English 1200: Freshman Composition II

Assignments
Course Description
Course Objectives
Grades
Policies
Portfolio
Syllabus
Textbooks

This class meets in Bate/GCB 1020 at 8 a.m.(Section 001); 10 a.m. (Section 002) MWF


Tentative Syllabus for Fall 2001
Date
Topic
Reading
Remarks/Assignments 
#1 Aug.15-17
Introduction & Overview; Projects
#2 Aug. 20-22-24 Intro to Library Research WRP Ch 1-3 Draft of Project One (due 8/27); Visit Joyner Library (?); Review writing on a computer
#3 Aug. 27-29-31 Intro to Internet Research  WRP Ch 4 No Class on Sept. 3rd (Labor Day)
#4  Sept. 6- 8 Research Strategies WRP Ch 5 Draft of plan for Project Two (due 9/17)
#5 Sept. 10-12-14 Workshop + Intro MGRP None Draft of plan for Project Two (due 9/17)
#6 Sept. 17-19-21 Digging for info WRP Ch 8 Sources exercises
#7 Sept. 24-26-28 Bibliographies WRP Ch 6 Draft of MGRP (due 10/5)
#8 Oct. 1-3-5 Style & citation Ch 7 Style exercises; Project 3 due
#9 Oct. 8-10-12 Revision; Intro to WAC Project Ch 9 No Class on Oct. 15th (Fall Break Day)
#10 Oct. 17-19 Writing in the Humanities WITH 1-33 & 35-110 Humanities exercises

#11 Oct. 22-24-26

Archival Research None

Draft of Project #3 Humanities Exercise (due with WC Portfolio 12/5)

#12 Oct. 29-31 & Nov. 1

Writing in the Social Sciences WITH 111-166 Revised Humanities Exercise (due with WC Portfolio 12/5)

#13 Nov. 5-7-9 

Writing in the Social Sciences (con'td) None (Early Registration for Spring 2002 runs all of week #13) Social Sciences exercise (due with WC Portfolio 12/5)

#14 Nov. 12-14-16

 

#15 Nov. 19

Writing in the Natural Sciences WITH 167-224

 

None

Natural Sciences exercise (Project #4 due with WC Portfolio 12/5)

No Class 11/21-23 (Thanksgiving Break)

#16 Nov. 26-28-30

Writing in the Natural Sciences None Natural Sciences exercise (due with WC Portfolio 12/5)
#17 Dec. 3-5 Review WAC Portfolio  None WAC Portfolios due 12/5
Dec. 7  (Friday)

Dec. 10 (Monday)

Final Exam
0800-1000

0800-1000


 

Textbooks

The Winkler Packet, which includes the following:

Clark, Carol Lea. English: Hits on the Web. 2nd ed. Forth Worth: Harcourt, 2000.

Kirszzner, Laurie G. and Stephan R. Mandell. The Harcourt Brace Guide to Documentation and Writing in the Disciplines. 4th ed. Fort Worth: Harcourt, 1999.

Winkler, Anthony C. and Jo Ray McCuen. Writing the Research Paper: A Handbook. 5th ed. Fort Worth: Harcourt, 1999.

In addition, students will need a floppy disk large enough to hold the work for this class (a doubled sided [DD] high density [HD] 3.5" diskette). If students are planning on using the Writing Center, they will need a floppy for a Macintosh computer.


Assignments

General Remarks

Please notice that your fees for this semester include a Computer & Technology Fee, which entitles you to any empty seat at most of the computer labs located around campus. Although some labs are restricted (the BVTE Lab is reserved for BVTE students, the Writing Lab is reserved for freshman composition students, etc.), most students use the lab in Austin.

Also, it's a pretty good idea to keep a backup copy of everything you write. You'll need a 3.5" DS/DD (720 KB) or DS/HD (1.44 MB) "floppy," and these are available at the bookstores.

Format Standards

A professional appearance establishes any writer's credibility and improves reader understanding; thus, all written work submitted for evaluation should follow the criteria below:

If you should discover one or two typing errors (typos), neatly correct the mistake(s) by crossing out the error(s)d writing the correction(s) above (three or more errors require both correction and reprinting).

Late Assignments

There aren't any, but if an assignment is submitted after a deadline has passed, 10 points per class meeting will be deducted for the grade awarded.

Submitting Assignments

Assignments are submitted in either of two ways:

 

 Table 1: Summary of Assignments & Percentage of Final Grade

Project One--Music & the Genres of Research 
10%
Project Two--Career Planning Portfolio
20%
Project Three--Multigenre Research Project
25%
Project Four--Writing Across the Curriculum Portfolio
25%
Final Exam
10%
Studentship
10%
Note: Add one point to your final grade for perfect attendance; deduct 10 points for no portfolio
100%


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Table 2: Grades and What They Mean

 Letter Grade

What the Grade Means

A (100 - 90)
Your boss would be impressed and remember you at promotion time. 
B (89-80)
Your boss would be satisfied with the job but not over impressed.
C (79-70)
Your boss would be disappointed and ask you to revise before others saw it.
D
(Hummmmmmmm)
F (69-0)
Your boss would start looking for someone to replace you!




Course Description

This course promotes skill in writing about research. It is designed to build upon the critical thinking and awareness skills of academic, public, and workplace literacies practiced in English 1100. In this course, the focus is on the use of writing to discover, organize, and convey information.

 This course uses a process approach, which identifies specific audiences and purposes, to produce research writing in a variety of genres, with a range of techniques, and across disciplines of scholarship.



Policies Attendance

Attendance is required, as is promptness with all assignments.

Although "life's little problems" often come up at the darnednest times, students are expected to be in class on time, every time, for all the time allotted to this course because it is in the classroom that information essential for the successful completion of this course is presented. However, if circumstances require your presence elsewhere, you are still responsible for material presented in class. If you anticipate any absences, please see me before hand.

Students will be rewarded for their studentship, which includes appropriate attendance, active participation, and support for the work of others.
 

Participation

Class participation is an important element of the learning process, and students are expected to feel free to freely and openly discuss the subject at hand. Since participation demonstrates (at least in part) your preparedness for each class, you are expected to:

Plagiarism

In the past, I have encouraged students to review their assignments as they prepare for future assignments. In order to do this, students necessarily have to have each assignment returned to them. Some students have allowed their friends (fellow members of clubs, fraternities, or sororities, not to mention those they are dating or their best bud) to make photocopies of their assignments (or worse yet) place their original, corrected copy in club/fraternity/sorority file).

Know this: such action violates the university's Honor Code and does a disservice to students who "copy the 'right' solution" from past assignments. Although former students have thought they'd help their friends, they have really harmed them (by robbing students of the opportunity to learn from their mistakes). The "real world" doesn't follow this unethical practice, and if I find that any of my students (either present or former) participate in this form of plagiarism (by either copying a completed assignment of a former students or by providing an assignment for you to copy) both students will be prosecuted to the fullest of my ability. This is not a warning; it's a promise.



Portfolio

On the last day of scheduled class, students are expected to submit the following

To help keep your material from getting mixed up with the work of other students, please place all graded material (as well as drafts, but not an assignments that may be due on the last day of class) inside a 10" x 13" envelope, and secure it by opening its clasps (please don't lick the glue and seal your envelope; the glue tastes ucky, and glued envelopes are darn hard to open). Envelopes are available at most bookstores for about 20 cents. In the upper left-hand corner of the envelope, label as follows: Name

ENGL 1200-001 (or 008)

Fall 2001

Students who fail to submit their portfolio of work will lose 10 points when their final grades are computed.

Packets may be picked up anytime after Spring Break; any packets not picked up by the last of class next semester will be disposed of in an ecologically safe manner #};=).



Course Objectives

During this course, students will:

1)  Become thoroughly familiar with the research process, especially doing research in Joyner Library (and on the Internet).

2)  Develop the ability to narrow a topic for research, formulate a research question, how to take notes, and how to use and document a variety of sources.

3)  Master the techniques for argumentative discourse and the uses of library and internet research to support arguments.

4)  Become proficient in composing essays that defend an argumentative thesis by means of logical analysis and evidence derived from library and internet research.

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Created May 1, 1998 
Last Updated Oct. 18, 2001