EN 251: Survey of American Literature Fall 2007 Dr. Linda G. Raughton English Instructor Northeast Alabama Community College E-mail: raughtonl@nacc.edu or preferably use the Blackboard Message Board E-mail for an appointment time. Request an online, phone, or in-person format. No Tolerance There will be no excuses for not turning in work on time. If you are late, more than once, turning in an assignment, you will have to take the penalty. If your computer crashes or you lose Internet, go to another computer. If your car breaks down, get a ride. If you are going out of town, find a computer, take a laptop with Internet access, or locate an Internet Café. If the campus Blackboard is down, I WILL KNOW IT as well as KNOW IT IS OUT OF YOUR CONTROL. Back up your work; work off line. Do not submit until you are finished with document you have saved and are ready to go online. Moreover, do not wait until the last minute to submit work; you will avoid some of the issues listed above by doing so. Online courses are designed to give the student flexibility, not excuses. Plagiarism See Required Course Syllabus. Students with Disabilities See Required Course Syllabus NACC Writing Center Since you will be writing several drafts of numerous essays in this course, you may want to visit the NACC Writing Center in the EN Building for assistance. The Writing Center is one of the best resources you will find on campus. You can simply sign in and ask for help, or you can request an appointment with one of the trained tutors to help with any phase of the writing process. ONLINE INSTRUCTIONS: WORK MUST BE SUBMITTED ON MICROSOFT WORD. IF YOU USE A COMPUTER THAT HAS MICROSOFT WORKS, WORDPAD, OR MICROSOFT OFFICE 2007 (VISTA), YOU MUST GO TO FORMAT AND CHANGE THE FORMAT TO RICH TEXT FORMAT OR FOR VISTA TO MICROSOFT 2003. I CANNOT OPEN THE OTHER FILES ON BLACKBOARD! IF YOU IGNORE THIS ANNOUNCEMENT, YOU WILL RECEIVE A ZERO FOR THE WORK SUBMITTED WITH A NOTICE, "CANNOT OPEN FILE." PLEASE DO NOT LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOU. THANK YOU FOR YOUR CONSISTENT COOPERATION. Make sure you check your computer to find out what you have before you start this class. It could mean the difference between an A and an F. Assignments: To make it easier for you, every item worth points will appear under ASSIGNMENTS. When you submit your work, you will see an (!) in your Gradebook. IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY TO GO TO THE GRADEBOOK TO SEE IF YOU CAN OPEN THE FILE AFTER YOU SUBMIT. IF YOU CANNOT, THEN YOU WILL KNOW I WILL NOT BE ABLE TO EITHER. ASK ME TO CLEAR YOUR ATTEMPT SO YOU CAN RE-SUBMIT. DO THIS IN A TIMELY MANNER SO THAT YOU DO NOT SUBMIT YOUR WORK LATE. In case you are wondering how I will know if you are the author, well, let's just say that at first I may not, but before the semester ends I will know you, your thought process, and your style of writing. Discussion Board: This is another category under which you will earn points for this class. Please do not ignore this forum, for there are easily-earned points waiting for you by simply doing what each post asks you to do. It can make a difference in your grade by as much as a letter grade at the end. In addition, this will allow our class to create a community even in cyberspace. YOU WILL BE ASKED NUMEROUS TIMES TO POST IN THE DISCUSSION BOARD (DB). WE WILL USE THIS FOR OTHER CLASSMATES TO VIEW AND RESPOND TO YOUR POSTS AS WELL AS TO GENERATE FOR THE CLASS WHAT IS TAKING PLACE IN OUR ONLINE CLASS, WHAT WE'RE LEARNING, AND WHAT WE NEED TO IMPROVE. YOU WILL ALSO USE THIS FORUM TO POST QUESTIONS OR CONCERNS THAT CLASSMATES AND I CAN CHOOSE TO RESPOND. Please remember that in every form of communication you use for this class you must remember it is first and foremost an English class. With that said, please understand that STANDARD GRAMMAR is always important and expected in any form of communication. Course Materials: You will find the required Course Syllabus as well as the Detailed Course Outline you will need for this class under this category. Message Board: I prefer that all correspondence take place under Messages. When you want to ask me a specific question that you do not want in DB for everyone to see, click on Messages and follow the instructions. Gradebook: This feature will show you work due, work you have submitted, work I have graded, and your total points to date of the final total possible for the course. Once too many days pass for you to get credit for submitting work, I will automatically place a zero in the column. If you lock your work as" in progress," I cannot open your file. Please do not submit until you are ready and finished. Use another document file, attach, and submit once you have completed the assignment. Locks are hard to remove, sometimes impossible. No credit can be assigned when a lock is in place. Please note that I, as administrator, have documentation as to the time and date of your last submission. That equals knowing if you claim to have submitted when you actually did not. E-MAIL: PLEASE DO NOT USE THIS FEATURE ON BLACKBOARD. BY SAYING THIS, I AM TELLING YOU THAT I LIKE TO CONDUCT ALL TRANSACTIONS IN BLACKBOARD NOT IN MY REGULAR E-MAIL ACCOUNT. WHEN STUDENTS E-MAIL ME, I HAVE TO LEAVE THAT ACCOUNT AND LOG IN TO BLACKBOARD, HUNT THE ANSWER, AND FINALLY RETURN TO E-MAIL TO REPLY TO THE STUDENT. IF I STAY IN BLACKBOARD, MY WORK IS MORE ACCURATE AND MORE PRODUCTIVE FOR YOU, THE VALUABLE STUDENT. THANK YOU FOR YOUR COOPERATION. Text: Textbooks are available in the Campus Bookstore. Texts are new; be sure you purchase the Norton Anthology. Wish You Well by Baldacci is a supplemental text required Fall Semester. Charlotte Temple by Rowson or Walking the Trail by Ellis may be used for the Critical Book Review. Guidelines: The course assignments will include the following: weekly log postings along with written discussion of class reading logs, answers to study questions, written essays, exams, a digital storytelling project, a critical book review, and a final exam. Check frequently for updates on ongoing or upcoming assignments. The fact that this is an online syllabus makes it possible for us to alter the schedule and to take advantage of availability of new resources. The reading listed for each week should be completed before the beginning of the next week’s class. Sometimes the text may be available online rather than in your book. Discussion Board You should post a paragraph of quality that demonstrates an important aspect of your assigned reading for that week based upon the given topic for discussion. This reflection should be posted in the Discussion Board for all class members to view. Grammar and mechanics will count. You should respond to two postings of other members of your class. Once a reflection has two replies underneath, students must select another reflection under which to post. This is so that every member of the class will have two postings under their reflection each week. Essays Essays submitted after the class in which they are due will receive a lowered grade. Papers submitted two weeks or more after the due date will NOT be accepted. Plagiarized work will be handled in accordance with college guidelines published in your student handbook. Attendance Regular attendance to the discussion postings is the only way to keep up with the ongoing threads of conversation. It will also be a factor in the final grades. You should not expect to pass the course if any one of the major areas of the course is missing or labeled unsatisfactory. Please consult the instructor a) if there is a legitimate reason that you cannot turn in an assignment on time, b) if you require special accommodations for any assignment; c) if you have a question concerning a grade or assignment; or d) if you have a comment or suggestion to improve the course for next time. In any of these cases, you can send me an online message with the information or questions or make an appointment to meet with me to discuss any of these matters. Grading: Essay 1and 3 = 20% Essay 2 (Research-based) = 10% *Academic Leadership = 25% Novel exam= 10% Critical Review = 10% Digital Storytelling Project = 15% Final Exam = 15% Points actually accumulate to 1000 possible. It will be easy for the student to keep track of his grade by going to MyGrades. *Academic Leadership refers to the quality of written contribution to the course via journal logs. You will be graded on your willingness to raise useful questions for the class to explore and test hypotheses, on your ability to discuss the reading material both scholarly and efficaciously, and on the display of your independence and persistence in pursuing appropriate evidence and answers to reading material examined. Recipe for a Fruit Salad: American Literature, History, and Culture Find these ingredients: Who is an American? What does it mean to be an American? When did the wild world of wilderness become a culture? Where did Americans acquire the notion of the U. S. linguistic culture? How should an American live? Why is America a fruit salad, not a melting pot? Unit 1: The New World Recipe: Add Armchair Explorers from Twenty-first Century. Mix in the Ability to Imagine New World during Colonial Period. Blend Together Ideas of What It Means to Be an American. Melting Pot Concept-Think about what this means to you when someone says America is a melting pot. Use a search engine to see if you can learn more. This will become an important topic in our class this semester. Later, you will have to defend or refute this statement by citing passages from our reading to support your argument. Importance of “American” voices for understanding what it means to be an AmericanThumb through the syllabus as well as your texts to discover the diversity of voices we will hear as we, as armchair travelers, begin our journey to the past. Unit 2: The Wild Wilderness Recipe: Add a pinch of English Colonists in Virginia and the Puritan Mission in New England. Introduce spices of charters, compacts, and covenants in a wild world of wilderness. Begin to look for who an American is. Unit 3: Myths, Tales, and Legends When did the wild world of wilderness become a culture? Unit 4: Versions of Transcendentalism and Representations of Women How should an American live? Recipe: Sweeten to taste with Revelation and Reason. Unit 5: Slavery and Rebellion How should an American live? Recipe: Pour in a cup each of race, class, community, and the American Dream. Unit 6: Nineteenth Century American Conversation Where did Americans acquire the notion of the U. S. linguistic culture? Recipe: Stir in a set of behaviors, assumptions, cultural forms, prejudices, attitudes, stereotypes, ways of thinking about language, religio-historical circumstances, and the linguistic priority of English. Recipe: Fruit Salad Marinate. Remove and enjoy. DETAILED COURSE OUTLINE TIMELINE 8/23 8/28 8/30 9/4 9/6 9/11 9/13 9/18 9/20 9/25 9/27 10/2 Orientation Read novel. Handout on paragraph from novel (I will be in Paraguay until 9/10. Please go to the Discussion Board and ask classmates questions if you have any.) Read novel. Study Questions ½ Discussion Board (DB) Read/SQ ½ Handout from novel DB Finish novel. Essay One (See assignments for instructions.) Novel Exam Go to exam under assignments. Introduction pp.1-15 in text Native Voices SQ New World Encounters SQ/ DB Columbus—Koasati Read pp. 31-33; 40-48; 55-57; 72-74; 86-91 DB: SQ: Answers due 9/20 Utopian Promise, English Settlement DB: SQ: Bradford- Thoreau Pp, 104-105; 147; 187-188; 217220;235; 267-26; 307-308; 343344; 350-351 SQ Spirit of Nationalism Growth and Empire Intro—Wheatley 357-367;384-386;396-397;437438;443;449-450;468-472;595- ON CAMPUS Wish You Well By David Baldacci Baldacci will come to speak September 19. DB: Post a comment that is a paragraph in length about a character in the novel. Use only pages 1-100. DB: Post a comment that is a paragraph in length about a conflict in the novel. SQ: Submit answers to all SQ on novel. DB: Post a paragraph about how Louisa felt about the Appalachian Mountains. Submit exam before midnight. Go to assignments for link to the videos. Learner.org is free, but you will have to log in. Be sure you write down what you choose because you will have to use it every time. DB: Post a paragraph that discusses one of the videos. SQ: Submit the answers to the videos you watched on 9/13. DB: Post a paragraph that discusses one of the videos. SQ due from previous assignment DB: Post a paragraph that discusses one of the videos. SQ: Submit assignment from 9/18 DB SQ due from 9/20 SQ due from previous reading 9/25 SQ due from 10/2 DB 10/4 10/9 10/11 605;649-651 Essay Two p. 147 Who Is an American? Intro-Legend of Sleepy Hollow/ SQ Last of Mohicans SQ 10/16 Masculine Heroes; Coming of Independence SQ 10/18 Truth-Intro-Boudinot SQ Westward; Slavery 10/23 10/25 10/30 11/1 11/6 11/8 11/13 11/15 11/27 11/29 Redemptive Imagery SQ Hawthorne SQ Poe SQ Grimke-Fern SQ Gothic Undercurrent SQ Melville SQ Essay Three Dickinson SQ Charlotte Temple/Walking the Trail 12/4 12/11 12/13 Read novel. Read novel. PPT 12/18 Exam SQ due on “Legend Of Sleepy Hollow” DB: Post one paragraph about one of the stories. SQ due from Last of the Mohicans DB: Post a paragraph about one of the videos. DB SQ from 10/16 SQ from 10/18 DW: Post paragraph from one of videos. DB from one video SQ from 10/23 SQ from 10/25 DB SQ on Hawthorne DB SQ on Poe DB DB SQ from Grimke-Fern DB SQ on video DB DB SQ on Melville SQ on Dickinson See assignment for directions for PPT. On campus