As I am a part-time instructor, I do not have an office. You can reach me at any point using either AC email: carogers@actx.edu OR carogers@amarillocollege.com. If you go through our Blackboard class, the email will go straight to my AC account and will contain our class section number. Unless I notify you otherwise, I will check the AC email several times a day.
I will be at AC every morning at least 30 minutes before class begins to offer help as needed. Please feel free to come early. If I'm not in the room, check in the office or around in the tutoring center, as sometimes I need to go either place.
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.
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-1302-010 Composition II
Prerequisite: ENGL 1301
Intensive study of and practice in the strategies and techniques for developing research-based expository and persuasive texts. Emphasis on effective and ethical rhetorical inquiry, including primary and secondary research methods; critical reading of verbal, visual and multimedia texts; systematic evaluation, synthesis and documentation of information sources; and critical thinking about evidence and conclusions.
Student Resources Student Resources Website
Amarillo College English Department Plagiarism Policy, revised Spring 2013
The English Department takes plagiarism seriously.
Plagiarism is defined as the following: the use of someone else’s exact words that are neither quoted nor cited; paraphrasing someone else’s words without citing them; or using someone else’s research without citing it.
Student plagiarism in the Amarillo College English Department is internally tracked. To clarify, records will be kept in the Department of those students who have plagiarized. At the beginning of each new semester, the names of students who plagiarized the previous semester will be sent to all English Department faculty.
Plagiarism may receive a penalty of a zero. A subsequent infraction will be deemed a reason for expulsion from the class. At this point, the case will be referred to the Vice President of Student Affairs.
Note: Self-plagiarism will be discussed with the class by each instructor and infractions for such are left up to the individual instructor’s discretion.
In addition to the course description, the skills taught in this course will be primarily achieved through the study of literature. Also, in addition to the learning outcomes, students will be expected to demonstrate an understanding of literary genres and the basic vocabulary of literary analysis, as well as write a researched literary analysis paper that utilizes peer review.
(3 sem hrs; 3 lec, 1 lab)
On Campus Course
Kirszner, Laurie G. and Stephen R. Mandell. Lit. Boston: Wadsworth, 2012.
OR If you have a laptop that you want to bring to class, you may read all of the material on-line rather than purchase the book. It will be important that you have the text of the poems and plays in class. Having the text of the short stories in class will be less important. If you are using your phone, you must be able to read the text easily. See the calendar (either at the end of the syllabus or posted on Blackboard) for hyperlinks or do your own searches.
Books, pen, paper, notes are essential to any class meeting.
Additionally, you need consistent access to the internet, whether on your personal computer at home or on the AC computers on campus.
\ Intensive study of and practice in the strategies and techniques for developing research-based expository and persuasive texts. Emphasis on effective and ethical rhetorical inquiry, including primary and secondary research methods; critical reading of verbal, visual, and multimedial texts; systematic evaluation, synthesis, and documentation of information sources; and critical thinking aobut evidence and conclusions. These skills will primarily be achieved through the study of literature.
\\ Prerequisite: ENGL 1301 or its equivalent
\\ Learning Outcomes:
\\ Upon successful completion of this course, the student will:
\\ 1. Demonstrate knoweldge of individual and collaborative research processes.
\\ 2. Develop ideas and synthesize primary and secondary sources within focused academic arguments, including one or more research-based essays.
\\ 3. Analyze, interpret, and evaluate a variety of texts for the ethical and logical uses of evidence.
\\ 4. Write in a style that clearly communicates meaning, builds credibility, and inspires belief or action.
\\ 5. Apply the conventions and style manuals for specific academic disciplines (e.g., APA, CMS, MLA, etc)
\\ 6. Demonstrate an understanding of literary genres and the basic vocabulary of literary analysis.
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 cell phones should be put away during class. Talking or texting during class is not acceptable. If you have extenuating circumstances (such as a child who is home alone), please let us know at the beginning of class. In that situation, leave the phone on your table, and if there is a need, we will understand.
\\ No late work is acceptable. Beginning of class quizzes may not be made up, and major assignments are due when assigned. If there is an emergency, I will accept a major assignment by email, but that will occur on an individual basis only.
\\ English Department Plagiarism Policy (Revised 2013):
\\
\\ The English Department takes plagiarism seriously.
\\ Plagiarism is defined as the following: the use of someone else’s exact words that are neither quoted nor cited; paraphrasing someone else’s words without citing them; or using someone else’s research without citing it.
\\ Student plagiarism in the Amarillo College English Department is internally tracked. To clarify, records will be kept in the Department of those students who have plagiarized. At the beginning of each new semester, the names of students who plagiarized the previous semester will be sent to all English Department faculty.
\\ Plagiarism may receive a penalty of a zero. A subsequent infraction will be deemed a reason for expulsion from the class. At this point, the case will be referred to the Vice President of Student Affairs.
\\ Note: Self-plagiarism will be discussed with the class by each instructor, and infractions for such are left up to the individual instructor’s discretion.
\ 15%--daily quizzes and lesser exercises
\\ 20%--short story essay
\\ 20%--poetry essay
\\ 25%--researched essay
\\ 20%--final exam
\\
\\ 90-100=A
\\ 80-89=B
\\ 70-79=C
\\ 60-69=D
\\ Below 60=F
Because this is a night class, we will be covering a full week's material each night. Attendance is therefore critical. Missing more than one class in a semester is just not acceptable. Should you have an emergency and have to miss a class meeting, you need to email me as soon as possible (either before class begins or as soon as you can afterwards).
The first thing that will occur each week is the opening quiz over the reading material and/or the discussion of the previous week. The total of these quizzes represents 10% of your grade and cannot be made up later. So, not only is attendance critical, but being on time is as well. Class begins promptly at 6:00 p.m.
If during the semester you consider dropping, please check with me first for an alternate plan that protects your investment in the course and gives you an opportunity to complete it. Remember that the deadline for drops this semester is November 12th.
Calendar for Fall 2015
English 1302
* "daily work" represents 15% of your total grade
Week 1—8/25—Introduce class; examine “Cask of Amontillado” and review
analysis process.
Assignment: Read “Story of an Hour” p. 115 http://www.vcu.edu/engweb/webtexts/hour/
“Tell-Tale Heart” p. 331 http://xroads.virginia.edu/~hyper/POE/telltale.html
“I Stand Here Ironing” p. 162 http://www.quixoticpedagogue.org/iron.pdf
“The Yellow Wallpaper” p. 313 https://www.gutenberg.org/files/1952/1952-h/1952-h.htm
Week 2—9/1—Take reading quiz (daily grade)
Discuss stories
Discuss short story analysis (specific topic given in class)
Assignment:
Read “A Worn Path” p. 285 http://xroads.virginia.edu/~drbr/ew_path.html
“Young Goodman Brown” p. 320 http://web.ics.purdue.edu/~rebeccal/lit/238f11/pdfs/YoungGoodmanBrown.pdf
Week 3—9/8—Take reading quiz (daily grade)
Discuss stories
Reminder about essay (rough draft due next week)
Assignment:
Read “The Lottery” p. 251 https://sites.middlebury.edu/individualandthesociety/files/2010/09/jackson_lottery.pdf
“A Rose for Emily” p. 121 http://xroads.virginia.edu/~drbr/wf_rose.html
“Barn Burning” p. 194 http://lssc.edu/faculty/holly_larson/Shared%20Documents/Barn%20Burning%20by%20William%20Faulkner.pdf
Complete rough draft of short story analysis
Week 4—9/15—Take reading quiz (daily grade)
Discuss stories
Peer edit essays (daily grade)
Assignment: Prepare essay for submission next week (20% of grade)
Week 5—9/22—Submit essay for grading (20% of your total grade!)
Discuss the sonnet (titles to be discussed on a separate document)
Topic assigned for poetry analysis (specific topic given in class)
Week 6—9/29 Take quiz on last week’s poems (daily grade)
Reminder about essay (rough draft due 10/14; final due 10/21)
Discuss narratives and dramatic monologues
Assignment: Work on essay
Week 7—10/6—Take quiz on last week’s poems (daily grade)
Reminder that essay rough draft is due next week
Discuss classic poems
Assignment: Prepare rough draft of essay for next week
Week 8—10/13—Take quiz on last week’s poems (daily grade)
Reminder that final copy of essay is due next week
Discuss modern poems
Peer edit essays (daily grade)
Assignment: Complete essay for submission next week.
Read Chapter 30—pp. 525-530
Week 9—10/20—Submit poetry analysis (20% of your grade)
Take quiz on last week’s poems and reading (daily grade)
Assign researched essay
Begin reading Death of a Salesman http://chatt.hdsb.ca/~IrvineA/FOV1-0013DC8B/Important%20Documents%20for%20Students/ARTHUR%20MILLER%20Death%20of%20a%20Salesman.pdf
Assignment: Read Chapter 33 (pp. 596-601)
Prepare essay rough draft for next week
Week 10—10/27—Take quiz on reading and the first part of play (daily grade)
Complete reading the play
Assignment: Continue research
Read Chapters 6 and 7 of book
Week 11—11/3—Discuss reading
Begin reading Hamlet http://shakespeare.mit.edu/hamlet/full.html
OR Othello http://shakespeare.mit.edu/othello/full.html
Assignment: Continue research
Week 12—11/10—Discuss research process and answer questions
Take quiz on first part of play (daily grade)
Continue reading play
Assignment: Bring at least three articles WITH Works Cited entries completed for each (for my checking). (daily grade)
Write an introduction for your essay. Email it to me by 11/17,
8:00 a.m. (daily grade)
LAST DAY TO DROP ANY CLASS IS November 12
Week 13—11/17—Take quiz on play (daily grade) and submit sample works cited forms (another daily grade)
Complete reading play (I hope)
Discuss final copy of researched essay
Give peer editing assignment
Assignment: Work on completing researched essay
Week 14—11/24—Work play first half of class; peer edit research papers the last half. Answer last minute questions. RESEARCH PAPERS due next week!!!! [IF we get ahead in our work, we MIGHT be able to not have class this week. Please understand that this is a BIG “if.”]
Week 15—12/1—Submit completed researched essay (25% of final grade)
Review for final (complete play if necessary)
Week 16—12/8—Semester test—in class essay plus a few short answer questions on
material covered this semester. (20% of final grade)
Poems to be covered*:
9/22
Shakespearean sonnets: http://www.shakespeares-sonnets.com/ (look up by first line)
“Shall I Compare You to a Summer’s Day” p. 408
“When in Disgrace” p. 446
“Let me not to the Marriage of True Minds” p. 517
“Not Marble nor the Gilded Monuments” p. 518
“Death, Be not Proud” p. 503 http://www.bartleby.com/105/72.html
“The World is too Much with us” p. 373 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/174833
“On the Sonnet” p. 443 http://poetry.about.com/od/poems/l/blkeatsonsonnet.htm
“Sonnet” p. 443 http://www.theguardian.com/books/2008/jun/07/poetry1
“When I have Fears” p. 512 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/173753
9/29
“The Raven” p. 465 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/178713
“My Last Duchess” p. 365 http://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poem/my-last-duchess
“Porphyria’s Lover” p. 375 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/175584
“To His Coy Mistress” p. 419 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/173954
“The Flea” p. 504 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/175764
10/6
“Valediction, Forbidding Mourning” p. 414 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/173387
“To a Nightingale” p. 422 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/173744
“I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud” p. 486 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/search/?q=I+Wandered+Lonely+as+a+Cloud
“Ode on a Grecian Urn” p. 511 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/173742
“Do Not Go Gentle” p. 484 http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/do-not-go-gentle-into-that-good-night/
“Road not Taken” p. 509 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/173536
“Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” p. 509 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/171621
“Jabberwocky” p. 440 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/171647
10/13
“Theme for English B” p. 510 http://www.eecs.harvard.edu/~keith/poems/English_B.html
“Chicago” p. 454 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/poem/2043
“Ars Poetica” p. 513 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/poem/6371
“Introduction to Poetry” p. 502 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/176056
“Bilingual/Bilingue” p. 386 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/175878
“Because I Could not Stop for Death” p. 502 http://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poem/because-i-could-not-stop-death-479
“I Heard a Fly Buzz” p. 503 http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/174972
“Dulce et Decorum Est” p. 492 http://www.warpoetry.co.uk/owen1.html
No additional information available
11/30/-1 12:00 AM
11/30/-1 12:00 AM