No on campus office location or hours
I am on ET, one hour later than you are. Please contact me via my AC email (jaherr@actx.edu) and be aware that I check my email at least twice daily Monday-Friday, approximately 8:00 AM CT and 8:00 PM CT. Please know that I do not respond to emails or Remind messages after 8:00 PM CT Monday-Friday, and after 8:00 AM on Saturdays. There will be occasions when I am working online that I will check and respond during the daytime hours, but please know that if you don not hear from me within 24 hours, I may not have received your email, so please resend. I do not respond to emails or Remind messages on Sunday, so please plan accordingly. Since all weekly assignments are due on Sunday, please be mindful that I am not available to answer questions on Sundays, so please don't wait until the last minute to complete your assignments.
If you have a disability (learning, mental, physical) that affects your ability to participate effectively and have access to any program or service at Amarillo College please contact Disability Services at (806) 345-5639 . Our offices are located in the Student Service Center office 112. More information may be found at www.actx.edu/disability.
Disability Services facilitates access to all programs and services according to the ADA, Americans with Disabilities Act and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, as well as other federal and state laws.
Amarillo College is committed to providing equal access to all programs and services, including all working, learning, and service environments that affect equal access for persons with disabilities. This commitment to provide equal access and opportunity for persons with disabilities is in compliance with federal and state law. Amarillo College also strives to provide Electronic and Information Resources (EIR) that are accessible to all authorized users.
If you find you are unable to access material in an accessible format please contact the Disability Services Office at (806) 345-5639 . This office will work in conjunction with other campus resources to address and accommodate your issue in a timely manner.
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
Students who do not attend class on or prior to the census date will be administratively dropped. Effective Fall, 2016
Students who wish to withdraw from a course must complete all steps indicated on the Academic Withdrawal Request form by the course withdrawal deadline.
NOTE: Students who are attending Texas institutions of higher education, for the first time fall 2007 and later, may not withdraw from more than six courses during their academic career. This withdrawal limitation does not include dual credit or developmental classes (Senate Bill 1231 Rule 4.10.) For more information on Drop and Withdrawal Policies, please visit the Registrar's Office Web site.
The Amarillo College Privacy Policy is found at https://www.actx.edu/-amarillo-college-privacy-notice , and applies to all Amarillo College students. If you have questions about this privacy statement or you believe that your personal information has been released without your consent, send email to humanresources@actx.edu .
ENGL-1302-022 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
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.
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 that follows the MLA format for citing sources and utilizes peer review.
Students are expected to complete all work in order to pass the clas
Notice to Students enrolled in an educational program for preparation of issuance of certain occupational licenses:
Students enrolled in an educational program in preparation for obtaining certain occupational licenses are potentially ineligible for such license if the student has been convicted of an offense. For further information, please contact:
Melodie Graves
Justice Involved Advocate
Student Service Center 117
mgraves24@actx.edu
806-371-5995
Make appointment at https://melodiegraves.youcanbook.me
You can also contact the Legal Clinic, or the faculty member in charge of the educational program that you seek to enroll in. The further information you will receive will include notification to you of your right to request a criminal history evaluation letter from the licensing authority in order to clarify your particular situation.
(3 sem hrs; 3 lec, 1 lab)
Online Course
Required Textbooks:
Amarillo College English Department. A Rhetoric Handbook for English 1301 and 1302. 3rd ed., Hayden McNeil, 2016.*
Bullock, Richard, Michal Brody, and Francine Wineberg. The Little Seagull Handbook with Exercises. 3rd ed., W. W. Norton, 2017
All literature will be found through links within the course content.
*These books are available for purchase only at the AC Bookstore.
If you have questions regarding your textbooks call the AC Bookstore at (806) 371-5307.
A word processing program and a computer with reliable internet access. Open Office, Word Online, Word Pad, and Note Pad are not acceptable word processing programs for this class.
Students may use the English Writing Lab in Ordway 101 on the Washington Street Campus during regular hours of operation.
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".
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."
Misdocumented Plagiarism:
1. The use of 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. The use of someone else's exact words that are neither quoted nor cited.
2. Paraphrasing someone else's words without citing them.
3. The use of 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.
|
Discussions |
5 |
6 |
30 |
5% |
|
Quizzes |
3 |
10 |
30 |
5% |
|
Minor Assignments, Reflection Papers |
20 |
7 |
140 |
5% |
|
Annotated Bibliographies |
35 | 2 | 70 | 10% |
|
Peer Reviews |
15 |
2 |
30 |
5% |
|
Out-of-Class Essays, Major Revision Project |
200 |
3 |
600 |
60% |
|
In-Class Essay--Final Exam |
100 |
1 |
100 |
10% |
A 90% and above
B 80-89%
C 70-79%
D 60-69%
F 59% and below
Online students attend this class by logging in to AC Online (Blackboard) and participating in the learning activities. They are not expected to come to campus. Be aware, however, that each assignment has a due date, and successful students keep current with their classwork. The last day to withdraw from this course is December 5, 2018
The instructor reserves the right to change the due dates as unforeseen situations arise.
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Finish the work in the class before the end of the day on . . . |
Reading Assignments |
Blackboard Learning Activities |
Major Writing Assignments |
Test |
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22 Oct. 2018 |
Web pages linked to the online class |
Logging in and exploring the online programs Unit 1 Lesson 1 Introduction to the class/discussion forum |
– – – |
– – – |
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23 Oct. 2018 |
Web pages linked to the online course |
Unit 1 Lesson 2
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Essay assignment: literary analysis of a short story |
– – – |
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24 Oct. 2018 |
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Unit 1 Lesson 3, Unit Lesson Minor Assignment, Unit 1 Lesson 3 Practice Quiz and Unit 1 Lesson 3 Real Quiz
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Continue working on the literary analysis of a short story |
– – – |
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25 Oct. 2018 |
Web pages linked to the online class |
Unit 1 Lesson 4
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Continue working on the literary analysis of a short story |
– – – |
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25 Oct . 2018 |
Web pages linked to the online class |
Unit 1 Lesson 5, Unit 1 Lesson 5 Quiz, Unit 1 Lesson 5 Minor Assignment
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Continue working on the literary analysis of a short story |
– – – |
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26 Oct. 2018 |
|
Unit 1 Lesson 6
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Continue working on the literary analysis of a short story |
– – – |
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26 Oct. 2018 |
Web page linked to the online class |
Unit 1 Lessons 6 & 7 Unit 1 Lesson 6 Quiz
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Continue working on literary analysis of a short story |
- - - |
|
29 Oct 2018- Census Day |
Web page linked to the online class |
Unit 1 Lesson 8- Unit 1 Lesson 8 Discussion Forum initial post
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Continue working on literary analysis of a short story |
- - - |
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30 Oct. 2018 |
Pages 41-42 in A Rhetoric Handbook for English 1301 and 1302 and a Web page linked to the online class |
Unit 1 Lesson 9, Unit 1 Lesson 9 Discussion forum
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31 Oct. 2018 |
Pages 65-67 in A Rhetoric Handbook for English 1301 and 1302 and Web pages linked to the online class |
Unit 1 Lesson 10 Unit 1 Lesson 8 Discussion forum Two responses
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Continue working on literary analysis of a short story |
- - - |
|
1 Nov. 2018 |
Web pages linked to the online class |
Unit 1 Lesson 9- Discussion Forum Two Responses, Unit 1 Lesson 11, Unit 1 Lesson 11 Quiz, Unit 1 Minor 11 Assignment
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|
- - - |
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2 Nov . 2018 |
- - - |
Unit 1 Lesson 12, Unit 1 Lesson 12 Annotated Bibliography Assigned, Unit I Lesson 12 Quiz Unit 1 Lesson 12 quiz- - - |
Annotated bibliography for the short story analysis assigned |
|
|
5 Oct. 2018 |
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Peer Review Draft Posted, Finishing the Unit 1 Essay |
Continue working on literary analysis of a short story, Peer Review Draft Posted |
- - - |
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6 Oct. 2018 |
- - - |
Unit 1 Lesson 13 Minor Assignment,
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- - - |
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7 Nov. 2018 |
- - - |
Peer Review Comments of Two Classmates' Essays Due today- - - |
|
|
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8 Nov. 2018 |
- - - |
Unit 2 Lesson 1 Unit 2 Lesson 1 Discussion Forum Initial Post Post, Unit 1 Annotated Bibliography Due, Unit 2 Lesson 1 Minor Assignment- - - |
Unit 1 Annotated Bibliography Due |
- - - |
|
9 Nov 2018 |
Web pages linked to the online class |
|
Essay # 1 Literary Analysis of Short Story Due Today |
- - - |
|
12 Nov. 2018 |
Web pages linked to the online class |
Unit 2 Lesson 2, Unit 2 Lesson 2 Initial Post, Unit 2 Lesson 1 Response Posts, Unit 2 Lesson 2 Quiz
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Continue working on literary analysis of a poem |
- - - |
|
13 Nov. 2018 |
Web pages linked to the online class |
Unit 2 Lesson 3 Unit 2 Lesson 3 Annotated Bibliography assigned
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Continue working on literary analysis of a poem |
- - - |
|
14 Nov. 2018 |
- - - |
Unit 2 Lesson 2 Discussion Forum Two Response Due Today- - - |
Continue Working on Annotated bibliography for the poetry analysis |
|
|
15 Nov. 2018 |
Web pages linked to the online class |
Unit 2 Lesson 4 Unit 2 Lesson 4 Quiz, Unit 2 Lesson 4 Minor Assignment |
Continue working on literary analysis of a poem |
- - - |
|
16 Nov. 2018 |
Web pages linked to the online class |
Unit 2 Lesson 5 Discussion Forum Initial Post Unit 2 Lesson 5 Files Peer Review Draft Uploaded Today by 11:00 PM |
Upload Peer Review Draft of Poetry Analysis Essay |
- - - |
|
19 Nov. 2018 |
- - - |
Unit 2 Lesson 5 Peer Review Comments ( TWO) due today- - - |
Peer review comments of TWO classmates' essays due today |
- - - |
|
21-25 Nov. 2018 |
Happy Thanksgiving- - - |
Work on Final Draft of Essay #2- - - |
Final Draft Poetry Analysis Essay Due Monday Nov. 26, 2018 11:00 PM |
- - - |
|
26 Nov. 2018 |
- - - |
Final Draft of Poetry Analysis Essay- - - |
Final draft of the poem analysis essay Due by 11:00 PM Today |
- - - |
|
27 Nov. 2018 |
|
Unit 2 Annotated Bibliography Due Unit 3 Lesson 1 Quiz |
Major revision project assigned |
- - - |
|
28 Nov. 2018 |
|
Unit 3 Lesson 2 Unit 3 Lesson 2 Quiz |
Continue working on the major revision project |
- - - |
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30 Nov. 2018 |
|
Unit 3 Lesson 3
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Continue working on the major revision project |
- - - |
|
3 Dec. 2018 |
- - - |
- - - |
Major revision project due |
- - - |
|
4 Dec 2018 |
Web page linked to the online class |
Unit 4 Writing the Final Exam |
- - - |
- - - |
|
5 Dec 2018 - Last Day to Withdraw from Class 10 Dec |
Final Exam- |
Final Exam- - - |
- - - |
Final Exam |
Policies Concerning Late Work:
All assignments must be submitted according to the deadline schedule posted in the calendar section of our AC Online class. Late essays are penalized 10 percent per day that they are late. Essays more than three days late will not be accepted. Late minor assignments, contributions to the discussions, annotated bibliographies, and peer review drafts are not accepted at all.
AC Online quizzes may be taken more than once before the due date. The best score will count for credit. If the quiz is not completed before the due date, it does not earn credit.
The final exam must be completed on the day indicated on the course calendar.
Discussion Scoring:
Be sure to contribute to the discussion in a timely manner. If you make a relevant and satisfactory comment before the due date of each lesson, you will earn two points. If you post a second contribution that responds to another student's posting, you will earn up to three more points. Postings that merely state "I agree" or "I disagree" without supporting reasons and those that do not add thoughtful material to the discussion do not earn points. To earn all the points possible, be sure to show evidence of original critical thinking instead of paraphrasing an idea that someone else has already posted. Also, late contributions to the discussions will be read, but they do not earn points. You may contribute to the discussions as often as you wish, but you can earn no more than five points per unit for the discussion.
Link to the Web page Required for this Course:
AC Connect: https://acconnect.actx.edu
Accessibility Statement: This course’s online content has been checked for accessibility; however, if you encounter any difficulty using the information in this class, please contact Bryant Manning, bmanning@actx.edu
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 806-371-5191. 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 www.actx.edu/arc
10/21/18 5:29 PM
10/25/18 12:51 PM