Composition I Syllabus for 2015-2016
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Disability Statement

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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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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N/A

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N/A

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Course

ENGL-1301-DC023 Composition I

Prerequisites

Prerequisite: RDNG 0331 and ENGL 0302-minimum grade of C or scores on a state-approved test indicating college-level reading and writing skills

Course Description

Intensive study of and practice in writing processes, from invention and researching to drafting, revising and editing, both individually and collaboratively. Emphasis on effective rhetorical choices, including audience, purpose, arrangement and style. Focus on writing the academic essay as a vehicle for learning, communicating and critical analysis.

Student Resources Student Resources Website

Department Expectations

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.

Disability Statement:
Any student who, because of a disabling condition, may require some special arrangements in order to meet course requirements should contact disAbility Services (Student Services Center Room 119, Phone 371-5436) as soon as possible.

In addition to the learning outcomes listed, students will be expected to use the library's online databases and other computer resources for research and word processing. Also, all students will write a third person, argumentative research paper following the MLA format for citing sources.

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Hours

(3 sem hrs; 3 lec, 1 lab)

Class Type

Dual Credit Course

Syllabus Information

Textbooks

Carter, Judith, et al., ed. A Rhetoric Handbook for English 1301 and 1302. 2nd ed. N.p: n.p., 2012. Print.*

Supplies

A.      Use a three ring binder, arranged as you choose, to keep ALL PAPERS in as the year goes on. We will return to these papers throughout the year to monitor progress and to use to demonstrate com

Student Performance

\ Learning Outcomes:

\

\ 1.     Demonstrate knowledge of individual and collaborative writing processes.

\

\ 2.     Develop ideas with appropriate support and attribution.

\

\ 3.     Write in a style appropriate to audience and purpose.

\

\ 4.     Read, reflect, and respond critically to a variety of texts.

\

\ 5.     Use Edited American English in academic essays.

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

\ 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.

\

\   

Grading Criteria

Grades are based primarily on tests, projects, oral presentations, and compositions. This course has few grades—perhaps five—in a six weeks period. Therefore, do not rely on several high daily grades to salvage missing or inferior work. Each assignment is important and must be done to the best of your ability.    

15% Quizzes and Class/Homework

25% Tests

35% Essays

25% Final In-Class Essay

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

ASSIGNMENTS:

We must meet many curricular demands and rigid deadlines. Time is scarce, and the pace of the class has to be rapid.

A.     All homework, prewriting, major assignments, written or oral, must be finished on the day when they are due. Assignments must be turned in at the beginning of class. Late work is heavily penalized if it is accepted at all.

B.     Oral work and group projects require responsible actions. Other people are depending on you to do your part for a high quality performance. Do not let them down.

C.     Final drafts of all compositions will be typed in the MLA Handbook style in ten or twelve point font and double spaced. The compositions may be typed at home; they do not have to be typed in the school’s word processing labs.

Attendance

Regular attendance is necessary for satisfactory achievement. Therefore, it is the responsibility of the student to attend class and to complete all assignments.

__________________________________________________________________________________________________

A.     Remember that this is a college class. Your presence in-class every day is vital.

B.     Should you be absent, check with me on the day you return as early as is feasible.

C.     One day’s absence will not excuse a student from taking a test which was assigned before the absence.

D.     If you know in advance that you will be absent, see me about your assignment before you leave.

E.     Check the make-up folder on the filing cabinet when you return from an absence.

F.     AISD requires 90% attendance to receive credit and to successfully complete the course.  

 If during the semester you consider dropping, please check with me first for an alternate plan, one 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 20. 

Calendar

English 1301 will include the following elements with specific topics and dates listed below:

Rhetorical strategies

Text content

In-Class Essay

Writing under pressure

Writing process including rhetorical profile

Plagiarism policy

Character and vocabulary of nonfiction

Rhetorical precis

Rhetorical analyses of authors' works

Research essay

Final essay exam

 

Aug. 25--Introduction to class, expectations, brief review of summer reading, annotation and close reading

Aug. 26--test on style analysis

Aug. 27— Review pre-writing stategies 

Aug. 28—Annotate “Birthday Party”

Aug. 29—Timed Writing

 

Week of August 31--Sept. 4--Writing Process review including a focus on eliminating clutter and refining style

            31—Review And the Mountains Echoed

            1-2—Discuss summer reading and examine passages for tone
            3—Summer reading test

            4review and access AP rubric/ exemplars for “Birthday Party”

                        Assign Reading Response/Reflection Journal 

Week of Sept. 7-11

            7— Labor Day

            8-- Sampling of College Application Essays /Begin drafting a college application essay

            9-10—Review Formal Academic Writing and Revision strategies

            11Draft 1 of College App Essay due for peer evaluation

 

Week of Sept 14-18     

            14-15We will focus on ethos, pathos, and logos in persuasive writing as well as the             different types of persuasive writing--Good Reasons

            16—Draft 2 of College Application Essay for peer edit

            18College Application essay due

 

Week of Sept. 21-25

            21-24---Read and analyze non-fiction articles in Good Reasons

             Precis assigned

 

            25— “Lady of Shalott”

 

Week of Sept. 28- Oct. 2

            28— Précis writing assignment due and shared with the class

            30—Error composition Log due

            Begin Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.

            1—Persuasive research paper assigned

            Annotated Bibliography information

            Research methodology

            2—Library Research

Week of Oct. 5-10

            5-6—Library Research

            6— First annotated bibliography due

            This mongrel language--a study of the history of the English language

            Archetypes and Sir Gawain

 

Week of Oct. 12-16

            14—test Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

            17—Annotated bibliographies and research paper outline due

            Dr. Faustus by Christopher Marlow

            From individual temptation to corporate temptation

            Archtypes continued

 

Week of Oct. 19-23

            23—Peer Review Research Paper

            Assign Secret Sharer

            Examining motivation through a Freudian perspective

 

Week of Oct. 26-30

            28 Peer edit research paper

            30 Research paper due

            Archetypal journey of the mind in Secret Sharer

            Group assignments and discussion

            Continue discussion of Freud

 

Week of Nov. 2-6

            2-4—Read Faustus in class

            5—Final Faustus test

             

 

Week of Nov. 9-13

            9—Introduce Durrenmatt and the theatre of the absurd

            Begin The Visit

            10-11 Read The Visit

            12— Discuss Freud and “Secret Sharer”

            13— Freud and “Secret Sharer” test

 

Week of Nov. 16-20

            16-18 —Read The Visit and discuss Themes/symbols/historical perspective

            19— The Visit test

            20—Carl Jung and the Jungian perspective

            Assign Heart of Darkness

            Read Orwell’s “Shooting an Elephant”

 

Week of Nov. 23-27

            23—Style analysis of Orwell’s “Shooting an Elephant”

            24—Style analysis essay due

            25-27--Thanksgiving holiday

 

Week of Dec. 1-4

            Wrap up of essential questions/findings

            3— Response/Reflective Journal due

            4— Heart of Darkness final test

 

Week of Dec. 7-11 Finals week

            Timed Writing Final Exam Essay

Additional Information

No additional information available

Syllabus Created on:

11/30/-1 12:00 AM

Last Edited on:

11/30/-1 12:00 AM