COMPUTERS "The Michigan Daily Computer comp English dept. aims to use word processing Tuesday, March 5, 1985 Page 5 By JERRY MARKON The word processing phenomenon will enhance the English department's curriculum next fall as two sections of English 125 students will get special ac- pss to the Zenith micro-computers recently installed in the Undergraduate Library. The English Composition Board recently created the Composition and ,omputers Committee to research and ;design the project, which is "still in the planning stages," according to Jane ,Monell, student services assistant of English Language and Literature. COMMITTEE member Dick Hor- mston said the committee will survey English TAs before fall term to deter- ,mine their interest, and that the designated sections will then be specially marked in the time schedule. The committee is already training TAs in word processing, he added, at the Micro-Computer Center in the School of Education. Hormston said the project has two primary goals: to introduce students to word processing and to help the English department learn more about the writing process itself. "We're trying to answer a lot of questions," he said. "We want to find ,Trying. to inform students By LEELA FERNANDES In a department as large and diverse 'as Electrical Engineering and Com- puter Science, getting information to students can be difficult and time- consuming. Helping to smooth out the wrinkles in this process is- an organization called The Association of Computer Engineers and Scientists (ACES). FOUNDED ONLY a year-and-a-half ago, the group offers a number of ser- vices enabling students to get better aquainted with the EECS department, said ACES chairman Allen Falcon, a junior computer science major. As part of the effort to increase com- munication between facully and students, ACES provides class and department information via the Michigan Terminal System. Anyone with an MTS account can access the group's newsfile, STGQ: news. In addition, ACES helps match 'students in need of extra help with other students who want to tutor them, Falcon said. GROUP MEMBERS also offer free tutoring sessions on a walk-in basis on ' Mondays and Wednesdays from 11 a.m. to noon and on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 2-3 p.m. at 609 Haven Hall. A feature ACES hopes to impliment in the future would provide students with pertinent background information and special interests of EECS professors. "This would foster more familiarity, especially for someone interested in in- dependent study," Falcon said. On Wednesday, ACES will sponsor a Pre-Computer Science and Engineering Night at the Michigan Unior. For students considering a com- puter science major, the event could be a good opportunity, Falcon said, because a number of EECS professors will talk about the department and its programs. ACES plans to help companies With computer science and computer engineering interviews on campus. "By working on the (recruiting) committee, I'll be able to learn more about inter- views," said group member Diane Feller, a junior computer science major. Right now the only problem facing ACES is how to get more people in- volved in the organization, Falcon said. Meetings are held every other Wed- nesday night. Any computer science or engineering student may attend. Typesetting & out if computers can encourage better writing." IN ANALYZING the problems of freshman writers, Hormston outlined what he called the "think and write model," a process by which young writers produce "short, choppy essays because they can't hold long discourses in their head." "It's characteristic of freshman writers that they don't put any correlations between their thoughts," he continued. "They write in a series of assertions which aren't defined. Meaning is disconnected; the flow of ideas is wrong."~ Word processing can help cure these problems, he said, because "people seem to flow better when they write on a computer." "BECAUSE THE screen is a fluid representation of writing, it will hopefully encourage them to write more fluidly-and perhaps to write out their ideas and then go back and put them in order," he said. Monell added that the English Depar- tment is interested in "students using the computer for major revisions-not just grammar and misspelled words." "The student can manipulate the text much more easily on a computer than with a typewriter," she said. TO ENHANCE the writing process, Monell said she expected students to write rough drafts on the computer, store them on a floppydisc, and wait for the instructor to read them and offer comments before making revisions. Hormston's main fear about the project is that students without typing experience may_ be distracted from the writing process as they concentrate on learning how to operate the computer. To combat this potential problem, he said, somebody from the Composition and Computers Committee will con- Uaily rnoto by LARUL L. FRANCAVILLA Starting next fall, certain sections of English 125 will use these recently-installed computers on the fourth floor of the UGM to complete their coursework. stantly be working with students during the two hours each day-one in the morning and one in the evening - when they will have direct access to the com- puters. ,"WE WANT to make the machines disappear and make the students flow with the words they see on the screen," Hormston said. He described a successful program in the English Department at the Univer- sity of Minnesota where use of word processors "gives students a solid un- derstanding of their own writing process." Colorado State University has advan- ced computers that are programmed to point out grammatical errors such as passive voice, he said, but added that the program isn't truly successful because "students aren't introduced to word processing-they enter in someting already written." THE UNIVERSITY is also watching what happens at Carnegie- Mellon University in Pittsburg where students are now required to bring personnel computers with them to school, he said. Nonetheless, Hormston said he strongly supports the University "making computers available, but let- ting students choose whether they want to use them." The UGLi's new micro-computers will be used for more than just word processing, says David Norden, the library's director. Although the new computers can fun- ction independently of the Michigan Terminal System, the campus com- puter network, hooking them up with MTS will give students full terminals to work on different computer languages, statistical programs, and various scientific programs. Norden said he detects a "Need to provide more computer facilities on campus and greater access to micro- computers." "They fit right in with the other in- formation functions at the UGLi," he said, "and our staff didn't need to be trained in how to operate them." COMPUTER RENTALS We offer a full selection of computers, modems, printers, terminals and hard drives including IBM, COMPAQ and APPLE I products. , Short and long term rates available. Full service and quick replacement of inoperative equipment. Call us today and take advantage of our for example ... NEW LOWRATES! TERMINALS -,$39-month RENT-A-BYTE -Inc. ' ' 749 Airport Blvd. Ann Arbor (Just off State Street near Chi-Chi's) ' (313) 761-BYTE Ann Arbor MONDAY - FRIDAY 9:00 a.m. to 5:0.0 p.m. SATURDAY 10:00a.m. to 2:00p.m. Serving Ann Arbor since 1981 mommmmmmmmmonmmnmmmmmmm MIS Happenings Tuesday Chalk Talk: Basic Use of Tell-A-Graf, 12:10-1 p.m., 1011 NUBS. Wednesday Laboratory: The Zenith Z-150 as an MTS Terminal, 1:30-3 p.m. and 3:30-5 p.m., Z-150Rm., NUBS. Lecture: Introduction to Debugging in Pascal, Part 1, 3:30-5 p.m., 165 Bus. Adm. Thursday ' Chalk Talk: Examples of Tell-A-Graf Plots, 12:10-1 p.m., 1011 NUBS. Lecture: How to Use the Xerox 9700 Page Printer, 3:30-5 p.m., 171 Bus. Adm. Friday Lecture: Introduction to Debugging in Pascal, Part II, 3:30-5 p.m., 165 Bus. Adm. ARE YOU LOST? DO YOU* FEEL OUT OF TOUCH WITH YOUR SCHOOL AND YOUR TOWN? 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