Alison Barnes

English 102-22

TTh 3:30-4:45 McIver 225

Office: 136A McIver Mailbox: 133 McIver

Office Hours: M & Th 2:45-3:30

email: albarne2@uncg.edu

Spring 2002

 

Connecting Voices:

Reading Histories and Cultures

 

In this speaking intensive composition course we will write, read and speak about the ways that varying perspectives work together to shape history and cultures. In the first half of the course we will examine a variety of subjects as we use verbal and visual texts to practice cultural and historical analysis.  Among the subjects that we will look at will be the cultural implications of fashion, the historical relationships between people and the environment, and the shifts in family roles that have occurred over the years.  Additionally, you will apply cultural and historical analysis to your own life and experiences. The second half of the course will be devoted to a study of oral histories.  This study will be twofold, as you read and discuss a book length oral history and also work on your own oral history project.

 

The speaking intensive element of this course will ask you to expand on the ways that you communicate your ideas in informal and formal speech and conversations. 

Throughout the course, we will draw connections between the ways that we develop, organize and present our ideas in writing and in speech.  Close attention and reflection on this process will give you the opportunity to become more confident in your abilities as a writer and speaker.

 


   

Texts

Kathleen McCormick, Reading Our Histories, Understanding Our Cultures

Ed. Linda Garland Page and Eliot Wigginton, Aunt Arie A Foxfire Portrait

 

Requirements

 

Attendance

Regular attendance and participation are critical to this course since there is no way to make up in-class work.  After two absences each absence will reduce your grade by a letter. There is no such thing as an excused absence so plan your time carefully.  Anyone missing more than six classes will receive an F in the course.  Anyone with three or more absences by midterm will be dropped from the course. Arriving late to class is rude.  If you arrive ten minutes late you will be marked absent.  Absence is not an acceptable excuse for late papers.


Reading

Intensive reading is an integral part of developing your writing skills.  You must complete all of the assigned reading to be successful in this course.

 

Writers Notebook

This is a loose-leaf notebook for your in-class and informal writing.  Because everything you write in this course has potential for inclusion in your final essay, you need to keep all of the writing you do both in and out of class.  Not participating in in-class writings will affect your final grade.

 

Group Work

You will spend a great deal of time in this course working in small groups. Groups will regularly present their work and ideas to the class.

 

Essays & Presentations

You will receive a handout that explains each essay and presentation assignment.

Late essays will not be accepted. Presentations will not be rescheduled.

Failure to complete an essay or a presentation will constitute failure of the course.

 

Drafts

A draft is an in-progress writing.  You will write several drafts for each essay.  Do not throw your drafts away. You will need them to show process and progress in your final paper.

 

Workshop

For each assigned essay and presentation you will share your in-progress work with a small group.  In this group you will engage in thoughtful discussions about the content, organization and presentation of your classmates work.

 

Conferences

You will be required to meet with me at least two times during the semester. We will schedule these conferences in advance and you will be asked to come to each conference with a completed set of ideas and questions. I also encourage you to conference with me any time during my office hours or by appointment

A missed conference is an absence.

Plagiarism will not be tolerated

Plagiarism means using someone elses published ideas or writing as if they were your own. This applies to web published materials.

March 20 is the last day to drop this course without academic penalty


Student Learning Goals

 

At the completion of this course you will be able to:

            - Interpret and evaluate argumentative discourse, including writing and speech

            - Construct cogent arguments

            - Communicate those arguments clearly, coherently and effectively

            - Locate, synthesize and evaluate relevant information

            - Demonstrate an understanding of the aims and methods of intellectual discourse

            - Weigh evidence and evaluate the arguments of differing viewpoints

 

Evaluation

 

The evaluation of your work in this course will be based on your fulfillment of the class requirements as well as on the following:

 

60% Essays

For each essay and presentation assignment you will receive a grade and a written comment.  The final evaluation of your essays and presentations will be based on these grades as well as on the progress of your writing over the course of the semester.

 

40% Informal Writing and Speaking, Work Ethic and Class Participation 

The evaluation of your informal writing and speaking will be based on your willingness to challenge yourself, try new things, think in new ways and see something from a different perspective. Work ethic refers to the time, effort and enthusiasm that you devote to your work and helping others.  Class Participation considers your willingness to share your ideas and questions and listen thoughtfully to the ideas and questions of others. Informal Writing and Speaking, Work Ethic and Class Participation include the work that you do individually and in a group.

 

If at any point you are unclear about where you stand in the course it is your responsibility to conference with me so that we can discuss it.

 

The Writing Center

 

The Writing Center is a resource where you can receive feedback on your writing.  You are encouraged to use this free service when you are writing or revising a paper.  The Writing Center is not limited to students who have problems with writing.  Drop in at 101 McIver or call: 3343125 for an appointment.

 


[T]he simple act of listening is crucial to the concept of language, more crucial even than reading and writing, and language in turn is crucial to human society.  There is proof of that, I think, in all the histories and prehistories of human experience M. Scott Momaday