1302 Composition II CRN# 75930 Instructor: Susan Drake Office hours: Mon/Wed 10-11am Class Times: Mon/Wed 8-9:30 Office: 310 Faculty Lounge Office email: susan.drake@hccs.edu Houston Community College System (HCC) is a comprehensive educational institution that provides academic transfer, workforce, corporate training/continuing education, developmental, and adult basic education programs. In all of these programs, HCC shall maintain high standards and encourage innovative teaching methods that take full advantage of technological advances. HCC encourages students to develop their skills, both personal and academic; to take responsibility for their education; to become flexible in order to meet the constantly shifting demands of a rapidly developing world; to appreciate their culture and those of other societies; and to cultivate excellence. Required Textbooks: Read, Reason, Write, (RRW) 10th edition. Dorothy U. Seyler The Little, Brown Compact Handbook, 8th edition. Jane E. Aaron Course overview Materials Needed: Flash drive for class presentations, etc. Two blue examination booklets HCC Library card A two-pocket file folder for organizing your essays, rough drafts, rewrites and short writing assignments. A supply of ruled white paper for in-class writing Teaching Methodology: This course is structured according to a writing workshop format, which means we will spend much of our time drafting, editing and re-writing essays. You will work in writing groups when working on rough drafts and rewrites. In addition to our workshop classes, we will spend time discussing reading selections from your textbook and, and we will spend a portion of our class time each week reviewing grammar. Writing Workshop: For each essay you write in this class, we will spend approximately two days working on the Rough Drafts. When possible, this will take place in the writing lab, so plan to have a flash drive with you on these days. On peer review day, you will need to bring a hard copy of your complete typed essay with you to class. All drafts of essays must be typed. Scholastic Dishonesty: According to the Student Handbook for the Houston Community College System, scholastic dishonesty includes cheating on a test, plagiarism, and collusion: cheating on a test-- copying from someone else’s paper or using unauthorized materials during a test. plagiarism—using another person’s words, information, or ideas in your own written work without appropriate acknowledgement (and quotation marks when exact words are used). collusion—“unauthorized collaboration” (35). Please note the possible consequences of such dishonesty, as stated in the Student Handbook: “Possible punishments for academic dishonesty may include a grade of 0 or F for the particular assignment, failure in the course, and/or recommendation for probation or dismissal from the college System” (35). Repeating the Same Course. Beginning in the Fall of 2006, students who repeat a course for a third or more times will face significant tuition/fee increases at HCC and other Texas public colleges and universities. Please ask your instructor and/or counselor about opportunities for tutoring/other assistance prior to considering course withdrawal or if you are not receiving passing grades. ADA Statement: Any student with a documented disability (e.g. physical, medical, learning, psychiatric, developmental, vision, hearing, etc.) who needs to arrange reasonable accommodations must contact the Disability Support Services (DSS)/ADA Counselor at the beginning of each semester. Faculty members are authorized to provide only the accommodations requested by the DSS Office. Dr. Roman Alvarez is Northeast College’s DSS / ADA Counselor. His telephone number is (713) 718-8420. Class Practices and Procedures 1. Attendance: College policy stipulates that any student who misses more than 12.5 % of instruction (6 class hours = 4 sessions) may be subject to administrative withdrawal or an F in the class. Attendance and on time arrival to class are absolutely essential to your success in this class. Students who arrive more than 10 minutes late will be counted tardy. Being late to class three times will count as one absence. Students who arrive more than 20 minutes late will be counted absent. Note: Attendance and class participation are graded in this class. A= 1 absence or less; B= 2 absences; C=3 absences; D=4 absences, F or W =5 absences. 2. Cell Phones. Please silence your phone during class and put it away (in your bag or pocket). It is distracting and impolite to use your phone during class, which also includes texting and looking at the Internet, so please show respect to both me and your peers during class. If you have an emergency, step outside and use your phone. When you are finished, you may return to class. Please note: If I have to speak to you about your cell phone, I will ask you to leave class and count you absent for the day. 3. Assignments: Failure to attend one class does not excuse a student from preparing for the following class. Find two classmates and exchange contact information so that you can keep up with assignments. Also, check the learning web for any new assignments posted. 4. Late Work/ Make –up work: All out of class papers are due at the start of class on the date designated. I reserve the right not to accept late work. You know now the due date for every assignment in this class. ALL PAPERS MUST BE SUBMITTED DIRECTLY TO THE INSTRUCTOR. DO NOT LEAVE PAPERS WITH SECRETARIES, IN MAIL BOXES, AT THE FRONT DESK, ETC... If a paper is not submitted on time, you must request an extension ahead of time, which may or may not be granted due to my discretion. There will be no make up of in class activities. There will be no make-up of the Mid-term and/or Final Examinations unless you make prior arrangements with me with a valid excuse for your absence. 5. HCCS On-Line Tutoring: We will be using the on-line tutoring service available at www.askonline.net this semester. You will submit a complete draft online to a tutor and make revisions based on the tutor’s feedback. Your essay must show evidence of revision before submitting your final draft. Students can access tutoring help 24/7 for writing assigned in any class, not just in English classes. Drafts seen by tutors are clearly marked; if submitted with papers, these prove that tutors have looked at the paper. Looking at these tutor-reviewed drafts also allows teachers to see exactly what kind of help students are getting. CHAT and DISCUSS transcripts can be printed as proof of use. HCCS On-line Tutoring has three components, all of which are available to every HCC student. ASK has two sub-components: paper submission and live tutors. 1. Students e-mail any paper, not just those assigned for English classes, and HCC tutors will pinpoint problem areas in organization, following directions, formatting, citing sources, and grammar; offer suggestions for correcting those problems; suggest links to other on-line resources; and guide students through the revision process. Papers will not be corrected or edited. They will be annotated because teachers need to evaluate student work, not tutor work. We hope to have a 24-hour turn-around on all papers submitted. 2. From 5:00 pm to 9:00 pm every day, a real, live HCC English faculty person will be live on-line to answer questions. Papers will not be read, but questions about understanding assignments, formatting papers, and other related questions will be answered. This component allows students to make sure that they are starting their work well. CHAT is an exciting feature. Real, live teachers will host 2-hour scheduled, focused chats on a regular basis. Some of the topics already on tap include understanding research methods, documenting sources, finding and fixing one’s own grammar problems, critical reading, and the difference between an analysis and a book report. A bi-weekly schedule will be posted on the splash page (what you see when you open Askonline / HCCS) and on HCC News. DISCUSS is the third component, and it has great potential for all students, especially non-native speakers of English. Students e-mail a question, a tutor answers it, and students check back to see the answers. All questions are threaded, so students can see what others have asked and increase their knowledge. We anticipate that this feature will be used for vocabulary questions, cultural context questions, questions about idiomatic expressions used in readings and class discussions, identification of people and places mentioned in classes and myriad other areas. 6. Turnitin.com All of your essays and some of your homework assignments will be uploaded to Turnitin.com by the assigned due date/time. If you miss the deadline, you will lose credit for that assignment, unless you have made prior arrangements with me. If you cannot submit your paper from home because you do not have access to the Internet, plan to take advantage of the Internet while at school. 7. Withdrawal: The final date for student withdrawals is Monday, March 31, 2014. If you drop the course, you must complete the necessary forms with the Registration personnel prior to this date. If you do not complete the withdrawal form and do not complete the required work in this class, you will receive an “F” for the course. HCCS instructors are no longer allowed to give students a grade of “W” at the end of the semester. The only way your grade will appear as a “W” on your course record is if the withdrawal form is submitted prior to the deadline, Monday, March 31, 2014. 8. Tardiness: Please arrive on time. I will call roll every day at the beginning of class. If you are more than 10 minutes late, you will be counted tardy. Thee tardies counts as one absence. If you are more than 20 minutes late, you will be counted absent. 9. Participation: Your level of participation in class discussions and evidence of your preparation for these discussions are very important to your final grade and to enhancing your ability to think critically. Being prepared includes: reading the assignment, brining your book and homework to class, paying attention, and the willingness to share your ideas about the assignment. Course Learning Outcomes: 2013-2014 Learning Outcomes for ENGL 1302 • Analyze a text by implementing rhetorical and/or literary strategies. • Recognize the elements of appropriate literary genres. • Focus a topic and formulate a critical/analytical thesis, focus, main point, or claim appropriate for an academic audience that analyzes literature—nonfiction and/or fiction. • Use a variety of organizational strategies within a single paper to support a thesis, focus, main point, or claim. • Interpret texts in a variety of cultural and historical contexts. • Demonstrate an ability to use effective research techniques to find appropriate oral and/or written media such as books, articles, interviews, visuals, and government documents. • Demonstrate an ability to evaluate sources. • Avoid plagiarism when incorporating quotations, paraphrases, and ideas. • Follow standard guidelines in documenting resources. • Synthesize and evaluate various interpretations of texts to complete an extended research project. • Compose relatively error-free papers. Grade Determination: Your grade will be determined by the following: Essay 1 Essay 2 Details Evaluation Argument paper Values Argument paper Percent of Final Average 10 10 Debate Debate 10 Midterm In class exam 10 Essay 3 Proposal Argument paper 10 Presentation Final Exam Proposal Argument Powerpoint presentation 10 In class exam 10 Homework Assigned work outside of the classroom 10 Lab Work Drafts, Tutorials and Peer Review 10 Attendance and Participation Come to class prepared to work. Be polite. Do good work. 10 Total: 100% Letter Grade Assignment: A Final Average in Percent 90-100 B 80-89 C 70-79 D 60-69 F 59 and below Letter Grade Tentative Instructional Outline: Week Activities Number and Assignment Week 1 Objectives and Details Jan 13 Course description; Introduction to argument Jan 15 The defining features of an argument; Class exercise: Mosh pits will be the subject for a simulation game in which class members present the points of view of the persons involved. Ch1 RRW Week 2 Jan 20 Jan 22 Martin Luther King, Jr. - Holiday CH 1 and CH 2 Class led discussion We will look at several current events and break into groups to identify parts of argument. Groups will present their work to the class. Class exercises from Ch 1 and Ch 2 Week 3 Jan 27 Jan 29 Week 4 CH 3 Lecture and group work: The structure of a Classical Argument- exordium, narratio, propositio, partitio, confirmatio, confutatio, and peroratio. Chapter 3 exercises Op-ed piece from NYT and CNN- class will discuss two op-ed pieces and working in small groups identify claim, reasons, values, counterargument, rebuttal, call for action, last impression and larger issue that topic is being related to. NOTE: Official Date of Record Ch 3 and Ch 8 Class led discussion: The Frame of an argument: claims supported by reasons (premises); because clauses; enthymeme; Class exercise: working in small groups, identify the claim, stated reason, and unstated assumption that completes each of the following enthymemic arguments (sentences provided in class). Groups will present work to the class for discussion. Feb 3 CH 8 Feb 5 Group work and class led discussion- CH 8 Evaluation Arguments LAB – Begin Draft for essay 1 Week 5 Feb 10 Feb 12 Group Work: Peer Review for Essay One Complete rough draft due; must be typed. Incomplete work will be ineligible for the peer review. Please arrive to class on time (with your work already printed and ready to review) to ensure your participation in peer review. BRING THE LITTLE BROWN HANDBOOK TO CLASS TODAY *Email your complete draft to WWW. ASKONLINE.COM Chapter 9 Week 6 Feb 17 Feb 19 Group Work, Values Argument. Ch 9 Essay two handout. Pick debate teams and talk about topics HOMEWORK- Decide on three possible topics for project and prepare 5 minute presentation to the class explaining your ideas. Ideas should be typed and brought to class on Wednesday. LIBRARY ORIENTATION Week 7 Feb 24 Ch 9 continued Feb 26 LAB Week 8 March 3 March 5 March 916 Week 9 Review for Essay 2 BRING THE LITTLE BROWN HANDBOOK TO CLASS TODAY *Email your complete draft to WWW.ASKONLINE.COM Midterm- Blue Examination Booklet required; Essay 2 is due at the beginning of class. SPRING BREAK March 17 Debates (Note cards and outlines are due at the end of debate for each speaker) March 19 Debates Week 10 March 24 Debates March 26 Debates (Note: The last day to drop is Monday, March 31st) Week 11 March 31 April 2 Introduction to Proposal Arguments Ch 11; Group work and class led discussion Exercise: Working in pairs, identify and list several major problems facing students in your college. Decide among yourselves which are the most important and rank them; take your group’s number 1 problem and explore answers to the questions supplied in class by your instructor. Present findings to class. Chapter 11 continued Homework: Decide on three possible topics for Proposal argument and present to the class on Monday. Ideas should be typed and brought to class. Week 12 April 7 April 9 Class led discussion: Topics are due for proposal argument. Short presentation to class on topic proposal (5% of paper) Writing Workshop Week 13 April 14 Peer Review for Proposal Argument, Essay 3 (15% of paper grade) April 16 BRING THE LITTLE BROWN HANDBOOK TO CLASS TODAY Essay 3 is due Proposal Argument Class Presentations Week 14 April 21 Presentations April 23 Presentations Week 15 April 28 Presentations April 30 Review for Final Exam Week 16 Final Exam- Blue examination booklet is required