English 101 Section 31 Policies Spring 2003

 

Instructor:  Ken Rumble                                                            Office:  136E McIver

Mailbox:  132 McIver                                                               Email:  rumblek@uncg.edu

Office Hours:  MWF 10 - 11 and by appointment

Office Phone Number:  334-5837                                             Course Location: Petty 320

Course Time:  M, W, F 9am - 9:50am

 

Texts: 

Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston

The Art of the Tale edited by Daniel Halpern

Writing Matters

Easy Writer by Andrea Lunsford

 

Objectives:  This is an introduction to writing course.  Our goals are to develop the skills that will allow us to write in a scholarly and persuasive way.  To accomplish these goals we will read contemporary and classic short stories and a novel.

 

Student Learning Goals:  At the completion of this course, the student 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

 

Requirements: In order to pass this course (with a "C") you must satisfactorily fulfill the following requirements:

 

-         Write four papers.  Each paper must be submitted in a folder (not a three-ring binder), along with the rough drafts, signed peer review comments from draft workshops, and other materials and notes that represent the various stages of the paper's development (including notes and photocopies and printout from any sources you have used.)  Papers must be handed in by the end of class the day they are due.  Late papers will lose one whole letter grade per day (B to C).

-         Revise a paper.

-         Complete all homework assignments (reading and writing).

-         Maintain regular attendance and active participation as both reader and writer in draft workshops, in class exercises, and classroom discussions.

 

Attendance:  Regular attendance is required.  Your grade will be lowered for poor attendance, down to and including an "F."  Specifically, you have three unexcused absences.  Absences beyond that will lower your grade.  If you miss class it is your responsibility to get the assignments from another student and complete the work.  If you miss more then eight classes you automatically fail this course, no exceptions.  If you miss class as a result of illness, family emergency, or religious obligation, it will be excused if you bring a note from an appropriate person (doctor, family member, etc.)  Being late to class three times equals an unexcused absence. English 101 depends on your presence and participation every day.

 

Grades:  When figuring your overall grade, I will use the following formula:

 

Paper #1                                                                      10%

Paper #2                                                                      15%

Paper #3                                                                      20%

Paper #4                                                                      25%

Participation                                                                 15%

Revision                                                                       15%

 

Office Conferences:  Think of my office as an extension of the classroom and use my office hours to discuss any aspect of your reading or writing:  problems, questions, papers you're working on, ideas you wish to develop, strategies you'd like to try, and so on.  Plan on having at least two conferences with me this semester to discuss your work and your progress in the course.

 

Plagiarism:  Plagiarism demonstrates contempt for ethical standards, your instructor, and your classmates.  If you commit plagiarism, you will fail this course.  You will also be referred to the Dean of Students who may recommend expulsion for academic dishonesty.

 

Format:  Your papers must be typed in black ink, double spaced, on one side of the page only, and have no title page.  Place your name, date, class, and name of the assignment in the upper right hand corner of the paper.  Place the title at the top of page one.  Number all pages.  Staple all papers securely together.

 

Paper Extensions:  I will grant extensions on papers only if:  the request is submitted in writing with the proposed deadline, and the request is submitted, at the latest, by the end of the class period before the paper is due.  No explanation is necessary for an extension.

 

If you have a disability that will effect your participation in this course, please let me or the Dean know so that we can accommodate your full participation in class.

 

            Reminder:  At the end of the semester, you will submit a portfolio of your work including all the major papers as well as any revision that you and I have agreed you will undertake.  Therefore, keep all the graded copies of your papers.

 

English 101 Section 31 Syllabus Spring 2003

Instructor:  Ken Rumble

 

Texts:

TEWW -- Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston

AT -- The Art of the Tale edited by Daniel Halpern

WM -- Writing Matters

 

 

                Week One

January

Mon.      13.  Introduction to course and course materials.  Reading and writing.

Wed.      15.  WM 11 - 22.  College writing.  Introduction to paper 1 -- Narrative.

Fri.          17.  AT 94 - 97.

 

                Week Two

Mon.      20.  Martin Luther King Jr. Day -- No Class

Wed.      22.  AT 77 - 81.

Fri.          24.  WM 38 - 43.  Narrative examples.

 

                Week Three

Mon.      27.  AT 411 - 416.

Wed.      29.  Thesis and sentence and paragraph coherence.  Peer review practice.

Fri.          31.  Peer review.  WM 86 - 101.

 

                Week Four

February

Mon.      3.  Conferences.

Wed.      5.  Paper 1 due.  Introduce paper 2 -- Description.  WM 44.

Fri.          7.  AT 318 - 322.

 

                Week Five

Mon.      10.  AT 341 - 346.  Descriptive exercise.

Wed.      12.  Descriptive fieldtrip.

Fri.          14.  AT 323 - 330.

 

                Week Six

Mon.      17.  AT 184 - 196.

Wed.      19. Peer review.

Fri.          21. Conferences.

 

                Week Seven

Mon.      24. Paper 2 due.  Introduce Research paper.  WM 57 - 58.

Wed.      26. MLA documentation.  Plagiarism.  WM 102.

Fri.          28. Library research visit.

 

                Week Eight

March

Mon.      3. TEWW Chapters 1 - 3.

Wed.      5. TEWW Chapters 4 - 5.

Fri.          7. TEWW Chapters 6 - 7.

 

                Week Nine

Mon.      10.  No Class -- Spring Break

Wed.      12.  No Class -- Spring Break

Fri.          14.  No Class -- Spring Break

 

                Week Ten

Mon.      17. TEWW Chapters 8 - 11.

Wed.      19. TEWW Chapters 12 - 13.

Fri.          21. TEWW Chapters 14 - 15.

 

                Week Eleven

Mon.      24. TEWW Chapters 16 - 18.

Wed.      26. TEWW Chapters 19 - 20.  

Fri.          28. Research paper examples WM 58 - 72.

 

                Week Twelve

Mon.      31. Peer review.

April

Wed.      2. Conferences.

Fri.          4. Paper 3 due.  Introduce argument paper.  WM 49 - 50.

 

                Week Thirteen

Mon.      7. AT 18 - 27.

Wed.      9. AT 110 - 121.

Fri.          11. AT 488 - 501.

 

                Week Fourteen

Mon.      14. AT 612 - 621.

Wed.      16. AT 481 -487.

Fri.          18.  No Class -- Spring Holiday

 

                Week Fifteen

Mon.      21. Argument paper examples WM 50 - 56.

Wed.      23. Peer review.

Fri.          25. Conferences.

 

                Week Sixteen

Mon.      28. Paper 4 due.  Introduce Revision assignment.

Wed.      30. Revision exercise.

May

Fri.          2. Peer review.

 

                Week Seventeen

Mon.      5. Conferences.

Tue.        6.  Last Day of Class.  Revision due.  Portfolio due.