User talk:Daniel Wascoe

 Hello and Welcome to Wikiversity Daniel Wascoe! You can contact us with questions at the colloquium or me personally when you need help. Please remember to sign and date your finished comments when participating in discussions. The signature icon above the edit window makes it simple. All users are expected to abide by our Privacy, Civility, and the Terms of Use policies while at Wikiversity.

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You do not need to be an educator to edit. You only need to be bold to contribute and to experiment with the sandbox or your userpage. See you around Wikiversity! --Joey Cross (discuss • contribs) 15:09, 27 August 2020 (UTC)

How do I do a regular edit of the discussion tab instead of a source edit. All I have is a source edit that I can do.
 * Sorry, I somehow missed this! When editing the Discuss tab, you can only do a source edit. I'm not sure the exact reason that Wikiversity has it this way, but I think it is to make a clear distinction between main (Resource) pages and talk/discuss pages. -Joey Cross (discuss • contribs) 00:28, 20 October 2020 (UTC)

Confucius feedback
-Joey Cross (discuss • contribs) 00:41, 20 October 2020 (UTC)
 * Did you get the definition "a man of talent and virtue" from a dictionary? Can you cite?
 * Could you make some connections between your discussion of the idea of being a gentleman in the USA with Confucius? Is there something political or cultural about it? Maybe some specific examples would be helpful.
 * I like your example about "recognizing the gentleman"! So, are you saying that it might be an out of date concept? That there is something inherently old fashioned about it? Would Confucius agree? Could you think about it in terms of class (as in, what kind of people say "gentleman"?) This is especially interesting from a Southern perspective.
 * I like your commentary on the different quotations you give! Strive to integrate your insights into what Confucius is saying into your definition of the concept. Be able to connect parts of that definition to different analects (you can parenthetically cite them by number).