to incorporate passages from your own writing in every paragraph following the introduction of your letter. You should also make sure to write using academic conventions. Though the letter is more informal, you are still expected to use complete sentences and follow basic academic conventions. Telling me that you learned the value of craft when you are misspelling words and writing in non-rhetorical fragments is not necessarily going to impress me!

Extra Credit:

This assignment is a variation from the one found on page 394 of your textbook.

Do a word count for one of your essays or stories. Suppose it has been accepted for publication, but the magazine has one condition: You must cut it by 10 percent. Figure out your word count goal and work toward it. Be both aggressive and picky. Cut any expendable scenes or paragraphs, but also wring out every extraneous word and phrase. Cut beyond the 10 percent if it feels right to do so. Include both drafts in your portfolio—place the word count in the upper right hand corner of each draft. Discuss this process somewhere in your cover letter.