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Remote Ready Biology Learning Activities has 50 remote-ready activities, which work for either your classroom or remote teaching.
Yesterday in my historical
For cross-listed courses, I remember one of my friends, an anthro major, saying that the discussion in her anthro course was stunted because most people didn't 'think like anthropologists.' I have the same problem in my linguistics courses. There is a sacrifice made when people who have not been trained in a certain way of thinking take an upper level class in that field. But there are always problems with becoming mired in said way of thinking. My syntax prof requires those that have taken multiple ling courses to bite their tongues when we are discussing something we've already learned. Linguistics is constantly being overturned and revised. I don't know how to end this so I'll just stop.
I don't know how I feel about Anne placing this paper so late in the syllabus. Could it be that we've been working all semester towards this pinnacle of thought? (I'm not trying to be sarcastic.)
Even as we discuss it here on the forum, we exchange Anne's first name for her last. "Dalke and McCormack say this..." I was intrigued by the language Anne and McCormack used: it was so detached, so unemotive. I agree with Janet's assessment of the scientific quality of the essay, but do not share the discomfort of being an object of study. I also agree with Sonal that the personal is lacking. If Anne hadn't established her personal locale somewhat in class, I would have no concept of who was writing the paper or why.