Green -English 1302 syllabus-spring 2012.doc

Spring 2012 English 1302 Syllabus
Instructor: Patricia Green
Email Address: patricia.green@hccs.edu or pgreen@houstonisd.org
Office Hours: Lunch 11:35-12:20 or 2:25-4:00
English 1302; CRN: 3rd: 82071; 5th: 82666; 6th: 82665
Meeting Days: Tues-Wed-Thurs. Times: 3rd: 9:43-10:36; 5th: 12:24-1:17; 6th:1:23-2:16
Location:E342
Required Texts:
Fowler, H. Ramsey & Jane E. Aaron, eds. The Little, Brown Handbook
11th edition, Pearson/Longman, 2010. ISBN-13: 978-0-55832480-3
Schilb, John & John Clifford, eds. Making Literature Matter, 4th edition.
Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2009. ISBN- 13:978-0-312-53678-7
Grade Percentages:
Essay 1: Argument/Persuasive essay, or personal narrative/memoir
(750 words)
10%
Essay 2 : Literary Analysis of a Poem (750 words)
20%
Essay 3: Midterm in-class essay (500 words)
10%
Essay 4: Research Paper documented essay (7-10 pages)
30%
Essay # 5: Drama Critical Analysis, comparison (750 words)
10%
Essay # 6: Final Retrospective Essay
10%
Journals
10%
Supplies:
A notebook for class notes.
Blue or black ink pen
Flash Drive
Attendance:
HCCS policy states that a student who is absent more than 12.5% (6
hours) of class may be administratively dropped from the
course. This policy will be enforced. Coming in late or
leaving early will constitute a tardy. All tardies will be
counted toward your allotted absences. Your participation
is required. Students who intend to withdraw from the
course must do so by the official last day to drop, March
29th, before 4:30pm. Students who do not request to be
withdrawn from the course by this date will be required to
receive a grade in the course.
Students who prefer to receive an F rather than a W will need to attend
classes throughout the semester and take the final exam or discuss the
situation with the instructor before they stop attending the class.
Withdrawal Policy:
The State of Texas has begun to impose penalties on students who drop
courses excessively. For example, if you repeat the same course more
English 1302 Course Syllabus
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than twice, you have to pay extra tuition. Beginning in the Fall of 2007, the
Texas Legislature passed a law limiting first time entering students to no
more than six total course withdrawals throughout their academic career
in obtaining a certificate or baccalaureate degree. There may be future
penalties imposed.
**If you do not withdraw before the deadline or ask your professor to
withdraw you from this course, you will receive the grade
that you are making as the final grade. This grade will probably be an “F.”
Scholastic Dishonesty: Plagiarism results in a grade of zero on that project. Cheating or
collusion results in a grade of zero on that project. Plagiarism or
collusion on a second major assignment results in a zero in the course.
1] “Plagiarism”--the appropriation of another person’s work and the
unacknowledged incorporation of that work in one’s own written work for
credit.
2] “Collusion”--the unauthorized collaboration with another person in
preparing written work for credit.
Copying information from a website without appropriate citations is
plagiarism and also results in a 0. You may be asked to submit your paper
via the internet to turnitin.com a plagiarism detection program.
Important Dates:
January 17
Classes Begin, Drop/Add/Swap Fee Begins
January 18
Registration Ends
January 18
Last Day for Drop/Add/Swap
March 29
Last Day for Administrative /Student Withdrawals
May 4
Instruction Ends
May 7-11
Final Exams
May 13
Semester Ends
May 18
Grades available to students:
Late Paper Policy:
Ten points will be deducted from late papers per day. No late papers will
be accepted more than 1 week late. Arrange a conference with me
regarding late work for special exceptions. Please keep a copy of your
papers for your own file; should a paper be lost, it is your responsibility
to provide another.
Conferences:
Students are encouraged to arrange a conference with the professor to
discuss their progress in the course at any time. All students should
arrange a conference with their instructor concerning their research paper
progress prior to turning in the first version for instructor comments or
immediately after for the revision. Collaborative groups are advised to
consult with the instructor several weeks before presentations are due.
Immediately after the 4th absence, students are required to schedule a
conference with the professor.
Recording Devices:
Use of recording devices, including camera phones and tape recorders,
is prohibited in classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, and other
English 1302 Course Syllabus
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locations where instruction, tutoring, or testing occurs.
Library (Learning Resource Center)
The Southwest College has a Learning Resource Center at each campus
for student use. The library provides electronic resources including a
computerized catalog system as well as numerous data bases that
contain full-text articles. Stop by your campus library to find out hours of
operation. All students will be required to obtain and/or update an HCCS
Library Card (this is your student picture id card).
Mission Statement of the English Department:
The purpose of the English Department is to provide courses that transfer
to four-year colleges; introduce students to literature from diverse
traditions; prepare students to write clear, communicative, well-organized,
and detailed prose; and develop students’ reading, writing, and analytical
skills.
College Classroom Policies:
Show respect and courtesy to the professor and one another at all times.
Use appropriate academic language in all discussions and class activities.
Type all major essays.
Use a standard 12 point font for all assignments with one inch margins,
complete heading, and original title.
Limit talking unless during group assignments.
Focus on class activities: do not bring any cell phones or other recording
devices into the classroom.
Arrive on time and prepared to participate in class.
Course Description
English 1302 is a more extensive study of the skills introduced in English
1301 with an emphasis on critical thinking, research and documentation
techniques, and literary and rhetorical analysis. English 1302 is a core
curriculum course. English 1301 is a prerequisite for this course. You will
not be allowed to remain in the class if you have not successfully
completed English 1301. You may not take sophomore literature courses
until you have completed English 1302. This class fully prepares students
for sophomore level core curriculum literature courses English 2327-2374.
English literature courses fulfill the core curriculum humanities
requirement (3 semester hours) as well as the multicultural requirement (3
semester hours).
I. BASIC INTELLECTUAL COMPETENCIES IN HCCS CORE
·
READING: Reading material at the college level means having
the ability to analyze and interpret a variety of materials -- books, articles,
and documents.
·
WRITING: Writing at the college level means having the ability to
produce clear, correct, and coherent prose adapted to purpose, occasion,
English 1302 Course Syllabus
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and audience. In addition to knowing correct grammar, spelling, and
punctuation, students should also become familiar with the writing
process, including how to discover a topic, how to develop and organize it,
and how to phrase it effectively for their audience. These abilities are
acquired through practice and reflection.
·
SPEAKING: Effective speaking is the ability to communicate
orally in clear, coherent, and persuasive language appropriate to purpose,
occasion, and audience.
·
LISTENING: Listening at the college level means the ability to
analyze and interpret various forms of spoken communication.
·
CRITICAL THINKING: Critical thinking embraces methods of
applying both qualitative and quantitative skills analytically and creatively
to subject matter in order to evaluate arguments and to construct
alternative strategies. Problem solving is one of the applications of critical
thinking used to address an identified task.
·
COMPUTER LITERACY: Computer literacy at the college level
means having the ability to use computer-based technology in
communicating, solving problems, and acquiring information. Coreeducated students should have an understanding of the limits, problems,
and possibilities associated with the use of technology and should have
the tools necessary to evaluate and learn new technologies as they
become available.
II. EXEMPLARY EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES: ENGLISH 1302
By the time they have completed English 1302, students will
•
demonstrate the ability to use consistently and effectively the
writing process for both in-class and out-of-class essays (thus reinforcing
English 1301 instruction);
•
understand and apply the basic principles of critical thinking—
evaluation, analysis, and synthesis— as they write essays that persuade
or argue;
•
be able to analyze, in writing, readings by professional and
student writers (for such elements as purpose, audience tone, style,
writing strategy, and for much deeper meanings);
•
be able to develop a critical and creative essay in response to an
issue related to reading(s) or other class projects;
•
demonstrate the ability to resist simplistic formulations, whether in
their own or others’ texts;
•
understand the characteristics of imaginative texts and write
effective analyses of various genres;
•
be able to acknowledge, as appropriate, their own history,
interests, and biases as they discuss a topic, thus placing themselves
credibly in the discussion;
•
develop the ability to research and write a documented paper;
•
make effective stylistic choices (diction, tone, sentence structure)
in all writing assignments, depending upon the audience and purpose of a
piece of writing;
English 1302 Course Syllabus
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•
apply suggestions, as appropriate, from evaluated compositions
to other writing tasks; and
• fulfill the writing requirements of the course, writing at least 6000 words
during the semester.
The Reading Notebook:
The Reading Notebook is designed to encourage the students to examine
the weekly readings in greater depth. The Notebook writing will stimulate
class discussion and provide practice for students to develop into major
assignments. The entries will be collected periodically for instructor review
and the notebook will be reviewed at mid-term and during the final week of
class for the final evaluation grade.
Student Learning Outcomes for English 1302:
1. Apply basic principles of rhetorical analysis.
2. Write essays that classify, explain, and evaluate rhetorical and literary strategies employed
in argument, persuasion, and various forms of literature.
3. Identify, differentiate, integrate, and synthesize research materials into argumentative
and/or analytical essays.
4. Employ appropriate documentation style and format across the spectrum of in-class and
out-of-class written discourse.
5. Demonstrate library literacy.
English 1302 Dual Credit
Schedule of Assignments
Green
Tues/Wed/Thurs classes
MLM – Making Literature Matter
LBH – Little, Brown Handbook
WEEK ONE:
1/17
Preliminary assignment MLM p. 12 Search the library and find a
book for the first essay
Introduction to the course, review syllabus
Journal #1: choose MLM p. 12: # 2 or 3 , or personal narrative
Read by next week: LBH Chapters 1 and 6 Reading and Writing in
College
Read MLM “Letter from Birmingham Jail” p. 1079
1/18
MLM p. 96, Chap. 4 – Writing About Stories
Read MLM pp.26-56: The Elements of Argument. Writing Exercise
p.51. Continue discussion of course requirements.
1/19
Read “A Modest Proposal”
Journal # 1: Write about an experience when you first encountered
another culture other than your own, or “Letter from Birmingham
Jail”
English 1302 Course Syllabus
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WEEK TWO:
1/24
LBH Chap. 2, pp. 31 ex. 2,6,7,8; p.44, ex. 2.12
1/25
Alice Walker “Everyday Use” p. 355
1/26
Essay # 1 outline. Discuss Elements of Argument MLM p. 26
Discuss “Everyday Use”
Read Chopin MLM pp. 683-694: 500 word journal # 2 is due.
WEEK THREE:
1/31
LBH chaps. 3 and 50.
Discuss poetry . Assign Essay # 2 Poetry Analysis. MLM p. 87
Writing a Comparative Paper, Chap. 5 Writing About Poems p. 131
Discuss Chopin; LBH chap. 4; MLM pp.26-39 “Shoplifters”
2/1
MLM chap. 4: Welty pp.99-102 and Brown pp. 103-106
2/2
Essay # 1 one-on-one conferences.
Essay # 1 is due.
Introduce Essay #2: poetry project topics
MLM pp. 131-156 Writing about Poems
Respond to one of the Chopin readings in a 300 word essay.
Discuss the writing process
Poems: MLM Levine p. 134; Erdrich p. 139; Piercy p. 202-208; ;
Chin p. 276; Pratt p. 603, Komunyakaa p. 136 and Baca p. 137
Niemoller p.1047.
Romantic Poets: Blake p. 273, 1372; Wordsworth p. 57; Keats
p. 1403, Shelley p. 1409
WEEK FOUR:
2/7
Library Computer Lab
2/8
2/9
LBH chap.56 and 751-754; review MLM stories for the research paper
MLM pp. 96-130 -Chap.4 Writing about Stories. W.C. Williams p.. 97
Discuss Welty and Brown. Introduce Research Writing LBH p .557
Essay # 1 is due
WEEK FIVE:
2/14
Poetry Presentations
2/15
LBH Chap. 56 and pp.751-754. Poetry presentations
2/16
Review Research Writing LBH Part 9 p.557 MLA Format
Poetry presentations: Look through MLM at the poetry collection
WEEK SIX:
2/21
LBH Chaps. 44 and 45. The research paper.
Research Paper prospectus and annotated bibliography
MLA format LBH p. 557
Read the Father poems p. 313. Discuss and Compare poems
2/22
Computer Lab: Mid-Term Essay #3
English 1302 Course Syllabus
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2/23
MLM: Clifton pp.314-315; Hayden pp. 315-316; Roethke pp. 316317; Lim pp. 318-319; Plath pp.318-319; Giovanni p. 462; Hogan
pp.463-464; Soto pp. 465-466; Rios pp. 467-468
Journal is due
WEEK SEVEN:
2/28
Essay # 4 – Research Paper
LBH Chaps.7 and 8
MLM Choose one: Faulkner “A Rose for Emily” p.696-702, or J.C.
Oates “I, the Juror” p. 1144
p. 1144. Be prepared to discuss the reasons for your choice and
present an argument
2/29
Library: Research paper topic selections; MLA format; annotated
bibliography
3/1
Work on the research paper
WEEK EIGHT:
3/6
Library Computer Lab: Essay # 3 – mid-term
Read MLM Staples pp 285-291; Walker pp. 355-362; Bambara
p.1107
3/7
Discuss the readings. They are possible research paper topics.
3/8
Respond to one of the MLM readings: What makes one of the
characters an outsider. 300 typed words
Essay # 4: Research Paper is due
Spring Break: 3/12 – 3/16
WEEK NINE:
3/20
LBH Chap 9, 10, 47 and 48
MLM p 157 – Writing About Plays
Assign Essay # 5 Argumentative Essay based on a play
3/21
Assign parts to the play, a Doll House, MLM p.943, Glass
Menagerie p. 401 or “For Whom the Southern Belle Tolls p. 448
3/22
Present Drama skits
Journal is due.
WEEK TEN:
3/27
Review Argumentation; LBH MLM p. 26, LBH Chap. 10 Writing and
Argument p. 199
3/28
Read aloud: a Doll House p. 943
3/29
Discuss the play. Finish drama presentations
Quiz: the Elements of Argument
WEEK ELEVEN:
4/3
Read “The Things They Carried.” Class discussion.
English 1302 Course Syllabus
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4/4
4/5
Discuss argumentation. Review MLM p 47-56 and LBH Chap. 10
Journal is due: drama. Work on rough draft of Essay # 5.
WEEK TWELVE:
4/10
4/11
4/12
Read MLM pp. 995-1006 –Glaspell.
Continue reading Glaspell. Discussion
Read “Thou Art the Man” by E.A. Poe, MLM p. 1236 Discuss the
detective story and review the Elements of Short Fiction p. 110
Journal # 9 is due.
WEEK THIRTEEN:
4/17
Work on Essay #5. Review chaps. 9 and 10. Teacher-student
review of the rough draft
Read Grimm p. 390
4/18
Computer Lab
4/19
Organize the Portfolio. Read Hemingway p. 571
Essay # 5 is due
WEEK FOURTEEN:
4/24
4/25
4/26
Read John Updike’s “A&P.” p. 641
Argumentation review. Discuss “A&P.”
Read Bambara’s “The Lesson” p. 1107
Journal # 10 is due
WEEK FIFTEEN:
5/1
5/2
5/3
Review MLM poems and stories
Class discussion. Choose your favorite selection from MLM: write
about it for the last Journal
Review LBH writing skills. Notebook and Portfolio are due.
WEEK SIXTEEN:
5/7 Final Exam: Essay # 6
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