CLEMSON UNIVERSITY ENGL 1030-69: ACCELERATED COMPOSITION Eda Ozyesilpinar OFFICE: Strode Tower 102A HOURS: M 2:20pm-4:20pm – or by appointment EMAIL: eozyesi@g.clemson.edu Website: edaozyp.pbworks.com FALL 2014 CLASS DAYS/TIME: MWF 1:25-2:15 LOCATION: RHODES 522 COURSE DESCRIPTION This course focuses on writing and critical thinking by using an approach that teaches rhetorical strategies for reading and composing arguments in both print and digital environments. Students will learn to read texts critically and to recognize the different purposes and audiences for arguments. Students will compose five writing projects based on issues and research raised in the reading assignments and class discussions during the semester. The writing assignments will give students extensive practice in thinking critically and writing according to the rhetorical conventions of an argumentative essay using the full range of writing processes—invention, arrangement, drafting, revising, editing, and proofreading—for multiple assignments. We will explore the uses of rhetoric as a tool of persuasion in written, visual, and multimodal texts. We will learn how rhetoric works through attention to persona, audience, and persuasive appeals (such as pathos, logos, ethos, kairos). Rhetoric teaches us how we might persuade others, and whether to be persuaded ourselves. To these ends, we will pay particular attention to cultural and individual assumptions, and how rhetoric and language work to provide effective arguments. These approaches build a foundation for learning strategies of writing about the world in which we all work and live. During this course, there will be five key learning outcomes that will guide our learning (established by the Council of Writing Program Administrators): Rhetorical Knowledge By the end of first year composition, students should o Focus on a purpose o Respond to the needs of different audiences o Respond appropriately to different kinds of rhetorical situations o Use conventions of format and structure appropriate to the rhetorical situation o Adopt appropriate voice, tone, and level of formality o Understand how genres shape reading and writing o Write in several genres Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing By the end of first year composition, students should o Use writing and reading for inquiry, learning, thinking, and communicating o Understand a writing assignment as a series of tasks, including finding, evaluating, analyzing, and synthesizing appropriate primary and secondary sources o o Integrate their own ideas with those of others Understand the relationships among language, knowledge, and power Processes of Composing By the end of first year composition, students should o Be aware that it usually takes multiple drafts to create and complete a successful text o Develop flexible strategies for generating, revising, editing, and proof-reading o Understand writing as an open process that permits writers to use later invention and rethinking to revise their work o Understand the collaborative and social aspects of writing processes o Learn to critique their own and others' works o Learn to balance the advantages of relying on others with the responsibility of doing their part o Use a variety of technologies to address a range of audiences Knowledge of Conventions By the end of first year composition, students should o Learn common formats for different kinds of texts o Develop knowledge of genre conventions ranging from structure and paragraphing to tone and mechanics o Practice appropriate means of documenting their work o Control such surface features as syntax, grammar, punctuation, and spelling. Composing in Electronic Environments By the end of first-year composition, students should: o Use electronic environments for drafting, reviewing, revising, editing, and sharing texts o Locate, evaluate, organize, and use research material collected from electronic sources, including scholarly library databases; other official databases (e.g., federal government databases); and informal electronic networks and internet sources o Understand and exploit the differences in the rhetorical strategies and in the affordances available for both print and electronic composing processes and texts REQUIRED TEXTS AND SUPPLIES Everyone’s an Author. By Andrea Lunsford et al. Norton, 2013 (print or e-text version) The DK Handbook. By Anne Frances Wysocki and Dennis A. Lynch. 3rd ed. Pearson Longman, 2013 (print or e-text version). Laptop computer as per classroom teacher’s instructions Access to the instructor’s website (wikipage: edaozyp.pbworks.com) to follow the daily class plans, homework assignments, and updates and changes in the schedule and assignments. Access to Blackboard to submit Discussion Board assignments, Major Assignment and to follow grade updates and announcements. Access to Clemson email address: Your instructor will be contacting you via your Clemson email. Use your Clemson email to contact your instructor. 2 GRADE DISTRUBITION & GRADING PROCEDURES You have the opportunity to earn 1000 points over the course of the semester. A (899.5-1000), B (799.5-899.4), C (699.5-799.4), D (599.5-699.4), F (599.4 and below). Assignment Participation/Attendance Discussion Boards Is Everyone An Author? Collaborative Writing with A.B. Composing in the Real World The Researched Argument Arguing in Multimedia Total Date Due Daily Weekly Points Possible 100 points (10%) Sep. 8 Sep. 29 Oct. 17 Nov. 10 Dec. 1-5 100 points (10%) 100 points (10%) 100 points (10%) 200 points (20%) 200 points (20%) 1000 points (100%) 200 points (20%) Participation and Attendance: 100 points (10% of Final Grade) It is essential for you not to miss any of our class meetings to complete all the course work properly. However, I understand the fact that you may have an emergency situation (personal problem, family problem, health problem, etc.) which is why you are allowed up to THREE (3) absences (excused or unexcused) without penalty. This does not mean that it is “okay” to miss our class meetings; it means that you need to keep these 3 chances for any kind of emergency that might happen in the future. If you reach the limit of absences by the drop date, I may drop you from the class for excessive absences. I also reserve the right to drop any of you who have missed half or more of the total number of classes before the last day to drop a class or withdraw from the University without final grades. I will determine what to do in case of extended illness or personal crisis on a case-by-case basis. However, excessive absences are an adequate reason for being failed in first-year composition, even if you have turned in all the required papers on time. If you use all of your excused absences, you will not receive unexcused absences above and beyond those excused absences. For example, if you miss ONE (1) class for athletics, you will have two additional absences to use at your discretion. Also note that an excused absence only earns you the right to make up missed course work. An excused absence does not grant additional absences. Your attendance also has an important impact on your participation grade. Your participation grade involves speaking up during our discussion times, reading quizzes, showing up prepared for class and teacher conferences, and so on. In other words, participation is measurable and represents your commitment to this course. This is why, whenever you miss a class meeting, you will loose 10 participation points (this rules does not count when you use one of your three absences without penalty; if you have more than 3 excused our unexcused absences, you will still be loosing 10 participation points; under any extraordinary circumstances, I will make a decision whether or not to waive this rule considering the nature of the situation you are in and your overall performance in our class). BE CAREFUL! 10 points may not sound like an important part of your overall grade, but if you keep missing classes, you will lose a lot of 10 points, which will affect your overall grade badly. Arriving late to class or leaving early is unprofessional and will be factored into the attendance policy. Each recorded instance will count as ONE (1) Tardy. Three tardies equal one absence. 3 Any of you will be marked absent if you arrive more than 10 minutes after the start of class. When you are considered absent due to three tardies, you will be using one of your three absences without penalty. If you already reach the limit of three absences, your ever absence due to three tardies will cause you to loose 10 participation points. Note: If I see your cell phone or the use of any electronic device for non-classroom related purposes (e.g. Facebook, or working assignments for other classes), I reserve the right to mark you as absent without direct notification regardless of how much time is left in the class period. Weekly Discussion Boards: 200 points (20% of Final Grade) Informal. Thoughtful. Critical. We will keep regular Discussion Boards of more informal writing than the five main projects. In total, you are going to complete 10 Discussion Board assignments. Each Discussion Board (on Blackboard) is due every Sunday by noon and worth 20 points. These posts encourage you to make both the process of writing and the act of critical reflection a habit. In these posts, you are expected to reflect on assigned readings for each week, the class discussions for each week, and make connections among the readings and class discussions we will be going over throughout the semester. You can use these posts as a chance to also make connections to current events/debates/discussions going on around our community (Clemson campus and city) or to even a broader spectrum (at state level, national level, or global level). You can either post 200-300 words response as your weekly Discussion Board or you can use other multi-modal tools (e.g. videos, posters, cartoons, images, visuals, etc.) that you think doing an effective job reflecting your thoughts/ideas over the assigned readings and in-class discussions. Since you are going to be posting your entries as Discussion Board posts, you have the freedom to response to your classmates. Use this chance to create an ongoing conversation, see and experience how authoring works at both individual and collaborative levels. REMEMBER TO BE RESPECTFUL TO DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES AND POINTS OF VIEWS AT ALL TIMES as you post responses to your classmates. ANY IMPROPER AND DISRESPECTFUL COMMENT TO ANYONE’S RESPONSE WILL BE REMOVED BY ME IMMEDIATELY AND WILL CAUSE YOU NOT TO RECEIVE CREDIT FOR YOUR WEEKLY ENTRY. YOU SHOULD NOT POST ANY COMMENTS/QUESTIONS ABOUT YOUR GRADE. YOU SHOULD NOT REQUEST GRADE INFORMATION FROM ME IN YOUR POSTS. THESE ARE THE ISSUES YOU SHOUD DISCUSS WITH ME IN PRIVATE. You also should be careful about the amount of entries you post by using multi-modal tools; these entries should not be more than half of the total weekly entries. MAJOR ASSIGNMENTS Please remember that all work must be formatted in MLA manuscript style and sources must be cited in MLA citation style, unless otherwise noted. Project One: Is Everyone An Author? This assignment enables you to develop proficiency in rhetorical analysis and argument by writing an essay that examines the idea that everyone’s an author. Find a persuasive text (which can be a combined visual/textual piece) where someone is authoring that you would not have considered before. How are they authoring? How is it different than what you have considered authoring before? Make an argument about how the different form is, in fact, authoring, and how it is different than other traditional forms of authoring. The aim of your argument is to support a thesis—using the tools of persuasion—concerning how the text you analyze offers a persuasive argument. This assignment should include two sources (the one you’re analyzing and another supporting source) in a Works Cited 4 page, formatted according to MLA standards, and your essay should be a minimum of 1000 words. By completing this project, you can earn maximum 100 points. 100 points (10% of Final Grade) Project Two: Collaborative Writing This assignment requires you to shift from rhetorical analysis of one text and author to broader cultural, social, or political issues and multiple modes of authoring. You will compose the essay collaboratively with another student, which is why you and your partner should work on a unifying topic/issue that you both are interested. Since many essays, especially scientific ones, are coauthored, by working on a topic with a fellow student, you will explore how coauthoring works and how one composes collaboratively. This assignment emphasizes rhetorical argument, visual design, research skills, including library sources, interviews, and other forms of academic inquiry. You should put forth an argument using both writing and images. Using your collaborative library/field research, write an argument that offers a new perspective on the topic at hand. You should use 6 supporting sources, formatted according to MLA standards, and your essay should be a minimum of 1000 words. Both students will receive the same project grade, so it is important for each student to share the work of research and writing equally. As part of this assignment, you will also put together an Annotated Bibliography, which will help you to explore the conversation/discussion surrounding your topic. Understanding the conversation surrounding your topic will help you to develop your argument and figure out how to enter this ongoing conversation over your topic. You Annotated Bibliography should include your 6 supporting sources and it should be formatted according to the MLA standards. This portion of project 2 is 50 points. Your final draft, in where you present your argument, is 50 points. By completing this project, you can earn maximum100 points. 100 points (10% of Final Grade) Project Three: Composing in the Real World Compose a workplace-oriented project proposal in which you can investigate your own areas of expertise. You can work on the same topic/issue that you have started working on in Project 2 or you can start researching over a new topic/issue that you want to explore. If you decide to work on the same topic/issue from Project 2, it is essential for you to find a different aspect/perspective that you can focus on since at this point, this is not a collaborative project; it is an individual project for you to start shaping the research you will be working on for the rest of the semester. You should form your own specific research question, explain how you plan to investigate this question throughout your research, and propose a working claim/solution to your question. You project proposal should be minimum 1000 words. For this assignment, you are asked to use 6 supporting sources to establish a strong understanding of the conversation surrounding your topic/issue. If you are working on the same topic/issue from project 2, you are allowed to incorporate maximum 2 sources you used in that project with your partner. In this way, you will find different sources and to be able to explore different sides and perspectives involved in the overall conversation and you can develop a unique research question of your own. 100 points (10% of Final Grade) Project Four: The Researched Argument This assignment requires you to practice your rhetorical knowledge and develop an extended researched argument using multimodal composition strategies. You will keep working on the same topic/issue that you started to explore in project 3. In this assignment, you will start answering your question by structuring your own argument. It is essential for you to decide where you stand in the 5 overall conversation surrounding your topic (joining the conversation) to present a strong, clear, and persuasive argument for your audience. Keep in mind that you are writing an argument to a general and diverse audience; so in order to be persuasive and effective it is necessary to support your claims with evidence from a variety of sources. Remember to incorporate possible objections to your argument, rebuttals to those objections, with a goal of helping to mediate opposing sides of an issue (rather than offering mere opinions, present multiple perspectives to show why yours make sense). The goal is not to achieve consensus, but to put forth a well-reasoned and well-supported argument that helps your audience move toward understanding, rather than conflict. Your essay should be at least 2000 words and have a Works Cited of at least 10 sources (formatted using MLA guidelines). 200 points (20% of Final Grade) Project Five: Arguing in Multimedia This assignment requires you to share your extended argument using multimodal composition strategies (visual, textual, audio, tactile). Examples of the form your multimodal argument can take are: op-ads, photo-essay, website, remix, collage/montage, video, podcast, mp3 file(s), blog, or other multi-media combinations. It will be important to plan, organize, and structure your argument according to effective argumentative and design principles you are learning in this course. In this way, you will be able to present your argument effectively via multi-modal communicational tools. Projects will be evaluated on the overall quality of the argument, the design quality, as well as the creativity and effort needed to produce a final product comparable to a 2000-word traditional essay. In addition to your presentations, evaluating your peers’ presentations is going to be part of your grade for this assignment. You are going to be given “Evaluation Sheet” by me to evaluate the performance of your peers as they present. By completing these forms, you will earn 50 points.[NOTE: This does NOT mean your project needs to include 2000 words, but it should represent an equal amount of work (research, designing, writing) as you did on Project Four.] 200 points (20% of Final Grade) UNIVERSITY & COURSE POLICIES Students with Disabilities It is university policy to provide, on a flexible and individualized basis, reasonable accommodations to students who have disabilities. Students are encouraged to contact Student Disability Services to discuss their individualized needs for accommodation. For more information visit http://www.clemson.edu/campus-life/campus-services/sds/index.html The Clemson University Title IX (Sexual Harassment) Statement: Clemson University is committed to a policy of equal opportunity for all persons and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender, pregnancy, national origin, age, disability, veteran’s status, genetic information or protected activity (e.g., opposition to prohibited discrimination or participation in any complaint process, etc.) in employment, educational programs and activities, admissions and financial aid. This includes a prohibition against sexual harassment and sexual violence as mandated by Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. This policy is located at http://www.clemson.edu/campus-life/campus-services/access/title-ix/. Mr. Jerry Knighton is the Clemson University Title IX Coordinator and is also the Director of Access and Equity. His office is located at 111 Holtzendorrf Hall, 864.656.3181 (voice) or 864.565.0899 (TDD). In-class Conduct In general, treat each other and the instructor with respect and follow standards of common 6 Courtesy. Please see Clemson University “Classroom Behavior” policy to understand what our university expects from you: http://www.clemson.edu/campus-life/campus-services/studentconduct/classroom-behavior.html In addition to these university rules, I also have my own expectations and “do’s” and “don’ts”: This course requires the use of computer technologies in and out of class. Students are expected to bring their laptops to class with batteries fully charged. While some class time is provided for computer literacy instruction, the instructor on an individual basis will either provide additional help or recommend other support for advanced applications. Please turn off all cell phones or other electronic communication devices and place them out of sight (in a bag, purse, pocket) while in class. You may think quietly texting someone is not distracting to the instructor or fellow students, but it is. Do not use your time in English 1030 to work on assignments for other classes. Computers are to be used for English 1030 work only. No shopping, no Facebook, etc. Those who consistently violate this policy will be asked to leave. You will also be counted absent and lose credit for any in-class work that day. Do not talk or make excessive noise while the instructor or another student is speaking to the class as a whole. (This includes typing on the keyboard or clicking the mouse.) When group work is assigned in class, you must work in a group, not as an individual. During group work time, please stay on task and work cooperatively with other group members. BE PUNCTUAL. Attendance will be recorded for each class meeting. COME TO CLASS PREPARED. Your input is valuable. Read all assigned readings, complete all assigned work, and come to class prepared to write and talk about the day’s topics, readings, and writings. BE RESPECTFUL: Treat your peers and me with respect, even if our worldviews, values, and opinions are wildly different from yours. Please be tolerant and respectful of others. COMMUNICATE WITH ME. If there is something going on in your life that is affecting your work, please let me know as soon as possible. If you do not understand a concept or assignment, or if you are having trouble completing an assignment, please let me know so I can work with you to help you. MEET DEADLINES. It is your responsibility to turn in all of your assignments at the designated time and date. Quizzes I may elect to give quizzes on the readings and class discussions/lectures if I feel that all students are not completing the assigned work satisfactorily. The best way to avoid quizzes is to complete the assignments and participate in the class discussions. Office Hours Please note my regular office hours above. You also can arrange to see me at other times that are mutually convenient. Office hours belong to you just as much as our class time. Don’t hesitate to take advantage of 7 my availability and the help I am ready to offer. If you need to contact me outside of class time or office hours, it is best to communicate with me by email. Due Dates/Late Work/Extensions I will not accept late weekly Discussion Boards or missed in-class work. These weekly and daily assignments are directly related to your participation and attendance in class. All the major assignments are due within the first five minutes of class on the due date, unless otherwise specified. However, if there is a crisis that prevents you from meeting a deadline of any major project, you can request an extension granted in writing at least 24 hours before the due date- to turn the work in late without a penalty. The approval of an extension is entirely at my discretion and will depend on the reason for your absence, your record of completion of work, and attendance. If I realize that you miss a lot of classes, weekly entries, inclass work, and you do not turn any draft of the upcoming major project in, I will not give an extension because It will be obvious that you need extra time because of your laziness. All extensions must be confirmed by email. Due dates are already posted – please note them in your calendar and plan ahead. Turning in a major assignment late without a valid excuse will negatively affect your grade. If a paper is turned in after the due date, its lateness will be taken into consideration when assessing the grade. After the due date, you lose 10 points for every day you miss to submit your project. All work may be turned in early for evaluation and/or pre-planned absences. Periodically, the instructor might revise the tentative course schedule; students are responsible for documenting any formally announced changes in the schedule. Grading Policy Your major assignments will receive individual grades, as well as individual attention from your classmates and me. These various assignments will be assigned a separate grade. These assignments help to track your progress as we move through the semester. They indicate your willingness to be a part of the course, and to collaborate with others in the class. As with any course, you will get out of it what you put into it. Your goal is to demonstrate your development toward mastery of the five learning outcomes for this course. These goals will be discussed throughout the course. While each writing situation may call for some adjustment in the overall criteria based on the rhetorical situation, the following descriptive rubric is consistent with the values of first-year composition at Clemson and describe very general indicators that both you and your instructor may take into consideration when assessing your work and progress in the course. While the final interpretation and assessment of your grade remains the responsibility of your teacher, the work that earns the grade falls entirely to you the student. A: Represents excellent participation in all course activities (including attendance and promptness); all assigned work completed on time, with very high quality in all work produced for the course. Evidence of significant and sustained development across the five learning outcomes. Responds fully to topic and thoroughly addresses issues. Shows unusual or substantial depth and complexity of thought, including strong analysis. Demonstrates clarity, focus, organization, and unity throughout. Thoroughly investigates the topic; shows full development with supporting detail. Documents ideas, information, and questions according to convention. Demonstrates superior control of diction, shows appropriate variety of sentences, and incorporates smooth, well-integrated transitions. Evidences mastery of mechanical and technical aspects of writing. B: Represents good participation in all course activities (including attendance and promptness); all assigned work completed on time, with consistently high quality in course work. Evidence of marked and above average development across the five learning outcomes. 8 Clearly and directly responds to topic and to issues. Shows depth and complexity of thought; investigates issues and addresses basic counterarguments. Demonstrates effective organization and adequate development. Incorporates a wide range of sources; uses plenty of detail to support ideas and conclusions. Documents sources correctly, with occasional minor errors. Contains only minor mechanical errors and exhibits no pattern of errors. C: Represents average participation in all course activities; all assigned work completed, with generally good quality overall in course work. Evidence of some development across the five learning outcomes. Addresses question or topic and explores issues but draws no clear conclusion. Shows clarity of thought and organization but fails to show sufficient complexity or depth of thought. Uses only a few basic sources. Attempts to include adequate detail and development but may leave out obvious counterarguments. Attempts to document correctly. Demonstrates competence in mechanics; avoids major errors. D: Represents weak and uneven participation in course activities; some gaps in assigned work completed, with inconsistent quality in course work. Evidence of development across the five learning outcomes is partial or unclear. Consistently strays from topic; is oblique or irrelevant. Reflects simplistic, reductive, or stereotypical thinking; relies heavily on generalization; shows little evidence of research. Shows poor or confusing organization; is too short. Contains garbled paraphrases; words or passages are nearly plagiarized. Documentation is careless, incorrect, or missing in some cases. Exhibits consistent flaws in language, syntax, or mechanics. Exhibits inadequate research or reading. F: Represents minimal participation in course activities; serious gaps in assigned work completed, or very low quality in course work. Evidence of development is not available. Distorts topic or assignment; fails to address assignment; fails to establish topic. Provides no development. Contains obvious or deliberate plagiarism; lacks documentation of some or all sources. Displays gross technical or mechanical incompetence and repetitive errors. Exhibits inadequate research or reading. Plagiarism and Academic Dishonesty The following is Clemson’s official statement on “Academic Integrity”: “As members of the Clemson University community, we have inherited Thomas Green Clemson’s vision of this institution as a 'high seminary of learning.’ Fundamental to this vision is a mutual commitment to truthfulness, honor, and responsibility, without which we cannot earn the trust and respect of others. Furthermore, we recognize that academic dishonesty detracts from the value of a Clemson degree. Therefore, we shall not tolerate lying, cheating, or stealing in any form.” A simple definition of plagiarism—one that we will expand upon this semester—is when someone presents another person’s words, visuals, or ideas as his/her own. The instructor will deal with plagiarism on a case-by-case basis. The most serious offense within this category occurs when a student copies text from the Internet or from a collective file. This type of academic dishonesty is a serious offense that will result in a failing grade for the course as well as the filing of a formal report to the university. See the Clemson site below for information about Academic Integrity and procedures regarding the violation of Clemson policies on scholastic dishonesty: 9 http://www.clemson.edu/academics/academic-integrity/ Grade Protests A student wishing to protest a final course grade must first try to resolve any disagreement with the instructor. If unable to reach a resolution, the student may follow the procedures listed under "Academic Grievance Committee." Grievances must be filed within 90 calendar days (exclusive of summer vacation) from the date printed on the grade report. Dropping Classwork A subject dropped after the first two weeks of classwork and prior to the last seven weeks during the fall and spring semesters is recorded as W-Withdrew. Proportionate time periods apply during summer sessions. The Writing Center The Writing Center is a free tutoring service available to the entire student body, regardless of major or academic standing. It provides students opportunities to discuss questions or problems related to academic writing—from generating a topic and thesis to organizing a draft and integrating appropriate citations. The Writing Center’s goal is to help Clemson students become confident and effective writers. As an English 103 student, you should feel free to utilize the Writing Center to receive additional help or feedback on any course assignments or projects. You can make an appointment with a tutor by visiting the Writing Center’s website (http://www.clemson.edu/centers-institutes/writing/), calling them at 864-656-3280, or simply stopping by. SYLLABUS ITINERARY (subject to change: check my wikipage daily/weekly for changes and updates) [Assignments listed are due by the next class period unless noted otherwise] Notes: Aug. 20: Classes Begin | Aug. 26: Last day to register or add a class | Sept. 2: Last day to drop or withdraw from the University without a W (withdraw) grade In Class First day of classes Discuss: Introduction. What is Rhetoric? Introduce Project 1. Homework Read Introduction DB1 is due on BB. Read Chapter 1. Discuss Chapter 1. Consider how rhetoric is everywhere. Discuss visual rhetoric. Discuss ethos and write a short Academic Integrity Pledge to turn in during class. Discuss Chapter 2: Consider different rhetorical situations. Read Chapter 2 Friday, August 29 Discuss Chapter 3: Consider different writing processes. How do you write? Where do you write? What helps, and what doesn't. Practice different scenarios. Monday, September 1 Tomorrow is the last day to drop or withdraw from the University without a W (withdraw) grade) DB2: Consider how you have composed in the past and what you hope to learn more of in this class. Read Chapter 16 and Baron's "Should Everybody Write?" (705). First draft due for peer-review. Bring 2 hard copies. Read "Nation Shudders at Block of Text" (881). Wednesday, August 20 Friday, August 22 Monday, August 25 Wednesday, August 27 Read Chapter 3 10 Wednesday, September 3 Friday, September 5 Monday, September 8 Wednesday, September 10 Friday, September 12 Monday, September 15 Wednesday, September 17 Friday, September 19 Monday, September 22 Wednesday, September 24 Friday, September 26 Discuss: What is Baron's argument? Is he right? What is difficult about writing for individuals and as a society? Start searching for essays. Discuss "Nation Shudders at Block of Text" (881). And effective peer-review strategies. Peer-review first drafts. Sign up for Conference meetings. Conferences at Strode 102A. Project One DUE. Introduce Project Two. Form groups. Look at Chapter 4 in class. Discuss collaborative authoring. Get into small groups. Discuss Chapter 4: collaborative authoring. Get in your groups to explore your topic by using these techniques. :Mindmapping. Brainstorming. Freewriting. Discuss chapter 15. How can we enter an ongoing conversation collaboratively? Discuss some collaborative authoring tolls. Discuss collaborative writing examples like Wikipedia. Discuss Chapters 16 and 27. Lib. Day. Start your collaborative research and find at 2 sources with your partner. Discuss Chapters 18 and 20. Start evaluating your sources with your partner. Discuss MLA: resources. A.B. peer-review. A.B. is due on BB before class. Start planning/outlining the paper with your partner. Go over Bartlett and Steele, "Monsanto's Harvest of Fear" (683), a rare coauthored essay. Sign up for Conference meetings. Conference meetings at Strode 102A. Revise your drafts. Come prepared to Conference meetings. Project One is due before class on BB. Read Chapter 4. Read Chapter 15. DB 3 is due on BB. Read Chapters 16 and 17. Read Chapters 18 and 20. Keep researching. In addition to the 2 sources, find 2 more sources individually and bring to the class. Bring DK book to the class. Work on your A.B. Draft for peer-review. DB 4 is due on BB. Keep working on your draft with your partner. A.B. is due before class. Keep working on your draft with your partner. Come prepared to the Conference meetings. Work on your drafts for peer-review. Peer-review day. Project 2 is due on BB before class. Monday, September 29 Project 2 DUE. Introduce Project 3 Read Chapters 5 and 6. Wednesday, October 1 Discuss Chapters 5 (various forms of rhetoric) and Chapter 6 (how do we use various forms of rhetoric in real life) Look at examples of real life writing. Discuss the real world, work, and how this class is relevant to everything else you will ever do. Discuss Chapter 19. Brainstorming. Discuss Chapters 21 and 22. Planning. Read Honoré, "Work is a Blessing." (79) Friday, October 3 Monday, October 6 Wednesday, October 8 DB5 (practicing real life writing by using different genres) is due on BB. Read Chapter 19 Read Chapters 21 and 22. Start working on composing your first draft. 11 Friday, October 9 Drafting Project 3. Monday, October 13 Peer-review. Wednesday, October 15 Conference meetings at Strode 102A. Friday, October 17 Project 3 is due on BB before class. Introduce Project 4. Discuss Chapters 7 and 13: How to make good arguments? Look at good examples and analyze how they made successful arguments Discuss Chapter 14: explore which strategies you may use for project 4. Read Chapters 7 and 13. Exploring more about how to make effective arguments. Look at examples. Discuss Chapters 26 and 27: Importance of style, writing in an academic context. Discuss Chapter 28: talk about fallacies. Importance of proper language use and design. Drafting Project 4. DB8 is due on BB before leaving the class. Fall Break DB7 is due on BB. Read Chapters 26 and 27. First Draft of Project 4 is due for peerreview. Sign up for Conference meetings. Conference Meetings at 102A Strode. Revise your draft. Come prepared to our Conference Meetings. Project 4 is due on BB before class. Project 4 is due on BB before class. Introduce Project 5. Discuss Visual Rhetoric and Multimodal tools. Discuss Pinker and Carr. Look at effective multimodal presentation examples. Discuss Ebert and Lehrer. Explore different tools to apply for Project 5. Discuss Truss. Explore different tools to apply for Project 5. Working on Presentations. Work on Presentations. Discuss effective strategies to present. Sign up for days to present. Thanksgiving break Read the article you were provided (see BB). Monday, October 20 Wednesday, October 22 Friday, October 24 Monday, October 27 Wednesday, October 29 Friday, October 31 Monday, November 3 Wednesday, November 5 Friday, November 7 Monday, November 10 Wednesday, November 12 Friday, November 14 Monday, November 17 Wednesday, November 19 Friday, November 21 Monday, November 24 Wednesday, November 26 Friday, November 28 DB6 is due on BB. Keep working on your drafts for peer-review. Revising your drafts. Come prepared to our Conference meetings. Project 3 is due on BB before class. Read Chapter 14 Read Chapter 28. Explore 29, 30, 31. Start planning/outlining Project 4. Keep working on your drafts. Read Pinker "Mind over Mass Media" (893) Read Carr "Flame and Filament" (741) DB 9 is due on BB. Read Ebert "Why I Hate 3D" (755) and Read Leher, "We, Robots" (835) Read Truss, "The Joy of Texting" (939) Start working your presentations. DB 10 is due on BB. Project 5 is due in class. Notes: Dec. 8-12: Exams | Dec. 15: (9am) deadline to submit candidate final grades | Dec. 17: (9am) deadline for all grades (access grades via TigerWeb) Thanksgiving break 12 Monday, December 1 Project Five Due. Present research Wednesday, December 3 Present research Friday, December 5 Last Day of Class! Reflections. Portfolios due. Course Evaluations. Look at Chapter 32: Assembling a Portfolio. Gather your work into one place: such as on your blog or on a CD. 13