ENGL 1102-06, 20: English Composition II M,W Spring 2013 Professor: Stacey Carter Morin E-mail: Please use Course Den mail Office: Pafford 313 Office Hours: or by appointment ( I will also be in the Writing Center on Mondays from 10:001:00, but you must go through the Writing Center if you wish to see me during that time) Course Description: A course which serves both as a continuation of ENGL 1101 and an introduction to the study of literature focusing on skills required for reading, interpreting, and writing analytical essays about literature in at least three genres (I.e., fiction, drama, poetry). In writing, students must demonstrate competency in both explication of literary texts and research-based interpretation. Course Objectives: To extend the skills of expository writing and critical thinking established in English 1101. To read, understand, and interpret fiction, drama, and poetry and write analytically about them. To understand literary principles and use basic terms important to critical writing and reading. To construct essays using textual evidence from both primary and secondary sources. Required Texts: Maimon, Elaine P, et. al. A Writer's Resource. All readings will be posted on Course Den. You will be expected to print out the readings, annotate them, and bring them to class on days they will be discussed Films: Gran Torino (2008); Babel (2006) NOTE: You will be expected to have watched these films prior to our discussion of them in class—there will be NO excuses for failing to do so. I would suggest you purchase these films, so you will be able to watch them more than once. Good film analyses demand close attention to detail that can be overlooked with just one film viewing. Major Assignments and Grading Procedures: Essay #1--(3-4 typed pages) 20% Essay #2--(4-5 typed pages) 25% Essay #3--(5-6 typed pages) 30% Class Participation (Online postings/Quizzes/Writing Activities/Reading Annotations/Group Work) 10% 2 In-Class Responses (2-3 handwritten pages) 15%--The second in-class essay will be taken during the final exam period and is optional. You will need a large Blue Book for these. YOU MUST MAKE A GRADE OF “C” OR HIGHER IN THIS COURSE IN ORDER TO EXIT ENGL 1102!! NOTE: Your grade will be based strictly on your performance in this class--you decide your fate. If making a “C” or lower in this class will affect your ability to keep HOPE or any other scholarship, take this class seriously and work hard from the first day of class to earn the grade you need. Go to the Writing Center or come see me about problems you’re having during the semester. If you wait until the end of the semester to come to me with concerns about your status in the class and how that will affect your financial aid, I will not be sympathetic!! Essay Grading A. Each out-of-class essay will be graded according to the out-of-class essay grading rubric found on the English department website (http://www.westga.edu/~engdept/writing/index.htm) and will receive a letter and numerical grade. The numerical grade will be used when calculating your overall average at the end of the semester. A+=98 B+=88 C+=78 D+=68 F+=58 B. A=95 B=85 C=75 D=65 F=55 A-= 92 B-=82 C-=72 D-=62 F-=52 Your in-class essay will be graded according to the recommended in-class grading scale found on the English department website (http://www.westga.edu/~engdept/writing/index.htm) and will count 15% of your overall grade. In order to incorporate your in-class writing grades into your overall grade for the class, in-class writing grade (0-4) will be accompanied by a traditional grade as follows: 0 = 55 0/1=60 1 = 65 1/2= 70 2 = 75 2/3= 80 3 = 85 3/4=90 4 = 95 NOTE: You will be given the option to retake this in-class during the final exam period. If your second attempt is higher than your first, the higher grade will replace the original. You will also need a large Blue Book. Both in-class essays can be written in the same book. C. Essay Format: All drafts and essays MUST BE typed, stapled and prepared according to MLA format. In accordance with MLA format, all essays should be double-spaced and typed using 12 point, Times New Roman font. Proper MLA format can also be found in Tab 6 of A Writer’s Resource. Ten points will be deducted if you do not use MLA format. NOTE: Save your work in a secondary location {i.e, your hard drive, a thumb drive} in case you have technical problems. I will not accept late work due to computer problems. D. Revisions: We will be having workshops throughout the semester that encourage revision on all essays at different stages in your writing process (thesis, paragraph development, etc.). You will also have the option to submit a full revision of Essay #1 if it is a “C” or lower paper. If you revise your paper, staple the original graded draft to the back of your revision. This will allow me to see the changes you’ve made--I will not grade a revision without the original graded draft. Your final grade for a revised writing assignment will be determined as follows: 65 Final draft +75 Revised draft 140/2 70 Final grade If you make a conscious attempt to improve your final draft, it is impossible to make a grade on your revised draft that is lower than your original final draft. However, you can make a lower grade on your revision if you are not attentive to evaluation comments. Reading Quizzes/Daily Responses & Activities/Group Work: In this class I will assign a variety of in-class writing and critical reading activities ranging from brief responses to group work, which will make up your daily participation grade. The phrase “daily participation” implies 1) that you are present in class and 2) that you actively participate in and contribute to the class, so logically if you miss a quiz or in-class writing assignment because you are tardy or absent, you will NOT be allowed to make up the assignment. However, if you have to miss a class when an activity is assigned, don’t fret!! I will drop one low daily grade at the end of the semester. You will also be required to annotate each text assigned. An annotation is a reading comprehension activity in which you actively engage with a text by underlining, highlighting, and writing observations and questions in the margins of the text. To annotate the texts assigned, you will simply write any comments or questions directly on the text as you’re reading it. If the text assigned is an additional reading posted on webct, you must print the text, annotate it, and bring it to class on the day of discussion. If you are annotating a film, you will need to take detailed notes denoting significant filmic elements. These annotations will not only aid in your understanding of the texts but will also serve as a form of prewriting for essays. I will periodically check your annotations for daily grades. Before each writing workshop, you will be expected to submit portions of your essay (see the tentative schedule) on Course Den by 5:00 pm the previous class day. Submissions must be copied and pasted into the submission box. Any submissions posted after the 5:00 pm deadline will NOT be accepted. Be aware that Course Den is routinely down for scheduled maintenance every other Friday from10:00 pm-8:00 am Saturday morning, so don’t assume Course Den is down for the entire weekend if you cannot submit your assignment during this time. If, however, Course Den is down due to technical problems, you may send submissions to my campus email: scarter@westga.edu Late Work Policy for Essays: All rough drafts and final drafts are due at the beginning of class; therefore, bring them to class already printed and stapled. All papers turned in after class has dismissed will be penalized ten points, and ten points will also be deducted each day thereafter they are late. If you have a planned absence on the day a paper is due, you MUST make arrangements to turn your paper in prior to your absence. Any essays submitted a week late will not receive a grade! NOTE: To avoid confusion and potential emailing problems, I will not grade emailed papers—you must turn in a hard copy. If, however, you turn in an essay outside of class and I am not in my office when you turn it in, you should email a copy of your paper just to document the time and date you turned your paper in. Otherwise I will assume the paper is late and will deduct points. Also, if you have an emergency and cannot come to class the day a paper is due, you must email me a copy of your finished paper to document its completion AND turn in a hard copy of the paper upon your return to class. Also, if you miss a quiz or in-class writing assignment because you are tardy or absent—as with the attendance policy, no distinctions will be made between excused and unexcused absences— you will NOT be allowed to make up the assignment you missed. However, I will drop one low daily grade at the end of the semester. Attendance Requirements: Students may be administratively withdrawn from class based on the following attendance policy. Since our class meets two times a week, you are allowed THREE absences. Upon the FOURTH absence, I can administratively withdraw you from the class. Be aware that no distinction exists between excused and unexcused absences. In addition, you should be aware that if the withdrawal date falls before March 4, you will receive a “W.” If the withdrawal date falls after March 4, you will receive a “WF.” Disruptive Behavior: Students may be dismissed from any class meeting at which they exhibit behavior that disrupts the learning environment of others. Such behavior includes – but is not limited to – arriving late for class, allowing cell phones to ring, speaking disrespectfully to the instructor and/or to other students, checking email or surfing the web, and using personal audio or visual devices. Each dismissal of this kind will count as an absence and will be applied toward the attendance policy above. Emailing and MY UWG In accordance with campus policy, all emails sent to me must be through your UWG account. Any emails sent to me using another server (i.e, yahoo, bellsouth, juno, hotmail, etc.) are not considered legitimate university correspondences and will be replied to with the message: “Please resend this message using your UWG email account.” Sorry if this sounds harsh, but I’m just the messenger! Since our class uses Course Den, please email, any questions or paper concerns to me through Course Den mail. You will receive a speedier response if you do so. Department Paperless Policy As of Fall 2006, the English Department implemented a “paperless” policy in its classrooms. Therefore, all materials (handouts, assignment sheets, notes, etc.) will be made available online. Students may print these necessary course documents, including the syllabus, on their home computers. The Writing Center: Location: TLC 1201 Phone: 678-839-6513 Website: Writing@westga.edu Email: http://www.westga.edu/~writing *The University Writing Center works with students and other members of the UWG community to improve writing skills. What We Do: Discuss ideas, read drafts, and work through revisions of essays; we do not proofread Regents’ Test Preparation (both the reading and essay sections) Creative Writing Consultations MLA, APA, Chicago/Turabian, and other citation formats Policies: Please make appointments in advance. We accept walk-ins, but we cannot guarantee that a tutor will be available. If you cannot keep your appointment, you must call or email us 24 hours in advance to cancel. If you do not notify us 24 hours in advance, you will be counted as a No Show. Please arrive at your appointment on time. If you are 10 minutes late or more, you will be counted as a No Show and will not be able to have your appointment. If you have 3 No Shows in one semester, you will not be able to have any more appointments for that semester. Plagiarism & Excessive Collaboration Policy: Plagiarism & Academic Dishonesty The Department of English and Philosophy defines plagiarism as taking personal credit for the words and ideas of others as they are presented in electronic, print, and verbal sources. The Department expects that students will accurately credit sources in all assignments. An equally dishonest practice is fabricating sources or facts; it is another form of misrepresenting the truth. Plagiarism is grounds for failing the course. Any student turning in plagiarized material in this class will receive an F for the course. See also, excessive collaboration. The University policies for handling Academic Dishonesty are found in the following documents: The Faculty Handbook, sections 207 and 208.0401 http://www.westga.edu/~vpaa/handrev/ Student Uncatalog: "Rights and Responsibilities"; Appendix J. http://www.westga.edu/handbook/ Excessive Collaboration By the end of the term in both ENGL 1101 and 1102, students should demonstrate the ability to produce independent writing (writing without collaborative assistance of peers, writing tutors, or professionals in the field) that shows an acceptable level of competence. Although classroom activities and out-of-class assignments may highlight collaborative learning and collaborative research, excessive collaboration (collaboration that results in the loss of a student's voice/style and original claims to course-related work) is considered another form of academic dishonesty and therefore will not be permitted. Role of the Writing Center The role of the Writing Center is to offer consultation in which tutors question, respond to, offer choices, and encourage revision in student essays. Tutors do not evaluate or prescribe solutions to problematic areas in student essays, and tutors are specifically trained to avoid appropriating the student's work. For more information, visit the Writing Center online at http://www.westga.edu/~writing. Disability Pledge I pledge to do my best to work with the University to provide all students with equal access to my classes and materials, regardless of special needs, temporary or permanent disability, special needs related to pregnancy, etc. If you have any special learning needs, particularly (but not limited to) needs defined under the Americans with Disabilities Act, and require specific accommodations, please do not hesitate to make these known to me, either yourself or through Disability Services in 272 Parker Hall at (770) 839-6428. Students with documented special needs may expect accommodation in relation to classroom accessibility, modification of testing, special test administration, etc. This is not only my personal commitment: it is your right, and it is the law! For more information, please contact Disability Services at the State University of West Georgia. Tentative Class Schedule “Tentative” means portions of the class schedule (I.e., assigned readings, assignments, due dates) are subject to change! I would advise that you not print out a copy of the syllabus because I may occasionally change readings and assignments depending on how much we cover during class. Although I will alert you of changes in class, you are ultimately responsible for periodically checking the syllabus for any modifications, particularly if you have been absent. NOTE: All readings and assignments are due on the day they are posted on the syllabus. Cultural Difference and Identity JANUARY M 7 Class Introduction; Plagiarism Review; Course theme: Cultural difference and conceptions of self—“Mr. Z”; Annotating a text; Note: Drop/Add Jan 7-13. W 9 Plagiarism quiz; M 14 ; Assign Essay 1 (3-4 typed pages—20%) W 16 M 21 No Class—MLK Holiday W 23 Writing Workshop for Essay #1; Thesis Workshop for Essay #1; Post a revised thesis and introduction for Essay #1 on Course Den by 5:00 pm on Sunday, January 27th M 28 Writing Workshop (cont.)—Thesis and Introduction; The MEAL Plan W 30 Film as a Medium; Film Terms (See Notes on Course Den) FEBRUARY M 4 Film terms (cont.); Film Terms Quiz; Watch and annotate Gran Torino prior to coming to class; Beginning to Watch and Write about Film (see notes on Course Den) W 6 25%) Essay #1 due; Gran Torino (cont.); Assign Essay #2 (3-4 typed pages— M 11 Gran Torino (cont.); From Notes to Film Essay; Film Research Sources; Sample student paper ; Thesis Workshop—Developing a working thesis for Essay #2; Post a revised thesis/introduction and first body paragraph on Course Den by 5:00 pm on Tuesday, February 12th. W 13 Writing Workshop for Essay #2: Organization and Transition, Punctuation and Grammar Review M 18 Babel (2006)—Watch and annotate this film prior to coming to class! W 20 Babel (cont.) M 25 In-class Essay (15%)—NOTE: You will need to bring a large Blue Book with you to class; W 27 March 4th. Elements of poetry; NOTE: Last day to withdraw with a grade of W is MARCH M 4 Revision of Essay #1 due; Elements of poetry (cont.); figurative language quiz; Last day to withdraw with a grade of W W 6 Essay #2 due; Langston Hughes, “Ballad of the Landlord”; Hughes, “Harlem”; Hughes, “Let America Be America Again” (on Course Den—print, annotate, and bring to class); Assign Essay #3 (5-6 typed pages—30%) M 11 T.S. Eliot, “The Love Song of J.Alfred Prufrock (on Course Den—print, annotate, and bring to class) W 13 Rita Dove, “Daystar”; Taslima Nasrin, “Things Cheaply Had” (on Course Den—print, annotate, and bring to class) M 18 No class—Spring Break! W 20 No class—Spring Break! M 25 Reading Fiction; Kate Chopin, “The Story of an Hour” (on Course Den— print, annotate, and bring to class); NOTE: Registration for Summer/Fall 2013 begins, check “The Scoop” for details W class) 27 Jamaica Kincaid, “Girl” (on Course Den—print, annotate, and bring to APRIL M 1 Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, “Mrs. Dutta Writes a Letter” (on Course Den—print, annotate, and bring to class); Post a Thesis for Essay #3 on Course Den by 5:00pm on Tuesday, April 3rd. W 3 Essay #3 Thesis Workshop; Writing a Research paper; Blending Quotations; Documenting Sources; Parenthetical citations; Works Cited Citations M 8 Quotations and Citations (cont.); Post a thesis/intro and a body paragraph with at least ONE secondary source quotation or paraphrase by 5:00 pm on Tuesday, April 9th. W 10 Writing Workshop—Body Paragraphs M 15 Draft of Research paper due (Bring a typed and printed version to class); peer-editing (Print the peer-editing sheet on Course Den and bring it to class); Developing Effective Conclusions W 17 Essay #3 due—Turn essay in to my office (Pafford 313) by 5:00 pm. NOTE: Be sure to attach your peer edited rough draft, any additional peer commentary, and copies of sources to your final draft. M 22 ENGL 1102-06--Optional In-class Essay Retake (11:00-1:30 pm) ENGL 1102-20--Optional In-class Essay Retake (2:00-4:30 pm) I should have Essay #3 graded the day before you are scheduled to take the in-class essay retake. Be checking Course Den for grades. Be sure to factor your final grade (See the link to “How to factor your final grade “ on Course Den) to see if taking the in-class retake will benefit your grade.