Freshman Composition II Syllabus for 2011-2012
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Any student who, because of a disabling condition, may require some special arrangements in order to meet course requirements should contact disAbility Services (Student Service Center room 119, phone 371-5436) as soon as possible.

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Course

ENGL-1302-054 Freshman Composition II

Prerequisites

ENGL 1301

Course Description

Extends and refines the writing skills developed in ENGL 1301. Readings in fiction, poetry and drama. Focus on rhetorical patterns, literary analysis, research methods and documentation.

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Department Expectations

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Hours

(3 sem hrs; 3 lec, 1 lab)

Class Type

Dual Credit Course

Syllabus Information

Textbooks

 

Carter, Judith, et al.  A Rhetoric Handbook for English 1301 & 1302.  OH: Cengage Learning, 2010.

 

 

Kirszner, Laurie G., and Stephen R. Mandell.  Literature: Reading, Reacting, Writing.  Compact 7th Edition.  MA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2011.  (Must have 2009 MLA update)

 

 

  

Supplies

\ A word processing program and a computer with reliable Internet access would be great.  Students may use the English Writing Lab in Ordway Hall, Room 101, on the Washington Street campus during regular hours of operation.

Student Performance

\ After studying the material presented in this course of study, the student will be able to do the following as evaluated by the faculty in the department/program:

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\ 1.  Demonstrate an understanding of literary genres.
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\ 2.  Reinforce and enhance writing skills learned in English 1301; write rhetorical and interpretive essays on short stories, plays, and poems

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\      using diction appropriate to the topic.
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\ 3.  Know the basic vocabulary of literary and rhetorical analysis.
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\ 4.  Use the library, the computer resources in the English Writing Laboratory, or other resources in researching a topic.
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\ 5.  Evaluate sources, selecting appropriate evidence for a literary analysis research paper or several shorter researched essays on works

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\       of literature.

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\ 6.  Document primary and secondary sources in standard MLA form for citations and works-cited; know the penalties for plagiarism.

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Students Rights and Responsibilities

Student Rights and Responsibilities

Log in using the AC Connect Portal

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".

Expected Student Behavior

\ English Department Plagiarism Policy (Revised January, 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 words and the unacknowledged submission or incorporation of it in one's own written work."
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Misdocumented Plagiarism:
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1. The use of someone else's exact words that are quoted but not cited or cited but not quoted.
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\ 2. Using a citation at the end of a block of prose without clarifying which material is borrowed.

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\ 3.  Incomplete or missing works-cited entries.
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\ Misdocumented plagiarism will receive a maximum 50 percent deduction for the first offense, and the student will be required to meet with the instructor.
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\ Undocumented Plagiarism:
\ 1. The use of someone else's exact words that are neither quoted nor cited.
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\ 2. Paraphrasing someone else's words without citing them.
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\ 3. The use of someone else's research without citing it.
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\ 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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Grading Criteria

20%  Quizzes (as the instructor judges necessary) 
60%  Paragraphs and essays (in-class and out) and research exercise 
20%  Final Exam (may count up to 25% of semester grade)

90-100 = A, 80-89 = B, 70-79 = C, 60-69 = D, Below 60 = F

 

Attendance

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Calendar

RH= A Rhetoric Handbook for English 1301 & 1302         

LIT = Literature: Reading, Reacting, Writing-7thEdition

CWH = The Concise Wadsworth Handbook-3rdEdition

 Tentative Course Schedule

 Note:  All announcements will take place at the beginning of class.  It is imperative that you get to class on time.  Please read all assigned selections before class.  Be prepared for reading checks and class discussions.  Writing assignments will be due on Wednesdays/Thursdays of the assigned week unless notified in class.

 Week One:  Understanding Literature "All about Suicide"

                       Reading About Literature

Weeks Two-Week Seven:  Understanding and Analyzing Fiction "Hills Like White Elephants"

                                              Plot (Conflict, Stages of Plot, Order and Sequence) "The Story of an Hour"

                                                        "A Rose for Emily"

                                              Character (Round and Flat,Foil, Stock, Cariacture, Stereotype, Dynamic, Static)

                                                          "A & P" "Miss Brill" "Gryphon"

                                               Setting (Historical, Gepgraphical, Physical) "I Stand Here Ironing"

                                               Point of View (First Person, Unreliable Narators, Third Person--Omniscient, Limited Omniscient, Objective)

                                                         "Big Black Good Man" "Barn Burning"

                                               Style, Tone, and Language "Araby" "The Yellow Wallpaper" "The Things They Carried"

                                               Symbol, Allegory, Myth "The Lottery" "Young Goodman Brown"

                                               Theme "Doe Season" "The Rocking Horse Winner"

                                               Analysis of a Short Story (Essay) 

Weeks Eight-Ten:  Understanding Poetry and Analyzing Poetry

                                               Shakespeare"s Sonnets, John Donne, Mathew Arnold, William Blake, William                

                                                            Wordsworth, Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman, Robert Frost

                                                Analysis of a Poem (Essay)

Weeks Eleven-Fourteen:  Understanding Drama and Analyzing Drama MACBETH

                                                (Documented Essay)

 

Weeks Fifteen-Sixteen:  The Novel 1984 and LORD OF THE FLIES

                                             Analysis of a Specific Aspect of Both (Comparison and Contrast)

Final EXAM

                                                                                            

 

                      

 

Additional Information

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Syllabus Created on:

11/30/-1 12:00 AM

Last Edited on:

11/30/-1 12:00 AM