My letter to you
December 18, 2015
Professor Kirsten Ogden
1570 E Colorado Blvd,
Pasadena, CA 91106
Dear Professor Ogden:
I just wanted to thank you for giving me the opportunity to finish this project in time before grades were due. And also a big thank you for the effort you have put into teaching us. It has been a rough first semester and I wasn't planning on finishing in time, but I at least got a chance, thanks to you.
One of the many things I have learned from this class from you and my other classmates is to manage and utilize my time wisely and not spend to much time overthinking my assignments. Although it has been tough I have noticed that the less stress I put on myself the better the result is for my output in work. I have also noticed that although there was a lot of reading and annotation for the texts, they taught me a lot and were never to difficult to understand once I got through them.
This class is tedious and does involve hands on effort, so that is why I am more prepared now than ever for next semester and what is to come. I look forward to the group works and readings, since those were my favorites of the year. One of the first texts that we read that I truly fell in love with was Gloria Anzaldua's "How to Tame a Wild Tongue" it introduced me to abstract feminist writing that opened my eyes. It showed me that not all writing has to be proper and clean cut, it can be weird, and strung together like a collage.
Once more, thank you for this semester, I can't wait until the next one.
Sincerely,
Daisy Ojeda
STACC English 100 TR Student
Professor Kirsten Ogden
1570 E Colorado Blvd,
Pasadena, CA 91106
Dear Professor Ogden:
I just wanted to thank you for giving me the opportunity to finish this project in time before grades were due. And also a big thank you for the effort you have put into teaching us. It has been a rough first semester and I wasn't planning on finishing in time, but I at least got a chance, thanks to you.
One of the many things I have learned from this class from you and my other classmates is to manage and utilize my time wisely and not spend to much time overthinking my assignments. Although it has been tough I have noticed that the less stress I put on myself the better the result is for my output in work. I have also noticed that although there was a lot of reading and annotation for the texts, they taught me a lot and were never to difficult to understand once I got through them.
This class is tedious and does involve hands on effort, so that is why I am more prepared now than ever for next semester and what is to come. I look forward to the group works and readings, since those were my favorites of the year. One of the first texts that we read that I truly fell in love with was Gloria Anzaldua's "How to Tame a Wild Tongue" it introduced me to abstract feminist writing that opened my eyes. It showed me that not all writing has to be proper and clean cut, it can be weird, and strung together like a collage.
Once more, thank you for this semester, I can't wait until the next one.
Sincerely,
Daisy Ojeda
STACC English 100 TR Student