Section 003Meets in Bate
2017 Mondays through Fridays 11:30-13:00
Tentative Syllabus for 2nd Summer Semester 2007
Daily
Syllabus for English 3880
|
Date |
Topic |
Reading |
Remarks/Assignments |
| #1 June 21-22 |
Introduction |
EBC 13 + A & B; EBC 1 & 2 |
Grades; Fact Sheet;
"Economic Tsunami"; Sentence Types;
Style & Grammar; Parts of
a Business Letter; Spongebob
Squarepants;
My Spell Checker;
Letter
of Introduction (due 6/25); Parts of
a Business Letter; |
| #2 June 25-26-27-28-29 |
Planning, Writing & Completing Business
Messages; Routine
|
EBC 4, 5, 6, 7 & 8 |
Students
Intros; Review documents on p. 32 and
p. 165 and in class;
Readability; Review exercises
6.A,
6.B,
7.A, &
7.B;
"Dear John";
Assignment
#2 (due 6/29) |
| #3 July 2-3-4-5-6 |
Writing Bad News
& Persuasive
Messages; Planning & Writing Business Reports; Justification
Report |
EBC 8, 9, 10, 11 |
Review exercises
8.A,
8.C;
revise Negative
Letter (7/3); Review exercise
9.A &
9.B in
class; the
AIDA Plan; Persuasive
Message (due 7/5); No Class July 4th
(Independence Day); Review EBC example
p. 314;
Justification Report [info and
guidelines]
(due 7/7); |
| #4 July 9-10-11-12-13 |
Completing Business
Reports ; Formal Report
Requirements; |
EBC 12 |
Review EBC example p. 324;
Tentative
Work Plan (7/10) for
Formal
Report (due 7/23) Doing
Research, Works
Cited & When to Cite,
Paraphrase, or Summarize |
| #5 July 16-17-18-19-20 |
Formal Report Reviews |
EBC 14 |
Research, report covers & example of formal
report; Sample 1st
Paragraphs; First Draft Review (noon 7/17); Review Draft Review (midnight 7/19); Formal
Report (final draft due 7/23) |
| #6 July23-24-25-26 |
Employment
Communication |
TBA |
Resume
; Functional
Resume (due 7/25) |
| July 27 |
Final Exam |
|
|

Thill, John V. and Courtland L. Bovee. Excellence
in Business Communication. 7th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice
Hall, 2007.
Welcome to English 3880 Writing for Business and
Industry. This course will prepare you well for communication
responsibilities found in business and industry, as well as in government,
academia, and the professional world. Since the emphasis in this course is on
communication, you will read often, discuss what you've read, and apply what
you've learned in frequent writing assignments.
This semester, my
office hours
are 0800-0930 daily, but I'm also available
24/7 via e-mail (if you need to contact me
on weekends, e-mail me in Newport).
This course is designed to give students practical experience
in developing the skills they will need to practice effective business
communication. In doing this, students write various types of correspondence
including letters, memorandums, and reports.
Attendance
Policy
Because this course is built on a building-block format,
in which each assignment builds upon the one before and prepares students
for the assignment to follow, attendance is essential.
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, meeting for conferences, and active participation.
Cell Phone Policy
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!
Conferences
For the formal report assignment, several conferences will
be scheduled. You are expected to attend each scheduled conference and to be
prepared for each conference. Missing conferences will be reflected in your
studentship grade.
Laptops in Class Policy
Laptop computers are wonderful tools (I will use mine in
this class from time to time); however, students who bring their laptops to
class often use them for something other than taking notes (e.g., checking
e-mail, instant messaging, surfing the net for porn, etc.), and laptops are
frequently a distraction to other students. If you are caught using your laptop
for anything except taking notes, you will be given the choice of receiving an F
for this semester or donating your laptop to your favorite professor: me!
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:
-
Participate in class discussions and honor the Honor Code
(read: Don't Plagiarize!).
-
Develop and maintain a sense of professionalism and decorum
at all times (by now, students should be serious about developing some
degree of professionalism).
-
Be honest--don't try to B. S. me.
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.
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.
Academic integrity is a
fundamental value of higher education and East Carolina University; therefore, I
will not tolerate acts of cheating, plagiarism, falsification or attempts to
cheat, plagiarize or falsify. Should I determine that an academic integrity
violation has taken place, I reserve the right either to assign a grade penalty
or to refer the case to the Office of Student Conflict Resolution for an
Academic Integrity Board hearing. The minimum grade penalty that I will assign
is an F for the assignment/course. Should it come to my attention that you have
had a prior academic integrity violation, or if there are other aggravating
circumstances, I will refer the case directly to the Office of Student Conflict
Resolution. Should the Academic Integrity Board determine that you committed an
academic integrity violation, you may be assigned a grade penalty and/or any
other sanction allowed in the student Code of Conduct, up to and including
suspension from the University.
"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."
Because this class seeks to prepare students for business
writing in workplace, the following criteria apply to grades:
Table 1: 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 it before others saw it. |
|
D
|
(This grade is rarely given because
your work is either acceptable or unacceptable.) |
|
F (69-0)
|
Your boss would start looking for
someone to replace you! |
Unless otherwise indicated, grades for this class will use the 10 point
system (90-100=A, 80-89=B, 70-79=C, and 69 or below = F).
For most
assignments, your grade is determined by how well your document reflects the
guidelines for the assignment.
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. For an up-to-date list of lab locations, visit
http://www.ecu.edu/itc/lab/.
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, located in Slay 138, to verify the disability before any
accommodations can occur. The telephone number is 252-328-6799.
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:
-
Use 20 lb., white, bond paper (or whatever paper is available for printers in
the various campus writing labs).
-
Maintain a 1-inch margin (top, bottom, left, and right margins).
-
Compositions should use either an Arial or Times New
Roman fonts.
-
Printed text should be dark and clear but without smears
and smudges (if a dot matrix printer is used, make sure to print in the
letter-quality mode).
If you should discover one or two typing errors (typos),
neatly correct the mistake(s) by crossing out the error(s) and 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 from
the grade awarded.
Online Matters
Students should visit
http://personal.ecu.edu/snyderh/Messages/studinfo.html often, especially
during inclement weather.
Due to the very nature of writing and the Internet, some of this course lends
itself to being online; thus, some of this course will utilize the distance
learning model. Be
sure to check your ECU e-mail account daily.
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 3880-001).
Submitting
Assignments
Assignments may be submitted in one of the following ways:
-
Turning it in at the end of the class when it is due,
-
Delivering to the instructor (or his office) by the end of the day the
assignment is due; actually if it's in the box by my door by the beginning of
the next class day, that'll be okay, too (but remember that I get here around
7:00 a.m.), or
-
Electronically (when told to do so)--note the subject line admonition
immediately above the Submitting
Assignments heading for this section.
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,
unless you are instructed to.
Under no circumstances will an assignment be accepted after it has been
critiqued in class.
|
Table
2: Summary of Assignments
& Percentage of Final Grade
|
|
Letter Series (4)
|
30%
|
| Letter of Introduction |
05%
|
| Positive Message |
05%
|
| Negative Message |
10%
|
| Persuasive Message |
10%
|
|
Reports (3)
|
50%
|
| Justification Report |
10%
|
| Tentative Work Plan |
05%
|
| Formal Report |
35%
|
|
Employment Correspondence (1)
|
10%
|
| Resume |
10%
|
| Studentship |
10%
|
|
Total
|
100%
|
During this course, students will have the opportunity
to:
-
Compose a letter of introduction and write various business
letters and reports and a resume.
-
Plan, propose, research, analyze, draft, revise, and report
on a topic that is technical (as opposed to literary) in nature.
-
Master grammar, rhetoric, and usage of the American English
language.
In order to do this, students are expected to acquire the
ability to:
-
Organize their correspondence in an appropriate manner.
-
Analyze each writing situation for its purpose, audience,
and goodwill implications.
-
Properly integrate graphics into a formal report.
-
Recognize proper business writing and develop an effective
writing style.
 |
Created May 1, 1998 Updated
July 13, 2007 |