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As a student you may experience a range of issues that can cause barriers to learning, such as strained relationships, increased anxiety, alcohol/drug problems, feeling down, difficulty concentrating and/or lack of motivation. These mental health concerns or stressful events may lead to diminished academic performance or reduce a student's ability to participate in daily activities. Amarillo College offers services to assist you with addressing these and other concerns you may be experiencing. If you or someone you know are suffering from any of the aforementioned conditions, you can learn more about the broad range of confidential mental health services available on campus by calling the AC Counseling Center at 806-371-5900. The AC Counseling Center website is https://www.actx.edu/counseling/ . Also, if you are in need of social services (affordable housing, utilities, transportation, food, clothing, childcare, medical/dental/vision, legal), please call the AC Advocacy & Resource Center at 806-371-5439. The AC Advocacy & Resource Center website is https://www.actx.edu/arc
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ENGL-0302-001 Basic Grammar and Writing II
RDNG 0301 and ENGL 0301-minimum grade of C or acceptable Accuplacer reading and writing test scores or equivalent on a state-approved alternative test
A review of skills taught in ENGL 0301. Practice in writing compound and complex sentences; mastering subject-verb agreement and pronoun usage; using all punctuation marks; and overcoming major spelling problems. Emphasis on paragraph skills taught in ENGL 0301 and short essays in standard American English.
Student Resources Student Resources Website
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(3 sem hrs; 3 lec, 1 lab)
On Campus Course
\ The Writers World, 2nd ed. By Lynne Gaetz and Suneeti Phadke, Prentice Hall, 2012.
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\ Jump/Flash/USB drive if you want to save your computer work in a writing or computer lab.
\ Development of fundamental writing skills such as idea generation, organization, style, utilization of standard English, and revision. A review of skills taught in English 0301: Basic Grammar and Writing I. Practice in writing compound and complex sentences; mastering subject-verb agreement and pronoun usage; using all punctuation marks; and overcoming major spelling problems. Emphasis on paragraph skills taught in ENGL 0301 and short essays in standard American English.
\\ English 0302 is designed for students with some writing experience. This course includes instruction in the writing process, organizing an essay, editorial skills, critical reading, and a review of how to recognize and correct major errors in mechanics and grammar in their own writing.
\\ Students will be able to:
\\ · Analyze and write essays (500-750 words) utilizing different rhetorical modes
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· Evaluate written ex
\ · Understand that writing is a process that includes planning, organizing, composing, revising, and editing
\\ · Compose complete and grammatically correct sentences
\\ · Generate an appropriate thesis statement and develop major supporting points in a reasonable and logical manner
\\ · Apply standard American English syntax, usage, and mechanics in editing and writing essays.
\\ · Utilize basic computer technology including such things as composing a document in MLA style with word processor, communicating using email, and learning about the college’s learning management system.
In order to receive your AC Connect Email, you must log in through AC Connect at https://acconnect.actx.edu .
If you are an active staff or faculty member according to Human Resources, use "Exchange". All other students, use "AC Connect (Google) Email".
\ All rules and regulations set forth in the “Student Code of Conduct” section in the current edition of the Student’s Rights and Responsibilities publicationwill be followed in this course. It is the student’s responsibility to obtain a copy of the handbook from the Dean of Student Services Office and to become familiar with the contents and provisions of the college’s policies, rules, and regulations concerning student conduct.
\\ The class environment is based upon a simple principle: the instructor commits to treat you with respect, and you commit to treat each other and the instructor with respect. Everyone is equally responsible for maintaining a respectful dialogue and attitude. Disrespectful behavior towards anyone will not be tolerated in this class.
\ LATE WORK:
\\ All work is due on the date assigned. No assignment or weekly work (including reading quizzes) will be accepted late.
\\ You are allowed ONE late major assignment (essay). This does not include the midterm essay or the final exam essay. The late essay will be penalized 10 points per day (includes weekend) that it is late. An essay more than three days late will NOT be accepted. Late minor assignments will NOT be accepted. Your three lowest MINOR (daily) grades are dropped.
\\ An essay is late if it is NOT turned in at the exact time that it is due. If your essay is due at the beginning of class and you come to class late, even five minutes late, the essay is late.
\\ If there is considerable difference in quality and style between out-of-class writings and in-class writings, in-class writing grades will take precedence.
\\ PLEASE NOTE THAT ESSAY GRADES MAKE UP THE MAJOR PORTION OF YOUR GRADE (75% for out-of-class essays; 10% for mid-term timed essay; 10% for final essay (final exam)). Therefore, it is CRITICAL that you TURN IN ALL ESSAYS. You must follow all instructions for essay assignments. For example, every essay will have a minimum word count requirement; if that minimum word count is not met, the essay will receive a grade of 0. Also, on most essay assignments, I will provide a list of topics; you must select one of those topics; if you write on a topic that I have not listed on the assignment and you have not gotten permission from me ahead of time to select another topic, your essay grade will be a 0.
\\ GRADING CRITERA/GRADE SCALE AND PROGRESSING TO THE NEXT CLASS:
\\ Final grades will be determined by quizzes, exercises, and successful completion of all assigned writing and reading projects. In order to pass this class, students must turn in all of their work and score an average of 70 or better for the course. Grades will be based on the following system:
\\ A 90-100= high achievement
\\ B 80-89= above average achievement
\\ C 70-79= satisfactory achievement
\\ D 60-69= unsatisfactory achievement
\\ F 0-59= unacceptable
\\ PROGRESSING TO THE NEXT CLASS:
\\ A student who does not earn a "C" or above in English 0302 must re-enroll in the course. To receive credit for English 0302, students must have a 70 average or above, according to the following scale:
\\ 75% of your grade = written assignments
\\ 5% of your grade = daily work (grammar assignments & homework)
\\ 10% of your grade = midterm written timed exam
\\ 10% of your grade = final written timed exam, argumentative essay
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\ Students are expected to attend all classes. Because of the collaborative nature of this course and the fact that success in this course depends on continuous practice and constant direction from the instructor, missing even one class can interfere with a student’s grade.
\\ Regular attendance is necessary for satisfactory achievement. Therefore, it is the responsibility of the student to attend class. Students are expected to be in class on time.
\\ Students must sign an attendance roll each day, or they will be considered absent. If a student comes to class after the roll is passed around, it is the student’s responsibility to ask the instructor to change an absence to a tardy.
\ COURSE CALENDAR (tentative)
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\ DATE \ | \
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\ ASSIGNMENTS \ | \
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\ Week 1: \\ Jan. 16 – Jan. 18 \ | \
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\ Monday, January 16: holiday \\ January 18: Go over course syllabus and course policy; sign course contract. \ | \
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\ Week 2: \\ Jan. 23 – Jan. 25 \ | \
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\ Mon. Meet in lab (Ordway 104) for diagnostic writing. \\ Wed: Read Chapters 1 and 34 in textbook; quiz over reading \ | \
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\ Week 3: \\ Jan. 30 – Feb. 1 \ | \
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\ Chapters 2 and 33 in textbook. \ | \
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\ Week 4: \\ Feb. 6 – Feb. 8 \ | \
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\ Chapters 8, 20, and 28 in textbook. Description Essay assigned. Description Essay due at beginning of class on Monday, February 20. \ | \
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\ Week 5: \\ Feb. 13 – Feb. 15 \ | \
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\ Chapters 3, 23, and 29 in textbook. \ | \
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\ Week 6: \\ Feb. 20 – Feb. 22 \ | \
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\ Chapters 7 and 24. Narration Essay assigned. Narration essay due at beginning of class on Monday, March 5. \ | \
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\ Week 7: \\ Feb. 27 – Feb. 29 \ | \
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\ Chapter 4 and 27 in textbook. \ | \
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\ Week 8: \\ March 5 – March 7 \ | \
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\ Chapters 5, 12, and 21 in textbook. Comparison/Contrast essay assigned. Comparison/Contrast essay due at beginning of class on Monday, March 19. \ | \
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\ Week 9: \\ March 12 – March 14 \ | \
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\ SPRING BREAK \\ \ | \
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\ Week 10: \\ March 19 – March 21 \ | \
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\ Midterm Grade Report. Midterm timed essay. \\ \ | \
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\ Week 11: \\ March 26 – March 28 \ | \
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\ Chapters 13, 22, and 25in textbook. Cause/Effect essay assigned. Cause/effect essay due at beginning of class on Monday, April 2. \ | \
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\ Week 12: \\ April 2 – April 4 \ | \
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\ Chapters 26, and 32 in textbook. \ | \
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\ Week 13: \\ April 9 – April 11 \ | \
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\ Chapters 10,30, and 31 in textbook. Definition essay assigned. Definition essay due at beginning of class on Monday, April 23. \\ \ | \
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\ Week 14: \\ April 16 – April 18 \ | \
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\ Chapter 35. Thursday, April 19 is the last day to withdraw. \ | \
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\ Week 15: \\ April 23 – April 25 \ | \
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\ Chapters 14 and 36 in textbook. Argument essay assigned. Argument essay due by noon on Friday, May 4. \ | \
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\ Week 16: \\ April 30 – May 2 \ | \
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\ Chapters 37 and 38. \ | \
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\ Week 17: \\ May 7 – May 11 \ | \
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\ Final Exam Week. Your timed final exam date and time will be announced. \ | \
\ MIDTERM GRADE NOTICIFICATION:
\\ At midterm, instructors will send a grade notice to students whose grades are under 70. This form will let students know at midterm that they are not passing and why. It will give students an opportunity to talk to their instructors and to seek help to improve their grades.
\\ COMPUTERS:
\\ Computers are available in the English Writing Labs (Ordway 101 and 104) for individual student use for word processing and Internet work. Students will do some writing on computers as a part of this class. Students will need a USB (jump or flash) drive if they want to save their work. This class also uses AC Online.
\\ WITHDRAWING FROM A CLASS:
\\ It is the responsibility of the student to officially drop or withdraw from a course. Failure to withdraw may result in a grade of “F” for the course. A grade of “W” will be given for student-initiated withdrawals that are submitted on or before the withdrawal deadline: April 19, 2012. Students may withdraw via WebAdvisor, by meeting with their academic advisor, by meeting with Advising Department staff or at any of the Assistance Center counters. Withdrawal requests will not be accepted by telephone.
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The Texas Education Code stipulates that students attending Texas institutions of higher education for the first time in fall 2007 and later may not withdraw from more than six courses during their academic career, including courses from which transfer students have withdrawn at other Texas institutions of higher education. There are certain exceptions to this policy, and petitions for exceptions should be directed to the Registrar.
\ If during the semester you consider dropping this class, please check with the instructor first for an alternate plan that protects your investment in this course and gives you an opportunity to complete it. Remember that the deadline for drops this semester is April 19, 2012. Withdrawing early from a class could affect scholarship or financial aid monies. Check with a counselor or advisor before you withdraw from any class.
\\ TUTORING:
\\ Free tutoring is available through two sources: The Writers’ Corner and Smarthinking. The Writers’ Corner is on the first floor of Ordway Hall in room 102. It is suggested that you make an appointment at the Writers’ Corner, but you can also drop by for tutoring. The Writers’ Corner is open Monday – Thursday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. You can call for an appointment at (806) 345-5580.
\\ In addition, AC subscribes to Smarthinking, an on-line tutoring service you may use free for 10 hours each semester. This service is available nights and weekends. Access instructions are located in AC Online.
\\ TUTORING POLICY:
\\ This is the tutoring policy for this class. When you turn in your first paper, you may receive a grade of NG. This means that the paper’s grade would be below 70. When you receive an NG as a grade, this means that you have a chance to make a passing grade. I will return a copy of the paper to you with a tutoring form for you to take to the tutoring center, The Writers’ Corner. You will take the paper and meet with a tutor. You will have the tutor sign the tutoring form. You will then have one class period to rewrite the paper with the advice you received from the tutor. You will turn back in the original NG paper, the revised paper, and the signed tutoring form. The revised paper will then be graded. If you decide to not take the NG paper to the tutoring center and turn in a revised copy, then the original NG grade will turn into a 0. (You must see a tutor in the Writers’ Corner to have the tutoring form signed. Smarthinking will not be accepted to remove a NG grade.) The NG policy applies to your first essay.
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\\ FEED BACK:
\\ Email is the fastest way to receive a response back from me. You may use my regular work email or email me through AC Online. I do not use Facebook, Twitter, or MySpace for my classes.
\\ Remember that when you have questions that you need to contact me well before an assignment is due. For example, 11 p.m. may be too late to hear from me when a project is due at midnight or the next morning. You might not get an answer to your communication until the next day.
\\ ENGLISH DEPARTMENT PLAGIARISM POLICY (Revised Jan. 2009):
\\ Plagiarism:
\\ According to the Amarillo College Student Code of Conduct, plagiarism is the “appropriating, buying, receiving as a gift, or obtaining by any means another’s work and the unacknowledged submission or incorporation of it in one’s own written work.”
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Misdocumented Plagiarism:
\ 1. Using someone else’s exact words that are quoted but not cited or cited but not quoted.
\\ 2. Using a citation at the end of a block of prose without clarifying which material is borrowed.
\\ 3. Missing or incomplete works-cited entries.
\\ Misdocumented plagiarism will receive a maximum 50 percent deduction for the first offense, and the student will be required to meet with the instructor.
\\ Undocumented Plagiarism:
\\ 1. Using someone else’s exact words that are neither quoted nor cited.
\\ 2. Paraphrasing someone else’s words without citing them.
\\ 3. Using someone else’s research without citing it.
\\ Undocumented plagiarism will receive a minimum penalty of 50 percent for the first time and 100 percent off for all subsequent infractions. The student will be required to meet with the instructor and the English Department Chair.
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