
English 1020: Composition II
3
credit hours
| Course Information | |
| Course Description: | |
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English 1020 is a composition course emphasizing documented critical writing, based on an introduction to fiction, drama, and poetry. |
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| Course Objectives: | |
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Students will be able to
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apply Composition I
planning, organizing, drafting, revising and editing skills to the
writing of literary argument papers in Composition II. · read closely primary and secondary sources and understand them at interpretive and evaluative levels in preparation for writing about them. · distinguish among opinions, facts, inferences, and persuasive approaches in primary and secondary sources.
· formulate thesis
sentences based on readings of primary and/or secondary sources, select material from them to support theses, and write
papers with well-developed ideas supporting the thesis. · use appropriate rhetorical patterns, such as comparison/contrast and argumentation, to demonstrate an understanding of the elements of fiction, poetry and drama in coherent essays which develop literary arguments from process to product. · manage, coordinate, and document primary and secondary sources according to MLA style in solving problems and arriving at decisions in the writing process. · compose papers using correct diction, syntax, usage, grammar, and mechanics.
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| Prerequisites and Corequisites: | |
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English 1010: Composition I |
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Course Topics: |
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The required course topics are rhetoric, argument and persuasion, research, and literary analysis of poems, short stories, and plays. |
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Specific Course Requirements: |
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Students should have basic Composition I knowledge of essay composition and development. Students should be able to read poems, short stories, and plays critically and interpretively. They should have college-level competency in grammar, punctuation, and mechanics. They must be familiar and comfortable with basic computer and Internet skills. They must be familiar with or willing to learn a variety of WebCT tools. |
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| Textbooks, Supplementary Materials, Hardware and Software Requirements | |
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Required Textbooks: |
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| Please visit the Virtual Bookstore to obtain textbook information for this course: | |
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Supplementary Materials: |
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Hardware Requirements: |
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The minimum requirements can be found at http://www.tn.regentsdegrees.org/students/hardware_software.htm. |
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Software Requirements: |
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The minimum requirements can be found at http://www.tn.regentsdegrees.org/students/hardware_software.htm.
Microsoft Word is the recommended word processing software for this course. Students who do not have Microsoft Word should be able to submit essays as web pages (HTML files) or as rich text format files (RTF files). Essay assignments will be submitted to the WebCT assignment dropbox.
At least one of the course assignments allows but does not require Real Player audio. This is free software available from the Internet at http://www.real.com. |
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| Instructor Information | |
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Please click on the "Professor" link on the WebCT navigation bar to find instructor contact information as well as other communication information. |
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| Assessment and Grading | |
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Assignments: |
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Students will read assignments in the text, post homework assignments, and submit six formal essays. Formal essays include one diagnostic essay, five other developed and revised essays, and one timed essay submitted as a final exam. Students may be asked to engage in peer editing, revision assignments, grammar quizzes, and reading quizzes at the discretion of individual professors. Essay 1 (diagnostic essay on a poem) = 50 points
Essay 2 (on a
designated poem)
= 100 points Essay 3 (on a designated short story) = 200 points
Essay 4 (on
a designated short story plus a secondary source) = 200 points
Essay 5 (on a
designated short story plus one poem)
= 200
points Essay 6 (on a designated play; timed; submitted as a final exam) = 50 points
Homework Postings
(9 total) =
100 points Essay Corrections (Essay 2, 3, 4, 5) = 100 points Total = 1,000 pts. possible
Optional
Assignments:
Peer editing and response, revision requirements, grammar quizzes, or reading
quizzes (at the
discretion of the professor) |
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Grading Procedure: |
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Each essay is evaluated on its own
merits. There is no formula for judging a paper. When grading an essay,
the professor will consider the quality of content and organization,
thesis, specific detail to support and develop general
statements, and the number and frequency of serious composition errors
(e.g. fragments, comma splices, errors in agreement and tense, and
misspellings). A paper may be relatively free from errors but lacking in
insight, thought, or content; the instructor must give such a paper a
low grade. On the other hand, a paper with strong content and organization may receive a low grade because of serious errors in grammar, punctuation, sentence structure, and spelling. Progress is a principal objective; therefore, repeated errors and deficiencies weigh more heavily in the grading as the semester goes on. Homeworks are graded based on a rubric provided for each individual homework assignment. Corrections are graded based on correctly applying rules from the Handbook to the rhetorical context of errors.
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Grading Scale: |
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Note: There are no plus or minus grades permitted for the final grades in RODP.
900 -
1000 points = A |
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| Assignments and Participation | |
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Assignments and Projects: |
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Each essay will be evaluated, marked, and returned to the student. Once an essay has been submitted for a grade, students cannot revise it for a higher grade.
Students must keep copies of their essays and other work on their home computers. Students must resubmit any essays that are lost or misplaced inside WebCT.
The instructor must have on file a copy of each graded essay before she/he can record the final grade that essay.
The professor may refuse to accept essays that are not written according to class requirements or those for which there is a question about authorship or revision. |
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Class Participation: |
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Students must participate in all interactive aspects of the course. For example, students must post to the discussion board and submit essays to the assignment drop box for the course. Students are expected to communicate with the instructor on a regular basis and check the Calendar and email frequently for announcements or changes in the course. Students must actively participate in the class consistently and at a steady pace. |
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Punctuality: |
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To receive full credit, all assignments, including essays and homeworks, corrections, and the final exam essay, must be submitted on time. Ten percent (10%) of the score will be taken away for each 24-hour period a paper or other assignment is late. Once the deadline has passed, students may lose access to submitting the assignments. Students should be aware that the course is delivered in Central Standard Time, and students who are able to work on class assignments only in the evenings should make plans to complete assignments on the evening before the day of the deadline. |
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| Course Ground Rules | |
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Students are expected to communicate
with other students, learn how to navigate in WebCT, keep abreast of
course emails, and read directions in the Course Modules and Units
thoroughly and in detail. They should use WebCT email in regular
communication for the class; email outside WebCT should be reserved for
emergency use only. They should also give the instructor a web-based
email address (such as those available from Hotmail or Yahoo) as a back-up. Students should address
technical problems immediately. (See the help information below.) Students
should observe course netiquette at all times. In an
online composition course, regular attendance takes the form of turning
assignments in on time, keeping up with email from the professor and
other students, and participating in class assignments on time. If for
some reason the student must hand in any assignment late, it is his or
her responsibility to contact the professor. The student must hand in
missing essays even if they are so late that they cannot receive a
passing grade. The professor must have all essays from the student
before the student can pass the course. Plagiarism, cheating, and other forms of academic dishonesty are prohibited. According to Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary, plagiarism is to "steal and pass of as one's own (the ideas or words of another); to present as one's own an idea or product derived from an existing source." Students who plagiarize or commit any other form of academic dishonesty will receive a zero on the paper and may receive an F in the course. Using information from an Internet page, another student's paper or other assignment, or paraphrasing material from books, journals, and databases are all forms of plagiarism, cheating, and academic dishonesty. |
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| Guidelines for Communications | |
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Email: |
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Discussion Groups: |
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Chat: |
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Web Resources: |
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| Library | |
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The Tennessee Virtual Library is available to all students enrolled in the Regents Degree Program. Links to library materials (such as electronic journals, databases, interlibrary loans, digital reserves, dictionaries, encyclopedias, maps, and librarian support) and Internet resources needed by learners to complete online assignments and as background reading must be included in all courses. |
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| Students With Disabilities | |
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Qualified students with disabilities will be provided reasonable and necessary academic accommodations if determined eligible by the appropriate disability services staff at their home institution. Prior to granting disability accommodations in this course, the instructor must receive written verification of a student's eligibility for specific accommodations from the disability services staff at the home institution. It is the student's responsibility to initiate contact with their home institution's disability services staff and to follow the established procedures for having the accommodation notice sent to the instructor. |
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| Syllabus Changes | |
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The instructor reserves the right to make changes as necessary to this syllabus. If changes are necessitated during the term of the course, the instructor will immediately notify students of such changes both by individual email communication and posting both notification and nature of change(s) on the course bulletin board. |
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| Technical Support | |
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Telephone Support: |
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