Americans with Disabilities Act

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Keith G. Page

English 1301

Telephone: 281 641 7226

Conferences by appointment

Adjunct Instructor of English

Fall 2012

Email: keith.g.page@lonestar.edu

Office: KHS 2309

Department Chair: Professor Cindy Baker PAC 119 281 312 1484

Course description:

ENGL 1301 Composition I

The course offers an intensive study of and practice in writing processes, from invention and researching to drafting, revising, and editing, both individually and collaboratively.

There will be an emphasis on effective rhetorical choices, including audience, purpose, arrangement, and style. Focus on writing the academic essay as a vehicle for learning, communicating, and critical analysis.

Learning Outcomes:

Upon successful completion of this course, students will:

1. Demonstrate knowledge of individual and collaborative writing processes.

2. Develop ideas with appropriate support and attribution following standard style guidelines in documenting sources.

3. Write in a style appropriate to audience and purpose.

4. Read, reflect, and respond critically to a variety of texts.

5. Use Edited American English in academic essays.

Prerequisite:

Placement by testing or completion of English 0307 or 0326 and English 0305 or 0316.

Success in English III and approval of counselor.

Text:

The Language of Composition: Reading, Writing, Rhetoric

Everything’s an Argument

Sentence Composing in College

Vocabulary Workshop: Level H

Semester Grades:

Explain how much each assignment/grade weighs - also add this information (required):

Grading Scale: 90 - 100 earns an A; 80 - 89 earns a B; 70 - 79 earns a C; 60 - 69 earns a

D; 0 - 59 earns an F

Attendance and participation:

Attendance

Students should be present and on time for all class meetings. Attendance will be taken at the beginning of class. Class attendance is not optional; you should come prepared to discuss the work(s) under study. I do not distinguish between excused and unexcused absences. If you do miss a class, work assigned during your absence and due the next class meeting is due for you as well.

Upon missing six (6) classes, you should drop the course. If you have more than six absences and you do not drop the class by the withdrawal deadline of November 8th, one letter grade will be deducted from your overall semester average for each class missed beyond three .

Tardy Policy

Students who are late to class more than three times will receive a zero for the participation grade.

Drop (Withdrawal) Policy

If you choose to drop this course for any reason, you must fill out all the official paperwork before Thursday, November 8 th to avoid receiving an F on your transcript.

Late and Make-up Work

A paper is late if it has not been successfully uploaded to the online class prior to the start of class on the day it is due. I will accept only one (1) short essay late;

however, there will be a 10-point deduction . The last opportunity to submit a late essay will be one class meeting after the original due date. This policy only applies to the short essays. No late research papers will be accepted.

Although we will have only one test, it is my general policy that tests may rarely be made up. If you do miss the test, you must contact me that day. If I do allow a make-up test, there will be ten points deducted from the test grade.

 There will be no make-ups for missed quizzes. I will, however, drop the lowest quiz grade at the end of the semester. Any student who arrives after the quiz has begun will not be allowed to take the quiz and will, consequently, receive a zero.

Academic Integrity Policy

The Lone Star College System is committed to a high standard of academic integrity. In becoming a part of the academic community, students are responsible for honesty and independent effort. Failure to uphold these standards includes, but is not limited to, the following: plagiarizing written work or projects, cheating on assessments or assignments, and collusion on assessments or assignments.

Cheating includes looking at or copying from another student's work, communicating or receiving answers during an assessment, having another person take an assessment or complete an assignment, and using unauthorized notes, texts, or other source material to complete an assignment.

Plagiarism is the act of presenting another person’s work (including words and ideas) as if they were your own. When using another person’s words or ideas, you must cite the source to give appropriate credit.

Collusion is inappropriately collaborating on assignments that are to be completed independently.

Consequence for Violating the Academic Integrity Policy in This Class :

When there is clear evidence of cheating, plagiarism, and/or collusion, the student will earn an automatic F in the course.

Note : Due to the rise in plagiarism cases, be advised that the college subscribes to an anti-plagiarism site called www.turnitin.com

to which all assigned written work will be submitted.

Class Participation

Class participation is one of the means by which you will learn how to improve your thinking, reading, and writing skills. Be aware that you will be expected to share your writing with others in peer review sessions. Part of becoming a good writer and critical thinker is learning to appreciate the ideas and criticisms of others. * Please respect the diverse cross section of opinions and perspectives in this class.

Class Behavior

Misbehavior should not present a problem in a college course. However, if a student disrupts the class, he or she will be asked to leave the classroom. A notice of this action will be sent to the English department chair and/or the Dean of Arts and Humanities. If the student disrupts the class a second time, he or she will be dropped from the course.

Inappropriate behavior includes (but is not limited to): extraneous conversation, texting, sleeping, reading another text, lack of participation, and disrespectful or negative comments. **Please turn OFF and put away all electronic devices prior to class.

Problem Solving

I encourage you to make an appointment to see me if you wish to discuss issues associated with this class and/or your performance. Please discuss concerns with me while we still have options. I tend to be more open-minded and generous when these are

“situations” and less so when students leave matters until they reach the crisis point. If you need an alternate contact, the Arts and Humanities Dean is Jim Stubbs, and he can be reached via the division coordinator at (281) 312-1404.

Americans with Disabilities Act

LSCS is dedicated to providing the least restrictive learning environment for all students.

The college system promotes equity in academic access through the implementation of reasonable accommodations as required by The Vocational Rehabilitation Act of 1973,

Title V, Section 540 and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) which will enable students with disabilities to participate in and benefit from all post-secondary educational programs and activities. (Lone Star College System Catalog)

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission

Lone Star College System is committed to the principle of equal opportunity in education and employment. The system does not discriminate against individuals on the basis of race, color, sex, religion, disability, age, veteran status, nationality or ethnicity in the administration of its educational policies, admission policies, employment policies, scholarship and loan programs, and other system or college administered programs and activities.

Safety Statement

Lone Star College System (LSCS) is committed to maintaining the safety of the students, faculty, staff, and guests while visiting any of our campuses. See http://www.lonestar.edu/oem for details. Register at http://www.lonestar.edu/12803.htm

to receive emergency notifications. In the event of an emergency contact LSCS Police at

(281) 290-5911 or X5911

Course Work: Syllabus will be updated weekly

WEEK ONE

Monday, August 27 th : Introduction to class and syllabus; issue class texts; student introductions; an introduction to rhetoric. READ: pp. 1-34 for Wednesday’s class

Tuesday, August 28 th : Diagnostic grammar test

Wednesday, August 29 th : Writing workshop; diagnostic writing assignment. READ:

Friday, August 31 st : pp. 35-59 for Friday’s class

Close Reading: The Art and Craft of Analysis

WEEK TWO

Tuesday, September 4 th : Return Einstein writing assignment (pp.9-10 Language of

Composition

). Review “The Story of an Hour” writing assignment (handout). Present rhetorical analysis of Republican convention speeches .

Wednesday, September 5 th : Synthesizing Sources: Entering the Conversation (pp. 61-68

Language of Composition ).

Complete presentation of RNC speeches; analyze the rhetorical strategies in Mrs. Obama's DNC speech http://www.npr.org

Meet with counselors in LGI 4212

Friday, September 7 th : Analysis of Democratic National Convention speeches; Chapter

1: Everything Is an Argument ; exploring visual texts.

Assignment: Read pp. 66-68 in The Language of Composition and answer questions 1-7 on p.68

Homework: Study glossary of 20 selected tropes and schemes on pp. 58-59 in The

Language of Composition.

Quiz on Tuesday; read chapter 3 in the Language of

Composition . Test on Wednesday

WEEK THREE

Monday, September 10 th , 2012

Review Chapter 3 of The Language of Composition

Tuesday, September 11 th , 2012

Formative grade: quiz over glossary of terms; Chapter 1-3 test review

Wednesday, September 12 th , 2012

Summative grade: Test over Chapters 1-3 of The Language of Composition and material covered in analysis of RNC and DNC conventions

Friday, September 14 th , 2012

Read "I Know Why the Caged Bird Cannot Read" on pp. 89-99; Answer attached questions: Questions

WEEK FOUR

Monday, September 17 th , 2012

Read “The Campus Crusade for Guys”: pp. 923-929 in Everything’s an Argument.

Answer questions 1-5 on pp. 929-930

Tuesday, September 18 th , 2012

Fallacies in Argument: pp. 491-512 in Everything's an Argument; Study appeals for

Friday's quiz ; Fallacies of Argument.docx

; Read today's David Brooks' New York Times

Opinion page: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/18/opinion/brooks-thurston-howellromney.html

Wednesday, September 19 th , 2012

Complete Fallacies of Argument review; discuss rhetorical strategies in Brooks’s article:

Brooks Romney .docx

; Assign rhetorical analysis paper: Rhetorical Analysis Speech

Paper.docx

Friday, September 21st, 2012

Fallacies of Argument quiz ; Unit 1 vocabulary (quiz on Tuesday); modes of writing:

Patterns of Development

WEEK FIVE

Monday, September 24th, 2012

Return Fallacies of Argument quiz; The Language of Composition pp. 52-77: Analysis rhetorical strategies in JFK's 1961inaugural address:

http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/languageofcomp ; Chapter 5 of Everything's an

Argument pp. 102-115: Composing a Rhetorical Analysis; Begin grammar unit: Chapter

3 of The Little Brown Handbook ; HOMEWORK: Exercises 12.4 and 12.5 on pp. 241.

Tuesday, September 25th, 2012

Unit 1 vocabulary quiz; Grammar unit: Sentence grammar; Chapter 3 test on October

3rd; organizing the rhetorical analysis paper: Rough draft due for peer edit tomorrow.

Wednesday, September 26th, 2012

Return Unit 1 vocabulary quiz; Peer edit rhetorical analysis essay; Grammar: The

Transitive Vampire: A Handbook of Grammar for the Innocent, the Eager, and the

Doomed; Strunk & White's Elements of Style

Friday, September 28th, 2012

I am attending a funeral today. Ms. Townsend will substitute for me. Turn in your rhetorical analysis paper to Ms. Townsend. There will be a grammar activity for you to complete and turn in to Ms. Townsend. Description paper instructions: Descriptive Essay

WEEK SIX

Monday, October 1st, 2012

Unit 2 vocabulary study; Review answers to grammar packet

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2012

Unit 2 vocabulary quiz; Grammar study

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2012

Grammar test: Strunk and White's Elements of Style; Little, Brown Handbook

Chapters 18-21; Writing Workshop: the descriptive essay: Objective Description

Directions ; Editing Instructions ; Homework: Watch the first presidential debate.

Friday, October 5th, 2012

Peer edit descriptive paper

WEEK SEVEN

Tuesday, October 9th, 2012

Descriptive essay due; Unit 3 vocabulary quiz

Wednesday, October 10th, 2012

Units 1-3 vocabulary test preparation: A, B, C technique; The Language of Composition :

"A Talk to Teachers" - James Baldwin pp. 123-29; Answer questions 1-3 on p.129

Friday, October 12th, 2012

Discuss the Baldwin essay; * I realize quite a few of you will out today. Please read the following essay and focus on why this speech is so effective. What point is Postman making in constructing this hypothetical graduation speech? Athenians vs. Visigoths:

Neil Postman's hypothetical graduation speech

WEEK EIGHT

Monday, October 15th

In-class essay: Baldwin response

Tuesday, October 16th, 2012

Unit 1-3 vocabulary test

Thursday, October 18th, 2012

Meet in library for research orientation; begin initial research and find and annotate one source: Research paper

Friday, October 19th, 2012

Collect research paper proposals; Return Baldwin argument essay and make revisions;

Unit 4 vocabulary study ( quiz on Tuesday)

WEEK NINE

Monday, October 22nd, 2012

Counselor meeting in my room; read pp. 139-173 in Everything's an Argument - focus on the Toulmin method of argumentation

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2012

Unit 4 vocabulary quiz; peer edit argument paper

Wednesday, October 24th, 2012

Summary of third presidential debate; return vocabulary quizzes; Unit 5 definitions;

Everything's an Argument: What Toulmin Teaches; the research paper: requirements, due dates.

Friday, October 26th, 2012

Argument paper due; Discuss research topics and arguments:

WEEK TEN

Monday, October 29th, 2012

How to create a visual argument; Non-fiction unit: "The Culture of Thin Bites Fiji" pp.

589-90; "Television, Disordered Eating, and Young Women in Fiji: Negotiating Body

Image and Identity During Rapid Social Change" pp. 592-99 in Everything's an

Argument

Tuesday, October 30th, 2012

Work on visual argument

Wednesday, October 31st, 2012

Visual argument instructions: Visual argument ; library time

Friday, November 2nd, 2012

Return argument papers; MLA format instruction: MLA guided activity (formative grade given)

WEEK ELEVEN

Monday, November 5th, 2012

Visual argument due ; Non-fiction unit: David Sedaris - Me Talk Pretty One Day

Tuesday, November 6th, 2012

Unit 6 vocabulary quiz ; research paper instruction

Wednesday, November 7th, 2012

MEET IN LIBRARY: Research paper conferences; Non-fiction unit: From The

Destruction of Culture pp. 922-28 in The Language of Composition ; How to annotate a source: annotated bibliography

Friday, November 9th, 2012

5 annotated sources due ; Non-fiction unit: "Who's a Looter? In Storm's Aftermath,

Pictures Kick Up a Different Kind of Tempest" pp. 640-42; "Gay-Asian American Male

Seeks Home" pp. 644-48 in Everything's an Argument

WEEK TWELVE

Monday, November 12th, 2012

Non-fiction unit: "On Covers of Many Magazines, a Full Racial Palette Is Still Rare" pp.

649-52

Tuesday, November 13th, 2012

Unit 4-6 Vocabulary Test

Wednesday, November 14th, 2012

Rough draft of research paper due for peer edit (formative grade); Non-fiction list: readings

Friday, November 16th, 2012

Non-fiction unit: "Mainstream/Business-to-Business Advertising Best Practices" pp. 654-

58; "Not Only Natalee Is Missing: Is the Media Inattention to Missing Women Who

Aren't White Due to Deliberate Racism or Unconscious Bias?" pp. 659-61

THANKSGIVING BREAK - 19 th - 23 rd

WEEK FOURTEEN

Monday, November 26th, 2012

Review syllabus; grammar diagnostic revisited (You must past the grammar test to receive credit in class – you will be required to take remedial exercises and attend tutoring until you do pass the exam).

Tuesday, November 27 th , 2012

Non-fiction unit; synthesis essay – write outline/draft

Wednesday, November 28 th , 2012

Non-fiction unit: synthesis essay – write/type final copy

Friday, November 30 th , 2012

Research paper due; presentation instructions

WEEK FIFTEEN

Monday, December 3rd, 2012

Presentation workshop

Tuesday, December 4 th , 2012

Presentation workshop

Wednesday, December 5 th , 2012

Non-fiction unit exam

Friday, December 7 th , 2012

Presentation workshop

WEEK SIXTEEN

Monday, December 10 th , 2012

Presentation workshop

Tuesday, December 11 th , 2012

Presentations

Wednesday, December 12 th , 2012

Presentations

Friday, December 14 th , 2012

Pre-Finals Christmas extravaganza.

WEEK SEVENTEEN

Monday, December 17 th , 2012

Final exam review

Tuesday, December 18 th , 2012

Final exam review

Wednesday, December 19 th , 2012

Final

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