ENGL 2050: Self Staging: Oral Communication in Daily Life

Pafford 105, 5:00-7:45

 

 

Dr. Joshua Masters, TLC 2244

Phone: 678-839-4862

Email: jmasters@westga.edu

Website: http://www.westga.edu/~jmasters/

Office Hours: M-T 3-4:30

 

Description

 

In Self-Staging: Oral Communication in Everyday Life, we will study the public “self” in relation to a variety of audiences, understanding how the personas we construct and the roles we play differ in relation to different audiences. The course will be broken up into three units, each culminating in individual oral performances crafted in group workshops. We will begin by exploring the nature of public performances that have a human spectacle at their center, such as in a museum, at a cultural exposition, or even in a freakshow. How and why do we stage ourselves as monsters, curiosities, and “others” that we then consume as a spectacle? Our second unit focuses on the comedic self, the self who entertains an audience by telling stories and creating a persona—a persona that might resemble the “real” self (Chris Rock), act as its ironic opposite (Stephen Colbert), or be purely invented (Borat). Our final unit will examine the professional self, with a potential employer as one’s primary audience.

 

Required Texts

 

All readings will be available on course reserve through the library. See “Reading Assignments” below for details.

 

Requirements

 

One of the most important requirements is sustained engagement with the class for nearly three hours a day. In other words, one’s “student self,” and one’s ability to play the role of an interested learner in a meaningful community of learners, will be a huge component of the final grade. Daily reading quizzes, short writing assignments in preparation for class, performance-building workshops, and three oral presentations will make up the rest of the final grade.

 

 

 

 

* Students with disabilities should meet with me at the beginning of the semester, and we will make any necessary arrangements.

 

 


 

Explanation of Course Requirements

 

Final Grade: To pass the course, students must complete all three oral presentations plus the five short writing assignments. Your final grade will be calculated as follows: Presentation #1 (The Self as Spectacle): 25%; Presentation #2 (The Comedic Self): 25%; Presentation #3 (Job Interview): 10%; Attendance and Participation: 25%; Reading Quizzes: 15%.

 

Reading Assignments: All reading assignments are on the library’s Docutek system. You must print out each reading assignment and bring it to class on the day that it’s due. To access the reading, go to the Ingram Library website: http://www.westga.edu/~library/

 

Quizzes: At the beginning of each class, you will take a comprehensive, fact-based quiz on the day’s reading assignment. Once the quiz is distributed, the door to the class will close, and you will have about five minutes to complete the quiz. If you arrive late, you will not be allowed to take the quiz, and you must wait outside until the quiz is completed. If you are absent for whatever reason, you will not be allowed to retake a quiz. Under no circumstances will I give make-up quizzes. All quizzes are open note (but not open book), and you are encouraged to bring notes based on the reading to class. Quizzes will be written in a large blue book which you must purchase for Tuesday’s class.

 

Writing Assignments: Despite this being an English class, it requires very little formal written work from you. Your performances will need to be scripted, of course, but they will be presented orally rather than in writing. Your scripts will be composed in such a way that best suits each individual student—whether typed, written on note cards, power-pointed, or written on cocktail napkins. The department requires ten pages of typed writing for this class, however. You will therefore be writing two short exploratory essays about the reading materials for units one and two. In addition, following each oral performance, you will have two days to write up an evaluation of your work. These must be typed and at least 500 words.

 

Discussion and Attendance: Students are expected to attend every class and arrive on time, prepared, and eager to spend nearly three hours in a stuffy classroom while all your friends are at the beach. Your participation grade is based upon your performance in the class in terms of workshops, discussion, and attendance habits. You are expected to demonstrate genuine engagement with the material, actively contribute to discussion topics, show adequate preparation for each class, and respect the ideas of your classmates.

 

Cellphones and Texting: Use of electronic messaging devices of all shapes, sizes, and forms is absolutely forbidden inside the classroom and during workshop. In a class of this length, one which involves out-of-class workshops, you will feel sorely tempted to check your messages and perhaps even send one or two. Resist the urge. Each evening there will be a ten minute break at which time you can text, twitter, and chat. Otherwise, show the class, your classmates, and especially your group-mates the respect of your undivided attention. Each violation of this contract will diminish your final grade by 5% (seriously). And I love tattletales.

 

Email: All official email correspondence must take place through UWG accounts; however, I will also be establishing a class list using your preferred email address for other forms of communication. Your emails should address me (“Dear Dr. Masters,” rather than “HEY”), and they must be signed. Please proofread them and write in full sentences.

 

Tardiness and Leaving Early: If you arrive to class late, you will not be allowed to take the quiz (thus losing valuable points), and you will be marked a half hour late. If you have to leave a class early, the hours of class missed will be noted. Each student can miss three hours of class without penalty.

 

Absences: Attending each class is essential to your success in this course. Missing a three hour class is the same as missing a week of class during a regular semester. Each student can miss one class (three hours) without penalty; after that, for each half hour of missed class, I will subtract two percentage points from your final grade. If you were to miss two classes, that’s ten  percent off your final grade (or a full letter grade).

 

Departmental Plagiarism Policy: The Department of English and Philosophy defines plagiarism as taking personal credit for the words and ideas of others as they are presented in electronic, print, and verbal sources. The Department expects that students will accurately credit sources in all assignments. An equally dishonest practice is fabricating sources or facts; it is another form of misrepresenting the truth. Plagiarism is grounds for failing the course.

 

Course Goals

Program Goals

Assessment activities

Part One: The Self as Spectacle

 

Monday, June 7th

Tuesday, June 8th

Wednesday, June 9th

 

Thursday, June 10th

 

Monday, June 14th

·          Final Preparations for Presentation #1.

 

Tuesday, June 15th

 

Part Two: The Comedic Self

 

Wednesday, June 16th

 

Thursday, June 17th

 

Monday, June 21st

 

Tuesday, June 22nd

 

Wednesday, June 23rd

·         Workshop till we drop

 

Thursday, June 24th

 

Part Three: The Employable Self

 

Monday, June 28th

 

Tuesday, June 29th

 

Wednesday, June 30th