I read pages 50 to 60 of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. I decided to make the reading more interesting by doing some heavy annotating of the text.
I found a utube post from the Writing Centre at Eastern Washington University when I went to search for strategies on how to annotate the text in my TRC: Final Report. I am going to try some of these strategies and later tell you how this worked out for me this week.
And I also looked at the way the CCDS teaches people to annotate with symbols which I put into my notebook. If I can get two or three of these into my text this week, I will call that a big success.
I have to do this to have some fun because reading the text is difficult from a "making me heavy hearted" point of view.
Next week: pages 60 to 70.
Arta
I found a utube post from the Writing Centre at Eastern Washington University when I went to search for strategies on how to annotate the text in my TRC: Final Report. I am going to try some of these strategies and later tell you how this worked out for me this week.
And I also looked at the way the CCDS teaches people to annotate with symbols which I put into my notebook. If I can get two or three of these into my text this week, I will call that a big success.
I have to do this to have some fun because reading the text is difficult from a "making me heavy hearted" point of view.
Next week: pages 60 to 70.
Arta
What time of the day are you doing your reading. I read pages 50-63 to wind down before bed ... but now my heart is racing and I may need to go for a run.
ReplyDeleteI definitely do HOT read before bedtime. If I am falling asleep during the day, then I just pick up a volume and read a few paragraphs and I am so mad that the thought of sleep escapes me.
ReplyDelete