Composition II Syllabus for 2025-2026
Return to Syllabus List

Instructor Information

Phone

Phone number not available

Office Location

Office Hours

8:00 - 4:30pm on weekdays 

Not available on holidays

Course Information

AI Statement

Collusion is defined as “the unauthorized collaboration with another person or by any other means, including artificial intelligence (AI) and computer translators, in preparing work for fulfillment of course requirements.” Using AI like (ChatGPT or Google Gemini) to create a document is considered colluding. The use of Generative Artificial Intelligence on specific assignments is at the discretion of the instructor.

Title IX and Sexual Misconduct Reporting

Amarillo College prohibits discrimination and harassment based on sex, including sexual harassment, sexual assault, dating violence, domestic violence, and stalking, under Title IX and Texas Education Code §51.253–255. Faculty and staff are mandatory reporters and must share any related concerns with the Title IX Coordinator at titleix@actx.edu. Reports and additional information are available at https://www.actx.edu/hr/title-ixtitle-ix. Confidential counseling and advocacy services are available through the Counseling Center and Advocacy & Resource Center.

Recording Policy

Disability Statement

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 Enrollment Center, Suite 700. 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 Web Accessibility Policy Statement

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.

Statement for Mental Health and Advocacy & Resource Center:

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

Amarillo College Tutoring for Success Policy:

Tutoring for Success applies to any student whose overall performance in the course falls below 75%. The instructor will create the task in the Student Engagement Portal (Watermark) to direct the student to the appropriate tutoring service, which may be faculty- or SI-led, discipline-specific, and/or general. The tutoring service assigned, the due date for when the tutoring must be completed, and the amount of tutoring required are at the discretion of the instructor. Additionally, the task will alert the student’s success team. Students who do not fulfill the assigned tutoring task may be subject to program- and course-specific penalties that could result in a grade reduction and/or in not being allowed to progress in the course until the tutoring requirement has been satisfied.

Administrative Drop Policy

Students who do not attend class on or prior to the census date will be administratively dropped. Effective Fall, 2016

Student Withdrawal Procedures

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.

Privacy Statement

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 .

Course

ENGL-1302-DC027 Composition II

Prerequisites

Prerequisite: ENGL 1301

Course Description

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

Department Expectations

Occupational License Disclaimer

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.

Hours

(3 sem hrs; 3 lec, 1 lab)

Class Type

Dual Credit Course

Syllabus Information

Textbooks

All course materials are provided free of charge in the Blackboard course shell.

Supplies

  • Computer
  • Reliable internet access
  • Amarillo College Google account
  • Google Docs (through your Amarillo College Google account)

Student Performance

Upon successful completion of this course, students will:

  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

You MUST complete ALL of your written essays in a your google drive that comes with Amarillo College account that is attached to your email. You will not be able to complete the peer reviews and your paper will not be accepted if you do not use your google doc account.

Your Peer Reviews will be done in the form of a discussion board. There are specific directions on how to do them listed in your Content. You will share your googledoc link on the discussion board, comment on the actual document with no less than 8 comments, AND fill out a peer review form on the paper. This is what you will post on the discussion board. 

  • Communicate!: This is a remote class and I cannot see you when you are frustrated or having problems. I cannot help you if I don’t know what is happening.  Life happens and unexpected circumstances arise. PLEASE, please communicate with me. If needed, we can make an appointment to meet via Teams. I want to see you succeed in this course! 

  • Use your resources: If you encounter questions, always check the assignment details, the weekly memo, and the syllabus first. These will usually give you the answers to your questions and save your waiting on a response. 

  • Be proactive: If you are experiencing an issue, please contact me as soon as you safely can. All students in this course are remote, and it's impossible for me to be aware of what is happening in every location. Examples: evacuations in your area, emergency surgery, wildfires, storm damage that has interrupted your access to the internet, etc. You will have to inform me.

  • Stay in the loop: Check your email, announcements, and Remind every weekday

  • Learn from feedback: Look for teacher feedback on your assignments in the documents themselves and in the rubric. At any time, you may contact me to see about your grades. If you disagree with an evaluation or would like to have it explained to you, please contact me so we can discuss at a time that is convenient for us both.

  • Submit on time: Due to the short, intense nature of this course, students are expected to complete assignments by the due date. If you have a truly exceptional circumstance that is not related to procrastination or poor planning, please contact me as soon as you safely can. Otherwise, late work is generally not accepted and will receive an automatic zero. 

  • Do your own independent work: Use of AI tools or plagiarism will most likely result in a zero on an assignment, which may fail the student for the course. This includes any use of AI tools on the Final Exam. 

Grading Criteria

Professional Email Response 5%

Visual Analysis Essay 10%

Short Story Literary Analysis 15%

Poetry Analysis Essay 15%

Argument Research Article 15%

Annotated Bibliography 5% 

Final Essay 15%

Minor Assignments (discussions, journals, peer reviews, outlines) 20%

A 90-100= high achievement

B 80-89= above average achievement

C 70-79= satisfactory achievement

D 60-69= unsatisfactory

F 0-59= unacceptable

Attendance

  • Attendance: Attendance in an online class is measured by completing assignments. 
     
  • Administrative Drop Policy: Students who do not complete an assignment on or prior to the Census Date will be administratively dropped (effective Fall 2016). 
  • Student Withdrawal Procedures: Students who wish to withdraw from a class must initiate the request with me before the withdrawal deadline. This process has several steps, so it's best to begin a day or two in advance at minimum. 

Calendar

No late work will be accepted.  Please anticipate problems and work responsibly so that your work will be submitted on time.

WEEK 1: Professional Communication and Plagiarism

  • Read the contents of the Welcome Folder including the syllabus and take the syllabus quiz by Wednesday
  • Read contents of Plagiarism folder with policies AND submit Plagiarism Agreement
  • Read and complete Professional Email Literary Response Assignment
  • Read Lectures: “How to Write an Effective Summary” and “MLA Citations”
  • Read “Mastering the Art of Email Communication” and “Fish Cheeks”
  • Complete Journal Week 1

WEEK 2: Visual Analysis Essay

  • Read Lectures “Interpreting Art Meaning” and take related quiz and read “How to Write for a Visual Analysis”
  • Read Visual Analysis Essay Assignment
  • Review the Sample Visual Analysis Student Paper
  • Complete “What Do You See” Worksheet
  • Complete Journal Week 2

WEEK 3:  Visual Analysis Essay

  • Read Lecture “Writing a Good Thesis”
  • Complete “Outline for Visual Analysis Essay”
  • Complete Journal 3

WEEK 4: Visual Analysis Essay DUE

  • Review “Manuscript Preparation” and “Help with Citing Art in MLA Format”
  • Short Story Literary Analysis Essay DUE Sunday
  • Complete Discussion Peer Reviews with your full Rough Draft
  • Turn in Final Visual Analysis Draft

WEEK 5:  Essay 2: Short Story Analysis

  • Read “Elements of Literature Crash Course” and take related quiz.
  • Read “A Good Man is Hard to Find” and “The Lottery”
  • Take Complete Journal Week 5

WEEK 6: Essay 2: Short Story Analysis

  • Read “A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings”
  • Complete Common Assessment Assignment
  • Read “Harrison Bergeron” and “Everyday Use” by Alice Walker
  • Quiz over the stories
  • Complete Journal Week 6

WEEK 7: Essay 2: Short Story Analysis

  • Read “Who’s Irish?”
  • Review Short Story Analysis Assignment Sheet
  • Read Lecture “Analyzing a Short Story”
  • Complete an Outline for Short Story Analysis
  • Complete Journal Week 7

WEEK 8:  Essay 2: Short Story Analysis

  • Complete Discussion Peer Reviews with your full Rough Draft
  • Read “Lecture: MLA Quiz Quotations Reminder” and take related quiz
  • Submit Final Draft of Short Story Analysis

 

WEEK 9: Essay 3: Poetry Analysis

  • Read “Poetry Analysis Assignment Sheet:
  • Read Lectures “Figurative Language,” “Sound and Structure” and “Style, Mood & Structure”
  • Take Quiz over Lectures
  • Read “Still I Rise,” “Facing It,” and “When I Have Fears That I May Cease to Be”
  • Complete Journal Week 9

WEEK 10: Essay 3: Poetry Analysis

  • Read “My Pap’s Waltz,” “The Second Coming.” And “What the Living Do”
  • Student Poetry Paper Example
  • Complete Outline for Poetry Analysis
  • Complete Journal Week 10

WEEK 11: Essay 3: Poetry Analysis DUE

  • Read Lectures “Using Third Person” and “Quoting Poetry in MLA
  • Complete Discussion Peer Reviews with your full Rough Draft
  • Submit Final draft of Poetry Analysis

WEEK 12: Essay 4: Research Argument

  • Review Major Research Paper Assignment
  • Annotated Bibliography Assignment Sheet
  • Review Libguide for the Paper
  • Read Lectures “Evaluaating Web Sources,” “Tips for Searching Google, & “Defining and Citing Your Credible Sources”
  • Complete Journal 12

 

WEEK 13: Essay 4: Research Argument

  • Read Lecture “Finding Information and Using it in your Paper”
  • Read The Example of the Research Article
  • Complete Editorial Planning Sheet
  • Complete Journal Week 13

WEEK 14: Essay 4: Research Argument

  • Work On Research Assignment Sheet
  • Read Lectures”Tone and Voice in Op-Ed Pieces,” “Effective Opening for Your Op-Ed Piece,” “Writing ‘To Be Sure’ Section,” “When to Quote and When to Paraphrase,” & Reminder of Integrating Quotations in MLA Style.
  • Take Quiz over Lectures
  • Complete Journal Week 14

WEEK 15: Essay 4: Research Argument

  • Read Lecture: “The Importance of Revising”
  • Complete Discussion Peer Reviews with your full Rough Draft
  • Submit Final draft of Research Article

WEEK 16: FINAL EXAM

  • Review Prepare for Final Exam
  • Choose to read either “The School” or “Theme for English B’
  • Read "How to Write an Explication" (use this to help you take notes and prepare for the final exam)
  • Final Exam opens must be completed by the end of the day on Wednesday

Additional Information

  • Please be advised that this is a college-level course and may include heavy topics and/or adult subject matter.
     
  • Any opportunities for extra credit, bonus points, or dropping a particular grade will be given to the entire class at my discretion, not upon request. Any such opportunities will be posted in the Blackboard content in the section titled "Extra Credit, Bonus Points, and Grade Drops."
     
  • In particular, I award 5 bonus points to the relevant assignment each time that a student seeks help from Writer's Corner. This is permitted at each level of a major paper--outline, rough draft, and final copy. Writer's Corner sends me a receipt each time. When I add bonus points to your assignment grade, I will note that they are due to seeking help from Writer's Corner. It is your responsibility to ensure that I have applied those points as you expected. Email me if I have missed them.
  • Minor adjustments to dates may take place at my discretion. These changes will always be announced via Blackboard Announcements.
     
  • I strongly recommend that you print this syllabus on paper and also print it to PDF for safekeeping. That way, if AC experiences some sort of interruption, you will still have the ability to get in contact and to view due dates and class policies. 
  • AI Statement

    Collusion is defined as “the unauthorized collaboration with another person or by any other means, including artificial intelligence (AI) and computer translators, in preparing work for fulfillment of course requirements.” Using AI like (ChatGPT or Google Gemini) to create a document is considered colluding. The use of Generative Artificial Intelligence on specific assignments is at the discretion of the instructor.

  • The English and Cultural Studies Department takes academic integrity seriously.  Scholastic dishonesty, punishable as prescribed by Board policies, shall include, but not be limited to plagiarism, collusion, and cheating on a test or written assignment.

    Plagiarism

    Plagiarism is defined as “using exact words from any outside source without using quotation marks or properly citing them; paraphrasing words from any outside source without citing them; or using research from any outside source without citing it.” 

    Self-Plagiarism

    Self-plagiarism is defined as turning in your own previous work to meet a current assignment.  This policy will be amended at the discretion of each individual instructor.  

    Collusion

    Collusion is defined as “the unauthorized collaboration with another person or by any other means, including artificial intelligence (AI) and computer translators, in preparing  work for fulfillment of course requirements.” Using AI like (ChatGPT or Google Gemini) to create a document is considered colluding. The use of Artificial Intelligence on specific assignments is at the discretion of the instructor. 

    Cheating

    “Cheating on a test” shall include:

  • Copying from another student’s test paper.

  • Using test materials not authorized by the person administering the test.

  • Collaborating with or seeking aid from another student during a test without permission from the test administrator.

  • Knowingly using, buying, selling, stealing, or soliciting, in whole or in part, the contents of a pending test.

  • The unauthorized transporting or removal, in whole or in part, of the contents of the pending test.

  • Substituting for another student, or permitting another student to substitute for one’s self, to take a test.

  • Bribing another person to obtain a pending test or information about a pending test.

  • If you plagiarize, cheat, or collude, you will face consequences. Ignorance of the policy is not an excuse. Any work produced in part or in whole through plagiarism, collusion, or cheating may receive a penalty up to and including a zero for the assignment.  After assigning a zero, a subsequent infraction will result in a meeting the head of the Department and possible expulsion from the class. Another incident will result in a referral to the Vice President of Enrollment Management. 

     

    Our class environment is based upon a simple principle: I commit to treat you with respect, and you commit to treat each other and me with respect. We are all equally responsible for maintaining a respectful dialogue and attitude. Disrespectful behavior towards anyone will not be tolerated in this class.

    Expected Teacher Behavior:

  • At anytime, you may contact me to see about your grades.

  • The best way to reach me is to message me within Blackboard.  I will get try to back with you within 2 hours between the hours of 7am-9 pm on weekdays and 10am-7pm on weekends. 

  • If you email me, I will get back to you within 24 hours, unless I otherwise note.

  • I will grade everything generally within 7 days, though I usually get to them before that. (Unless I am out which may take longer)

  • If you disagree with an evaluation or would like to have it explained to you, please contact me so we can discuss during my office hours or some other time that is convenient for us both.

  • Expected Student Behavior:

  • Communicate, Communicate, Communicate.  I cannot help you if I don’t know what is going on.  I can’t allow you grace on something if I do not know what is happening.  I really can’t help you if I do not know what the problem is.  PLEASE, please communicate with me during my office hours: those don’t work for you?  Make an appointment and we can have a zoom meeting at a suitable time for you.

  • Plagiarism will most likely result in a zero on an assignment, which may fail the student for the course. This includes using AI to complete an assignment for you!

  • Keep up with the weekly assignments on Blackboard. 

  • Turn in work ON TIME!

  • Statement of Consequences

Syllabus Created on:

01/15/26 8:40 AM

Last Edited on:

01/19/26 12:28 PM