English 1200: Freshman Composition II

Assignments
Course Description
Course Objectives
Grades
Policies
Projects
Studentship
Textbooks

 Section 004 meets in Bate 2017 at 8 o'clock MWF
Section 032 meets in Bate 2017 at 10 o'clock MWF
Section 070 meets in Bate 2016 at 1 o'clock MWF
 

Tentative Syllabus for Spring 2005

Hal Snyder's Tentative Daily Syllabus

Date
Topic
Reading
Remarks/Assignments 
#1 Jan. 7
Introduction, Overview, Fact Sheet & Grades
#2 Jan. 10-12-14 Intro to English 1200 Instructor's Packet Sponge Bob Squarepants
#3 Jan. 17-19-21 Intro to MLA Style MLA Handbook No Class on Jan. 17 (State Holiday);
Exercise
#4 Jan. 24-26-28 Intro to Research WRR 1 & 10 Project #1 Site Study (due 2/11); The Basics of Writing
#5 Jan. 31-Feb. 2-4 Integrating Quotes TBA "What It Was, Was Football"; Peer Reviews; tentative topics
#6 Feb. 7-9-11 Site Study (cont'd); Intro to Project #2 TBA Workshop for Project #1(due 2/11); Project #2 Archival Research (due 3/7)
#7 Feb. 14-16-18 North Carolina Collection WRR 2 visit Joyner Library Joyner (Room 1021); artifacts; "Alice's Restaurant"
#8 Feb. 21-23-25 Analysis, Invention & Context WRR 7 Project #2 draft (due 2/28; Project #2 (due 3/7); Project #2 Info
#9 Feb. 28-Mar. 2-4 Intro to Research & Problem Solving WRR 8 Workshop for Project #2; Project #3 Research and Problem Solving (due 4/25); possible topics
#10 Mar. 7-9-11 Beginning a Research Project WRR 9 Project #2 due; Doing Research; Narrowing Your Topic;  Research ?s; Research Project Deadlines; Research Prospectus (due 3/21)
#11 Mar. 14-16-18     No Class All Week (Spring Break)
#12 Mar. 21-23-25 Annotatons, Summaries & Paraphrases TBA Annotated bibliography (due 4/4); How to Write an Annotated Bibliography ;No Class March 25 (State Holiday)
#13 Mar. 28-30 & Apr. 1 MLA Documentation

WRR 3 & 5

(Early Registration for Summer & Fall 2005 runs all week)  MLA Style; Annotated Bibliography draft workshop (3/30--due 4/4);

#14 Apr. 4-6-8 Argumentation WWR 14 (Early Registration for Summer & Fall 2005 continues)

#15 Apr. 11-13-15

Writing About Research; Conferences  WRR 13 When to Cite, Paraphrase, or Summarize; Parenthetical Documentation; Citing Online Sources; Documenting Sources; When a Source MUST Be Cited

#16 Apr. 18-20-22

Conferences   Conferences for Project #3 (due 4/25)
#17 Apr. 25 Review for Final Exam   Project #3 due; Take Home Final Exam
Apr. 27 (Wednesday)

May 2 (Monday)

May 2 (Monday)

Final Exam
0800-1030 Section 004

0800-1030 Section 032

1100-13:30 Section 070


 

Textbooks

Gibaldi, Joseph. MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 6th ed. New York: MLA, 2003.

Veit, Richard, and Christopher Gould. Writing, Reading, and Research. 6th ed. Boston: Allyn, 2004.

In addition, students will need something electronic (a floppy disk, USB flash drive, etc.) large enough to hold the work for this class (if students are planning on using the Writing Center to save their work on).


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.

East Carolina University and the Americans with Disabilities Act

East Carolina University seeks to comply fully with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Students requesting accommodations based on a covered disability must go to the Department for Disability Support Services, Brewster A-114, to verify the disability before any accommodations can occur. The telephone number is 252-328-6799.

Format Standards

A professional appearance establishes a writer's credibility and improves reader understanding. All work submitted for evaluation should follow the criteria below:

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 from the grade awarded.

Online Matters

Students should visit http://personal.ecu.edu/snyderh/Messages/studinfo.html often, especially during inclimate weather.

From time to time, some students encounter a printer problem. If you have a paper due and you develop a printer problem, e-mail yourself and attach the paper to your message. Go to the Writing Lab (Bate 2005), check your e-mail, open your attachment, and print it out on their printer.

Should you have occasion to contact me via e-mail, please identify yourself and the course section in the subject line (e.g., Assignment #1 Question John Doe 1100-008).

Submitting Assignments

Assignments are submitted in either of two ways:

Some students may encounter a "printer" problem just before an assignment is due. If this should happen to you, send yourself an e-mail and attach the assignment. Go to the Writing Lab (Bate 2005), check your e-mail, open your attachment, and print it out on their printer--then you can submit your assignment(s) on a timely basis.

Do NOT e-mail me an assignment. Under no circumstances will an assignment be accepted after it has been critiqued in class.


 

 Table 1: Summary of Assignments & Percentage of Final Grade

Project #1 (Site Study)

Paper

20%
Project #2 (Archival Research)
20%
Project #3 (Research and Problem Solving)
Research Prospectus (05%)
Annotated Bibliography (10%)
Research Process Reflection Piece (05%)
Research Paper (20%)

40%
Final Exam
10%
Studentship
10%
total
100%

"Excellence is not a sometime thing; it's an all-the-time thing.  You don't perform at that level once in a while; you don't do things right once in a while; you do them right all the time.  Excellence is a habit. Unfortunately, so is mediocrity." From the NPR "Scenes I Wish I Had Written." 


Table 2: Grades and What They Mean

 Letter Grade

What the Grade Means

A (100 - 92)
Your boss would be impressed and remember you at promotion time. 
B (91-83)
Your boss would be satisfied with the job but not over impressed.
C (82-70)
Your boss would be disappointed and ask you to revise before others saw it.
D
(This grade is rarely awarded because assignments are either acceptable--and thus at least a C--or unacceptable--no higher than an F)
F (69-0)
Your boss would start looking for someone to replace you!


Course Description

This course builds on students’ understanding of rhetoric and the processes involved in academic writing.  The focus is on research writing:  on conveying the results of our search for knowledge to a variety of audiences that will learn from and potentially act on the results of that research. Students will conduct research in a variety of forms, learn how to formulate research questions, identify and search both print and electronic sources, incorporate information gained from the library and other sources into their writing, cite secondary sources accurately and responsibly, and apply research writing to problem-solving in the academic and social spheres.


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 professional conduct, including active participation in class and support for the work of others.

Cell Phone

Don’t bring your cell phone to class. If you forget and bring your cell phone to class, turn it off. If you bring it to class and forget to turn it off, and the damn thing rings, your cell phone will magically become my “new” cell phone. If you don’t like this policy, don’t bring your cell phone to class with you. The best way for you to not lose (i.e., keep) your cell phone is this: don’t bring your cell phone to class!

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 files).

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!

Furthermore, the ECU Student Handbook defines plagiarism as "Copying the language, structure, ideas, and/or thoughts of another and adopting some as one's own original work." Be aware that the writing you do in this course must be your own work and, primarily, your own words. It is okay to incorporate the words of others from articles, essays, and interviews as evidence to support your ideas, but when you do this, you should be sure to cite your sources appropriately. We will talk about documentation and citations during this course. Penalties for plagiarism are severe--the can include failing this course, suspension, or even expulsion from the university, so be sure to see me about any doubts you may have before you turn in an assignment. You can access the student handbook at http://www.ecu.edu/studenthandbook/III.htm.

Workshops

Part of the writing process is revision, and for most of our writing projects, we will have a writing workshop (or peer review); it makes sense that if you are to obtain "feedback" from your peers, you must first have a good first/rough draft. Thus, if you have no draft, don't waste the valuable time of classmates by coming to class! 


Projects

Project #1 Site Study
Project #2 Archival Research
Project #3 Research and Problem Solving


(Note: All projects will involve research. All projects will require that you keep a detailed research notebook or journal that documents your research process and developing knowledge on your topic; furthermore, all projects will require responsible, correct, and thorough documentation of sources both in-text and on a Works Cited page. Also, this course adopts a process approach to writing--this means that each project will ask you to complete several drafts and demonstrate a commitment to revision.)

Project One:  Site Study: Observation and Interview (20%)

For this project, you will conduct primary research through observation and interviews. This project introduces students to methods of field research that are often in the social sciences and in business and marketing. The research component of the project involves selecting a site where a particular activity occurs, carefully observing and taking notes on the activity, and interviewing at least two people involved in the activity.  As part of your research, you should also collect 1-3 “artifacts” from your chosen site.  Artifacts are items that you can physically and legally take with you from the site (e.g., a program, a leaflet, an instruction card, a bulletin or newsletter, etc.)

The project has two components. First, it asks you to be descriptive, using observation and interview to answer questions such as who is at the site? What are they doing?  How are they interacting?  What rules or expectations seem to influence the activity they are involved in?  What routine processes are involved in the activity?  What do you notice that creates tension or disrupts the activity?  How do the participants seem to feel about the activity?  How have they come to be involved? What do they see as their role(s)?  You should also consider the physical characteristics of the site: How is the site set up?  What significant objects are there? How are the participants interacting with these objects?  Through careful observation and interview, you should try to discover details that a casual viewer or a regular participant in the activity might not notice. 

Second, the project asks you to compile and analyze the details you have gathered through your observations and interviews.  In the process, you will synthesize and draw inferences about the meaning of what you've observed. You should consider questions such as why do you think the participants interact the way they do?  What do you think is the significance of their interactions?  Why might particular procedures, habits, or routines have developed?  What values do they seem to reflect? 

Based on your research, you will produce a detail paper of about 6 pages (1,500 words) in which you explain and analyze the site and the activity, and your artifacts.

Project Two:  Archival research project North Carolina Collection (20%)

Following an orientation session at the North Carolina Collection in Joyner Library, you will select an item from that collection for analysis.  Acceptable items include:

  • Newspaper article/clipping/letter to the editor

  • Magazine or other periodical article

  • Yearbook

  • Personal letter

  • Map

  • Government (state/local/county) document

  • Rare book/broadside

  • Pamphlet

  • Any object from the collection that you want to analyze in detail; this must have my approval (before you can get my approval, you must provide me with either a copy or a detailed written description of the item/artifact).

Your analysis might begin with poising questions such as the following (your research will helpyou answer these questions):

  1. Where, how, and by whom was this object produced?

  2. What purpose did it serve when it was first produced?

  3. What does it indicate about the place that it was produced?

  4. What does it tell about the time that it was produced?

  5. What does it suggest about its author or maker?

  6. Why do you consider it significant (i.e., an important part of history, or an important part of North Carolina culture)?

Based on your research, you will produce a research essay of about 6 pages (1,500 words) in which you contextualize and explain the significance of the item you have chosen from the North Carolina collection. This paper can be divided into 3 parts: description, analysis, and significance. A successful paper will showcase your ability to find, evaluate, and analyze a special collections artifact.Completing this assignment will give you an opportunity to work in an archival collection and to learn something interesting about the history of North Carolina; it will also give you an opportunity to learn research methodology in the humanities.

Project Three:  Research and Problem-Solving (40%)

For this project you will identify a problem that needs to be addressed.  This problem should have some personal or professional interest for you. Consider, for example, a problem you have noticed on campus, in your local community, or in the profession you see yourself entering after college. You will research this problem, using a variety of sources, with the ultimate goal of writing a well-informed proposal that suggests what should be done to address the problem.  The project includes the following parts:

Research Prospectus (05%): The Research Prospectus is a statement of your plans Project #3, and the prospectus contains three elements:

  • A statement of your research question. Although your topic may be tentative at this stage of the research process, your statement of this question (and, thus, the focus o your research) is based on what you know, and it may be changed as you discover more information.

  • A paragraph or two about how your research is progressing so far. This summary should include why you chose this topic, what you already know about it, and what you hope to discover. You should also address any successes/problems you've had with this topic or sources.

  • A working bibliography (a list of sources that you have located thus far). Remember to use the MLA format. Remember that this is a preliminary list (you haven't read and evaluated them yet), so will likely vary from the Annotated Bibliography (see below) and the Works Cited page of your Research Paper (see below).

Evaluative Annotated Bibliography (10%): You will locate and read at least 12 sources, of which not more than four may be online sources, relating to the problem you have identified.  You will then produce a bibliography, in MLA format, that includes a summary and evaluation of each source. Annotations should show evidence of careful reaching, critical thought, and demonstrate a thorough understanding of the source.

Research Process Reflection Statement (05%): This component of the project asks you to describe and reflect on your research processes.  What was your knowledge of and belief about the problem before you started your research? How did you go about finding and evaluating your sources?  What surprised you about the search for sources? What difficulties did you encounter in finding sources? What advice would you have for future researchers interested in your topic (or a closely related one)?  Once you found your sources, what interesting or surprising things did you learn? How did your research change your thinking about the problem you selected?  What new topics have you discovered for possible research in the future?  The style of your statement may be informal like the “personal research paper” sample included in WRR (p. 236).

Research Paper (20%):  Based on your research, you will write a 8-10 page (2,000 -2,500 words) research paper in which you suggest what might be done to address the problem.  This will be a well-researched paper that uses a variety of primary and secondary sources. Your goal will be to describe the problem in detail and propose an informed, well-researched solution to the problem you identify. The successful paper will fully and carefully analyze the problem and explore alternative points of view--and--it will identify and address an appropriate audience and use evidence in ways that will accommodate that audience. For example, if you are addressing the overnight guest policy for ECU's dorm, direct your paper to someone—such as the Chancellor or the Dean of Student Affairs—who has the power to affect the change you recommend..

Final Exam (10%):  During the final week of classes, you will be provided information about the final exam assignment, which will be due in class during our designated exam time.

Studentship (10%):

The final component of your grade will be based on your level of engagement with class discussion and activities, particularly through feedback on others’ writing and presentations, as well as attendance.


Course Objectives

During this course, students can expect instruction and practice in the following areas:

  1. Formulating significant research questions.
  2. Locating, evaluating, and synthesizing primary, print, and electronic sources.
  3. Integrating source materials into original arguments.
  4. Citing sources accurately and responsibly.
  5. Applying research writing to problem solving in both academia, the community, and the work place.
  6. Conveying results of research to a variety of audiences that will learn from and potentially act upon those research findings.

Created Oct. 17, 2003
Updated April 15, 2005