Syllabus for English 104-13
College Writing and Rhetoric
Department of English, Foreign Languages, and Journalism
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
English 104-13 -- College Writing and Rhetoric
Instructor- Kathy Miller
Fall 2007
T-TH 12:30-1:50pm, Murphy Hall 109
Email: mlrfam@yahoo.com or millerk@wprii.k12.mo.us
Required Text:
*Axelrod, RiseB.
Required Materials:
*Computer
disks for revising and saving work.
*Notebook for notes, class work,
journal entries, etc.
*Folder(s) to keep all writing and
portfolio work.
Course Goals:
·
Read and respond to various texts, such as textbook
readings, media such as television, movies, theatre, advertising and our peers’
work.
·
Read and study written texts to improve our own
writing.
·
Summarize, analyze and evaluate texts.
·
Understand, find, shape, address and write arguments.
·
Engage in meaningful journal writing and
collaborative writing.
·
Revise our written work.
·
Participate in peer revision groups.
·
The
process of reading is not a half sleep, but in highest sense an exercise, a
gymnast’s struggle; that the reader is to do something for himself, must be on
the alert, must himself or herself construct indeed the poem, argument,
history, metaphysical essay-the text furnishing the hints, the clue, the start
or frame-work.
Walt
Whitman
For common objectives/means and institutional competencies
for ENG 104, also refer to the English department website at http://www.missouriwestern.edu/eflj/eng104.asp
Methods of Instruction:
Methods of instruction include textbook, lectures, class
discussions, group work, presentations, informal writing assignments, and
formal writing assignments. Students
will be expected to participate in peer revision group and in-class writing
exercises.
Journals:
You will write (informal) daily journal entries/responses to
most of your assigned readings. These
entries will be your explanations of and reactions to the readings. Each journal entry will consist of both
summary and response/analysis and be, on average, one full page. The collection dates will be announced one
class period in advance. Journal entries will be graded on content and will be
part of your grade for the course.
Peer Revision Group:
Prior to submitting your formal writing assignments, you will be
required to participate in peer revision groups in which you will bring in
word-processed copies of your rough draft to share with your group and receive
feedback from your group in order to help you strengthen and revise your own
written work. This is a required
activity and will be part of your grade for the course. If you miss a class that has a scheduled peer
revision you will NOT be able to make up the assignment.
Policies:
Attendance and Class Preparation/Participation:
In order to improve student learning and to achieve
compliance with federal financial aid policies, Western has a mandatory
attendance policy for all 100-level courses.
A student will be given an excused absence when acting as an official
representative of the university, provided the student gives prior
written verification from the faculty/staff supervisor of the event. A student will also be given an excused
absence if he or she can provide documentation and prove that the absence was
unavoidable. Please feel free to speak
to me about any extenuating circumstances.
All other absences will be deemed unexcused. The maximum number of unexcused absences
allowed before the midterm report, October 18, for this class is 3. Thus, when you have 4 you will be reported to
the Registrar’s Office, who will automatically withdraw you from this
class. The Financial Aid Office will
reduce financial aid as appropriate. If
you exceed the allowed absences after midterm, your final grade will be
affected.
Students are expected to attend every scheduled class
meeting and arrive on time. Arriving to
class late is disruptive. As a result,
chronic lateness will likely affect your final grade. Any student who is more than 10 minutes late
is absent. You are welcome to stay and
learn, but you will receive an absentee for the class. Students are also expected to come prepared
to every class meeting and participate in class discussion for this is the only
we can all share ideas, ask questions and learn.
Late work:
All writing assignments are due at the beginning of the
class period on the due date. I will not
accept late papers. If you are not in class on the due date you are still
responsible for submitting your assignment on time. Late journals and in-class writing
assignments will not be accepted. If you
miss class you miss the points for any in-class work.
Revision:
All formal, graded writing assignments can be revised and
resubmitted for a “new” grade. You will
have two weeks from the date the paper is returned in class to revise and
resubmit each paper. This is only for
formal writing assignments. It is
required that your original, graded essay accompanies your revised essay. Revision is important because each paper
covers important skills that you will need to know for the next paper.
Grading Policy:
Your grade will be determined on formal papers, journal
entries, quizzes and the final examination.
Please note that smaller assignments and class preparation/participation
are very important and do affect your grade.
The components of your grade in this course are:
Formal writing assignments.
Paper
0ne : 100pts
Paper
Two : 100pt
Paper
Three: 100pts
Paper
Four : 150pts.
Journal
Entries: 100pts.
Quizzes:
50pts.
Final
Exam: 100pts
Students with Disabilities:
Anyone who has a disability that prevents the fullest
expression of his or her potential to succeed in this course must notify me as
soon as possible so that we can discuss class requirements and
accommodations. You must also contact
Michael Ritter, Special Needs Coordinator, and submit all necessary
documentation to his office.
Academic Honesty Policy:
Academic honesty is required in all academic endeavors. Violations of academic honesty include any
instance of plagiarism, cheating, seeking credit for another’s work, and
falsifying documents of academic records or any other fraudulent classroom
activity. Cheating and plagiarism are
not acceptable. You will receive a grade
of F (0 points) for any paper/assignment /exam that shows evidence of cheating
and /or plagiarism. You have the burden
of proving that a paper/assignment/exam showing evidence of cheating and/or
plagiarism has been written by you. You
should keep thorough evidence of your writing processes for all papers so that
you can meet this burden of proof. If
you plagiarize a paper, you forfeit the right to revise that paper; if you
cheat on an exam, you will not be allowed to retake the exam. Violations of academic honesty will be
reported to the Provost of the designated representation on the Academic
Honesty Violation Report Forms. Please
see the 2006-08 Student Handbook and Calendar on page 21 for specific
activities identified as violations of this policy and the student due process
procedure. This handbook is also
available on line at http://www.missouriwestern.edu/handbook/index.pdf.
Miscellaneous:
Civility and Cooperation:
Please
remember to turn off cell phones and pages.
Please note that you must complete all writing assignments
in order to pass this course. In
addition, admission into ENG 108 requires a “C” or higher in ENG 104. All papers and work must be kept on disks.
Please feel free to come see me if you have any problems or
questions.
Tentative outline of assignments
Aug 28
Intro to
class
Syllabus
Writing
Autobiography
Aug 30
Intro: Why Writing is Important-Group Response
Collaborative
Activity p. 18
Assignment
to work towards: Paper 1 Page 43
Sept 4
Read Pages
22-37 in
Includes
essays by the following: Dillard, Wolf,
Bragg
Choose the
essay you like the best and write a 1 page analysis of it to be turned in.
Journals to
generate ideas for paper 1.
Sept 6
Read “Narrating”
pages 625-633
Read
“Describing” pages 639-649
Do exercise
15.1 page 640 to turn in. Look at exercise 15.3 to help you be more specific
Have the
event you are writing about decided on; in class writing
Sept 11
Independent
work on Rough Draft
Sept 13
Rough draft
due
We will be
going through a series of editing strategies together. You MUST have your paper
to do these activities.
Sept18
Peer
Revision: Have 4 copies of your paper to
share with peers.
Sept 20
PAPER # 1 DUE
Sept 20
(continued)
Begin
discussion of “Arguing a Position” p. 297
Read pages
276-279. In class summary.
In class
collaborative exercise
Sept 25
Read pages
276-295. Pay special attention to the 3
essays contained in these pages.
Do a
dialectical journal for each essay to turn in.
Journaling
for ideas on a controversial essaty
Sept 27
Skim
chapter 19 “Arguing” p. 670-685
MLA
documentation workshop
Use in
class article to practice documenting
Oct 2
“Read” Time magazine photo essays to generate
ideas.
Finalize
idea for essay on controversial issue
In class
writing
Oct 4
Library
Tour Day
Oct 9
Writing
Workshop day. Bring in articles from research to incorporate into paper.
October 11
Rough Draft
Due
Peer
Revision
Oct 16
PAPER #2 DUE
Read
“Justifying an Evaluation” pages 402-414
Preview
assignment page 425
Oct 18
Journal and
Practice Evaluating Video
To be
continued Midterm time