COURSE POLICIES
Fall 2009
ENGLISH 1102-08 CRN 80633
HUM 208 MW 5:30-6:45
Instructor: Marian Muldrow
Office: 310-A
Office Hours: By appt.
E-mail: mmuldrow@westga.edu
URL: www.westga.edu/~mmuldrow and webct.westga.edu
Contact: To reach me about course concerns and questions, email me via WebCT mail.
Attendance
Students will be administratively withdrawn from class based on the following attendance policy: For classes that meet twice a week, a student is allowed three absences. Upon the fourth absence, the student will be withdrawn. Be aware that no distinction exists between excused and unexcused absences.
If the withdrawal occurs prior to October 6th, the student will receive a grade of W. If the withdrawal occurs after October 6th, the student will receive a grade of WF. (FYW Department Policy)
Disruptive Behavior Policy
Students may be dismissed from any class meeting at which they exhibit behavior that disrupts the learning environment of others. Such behavior includes – but is not limited to – arriving late for class, allowing cell phones to ring, speaking disrespectfully to the instructor and/or to other students, checking email or surfing the web, and using personal audio or visual devices. Each dismissal of this kind will count as an absence and will be applied toward the attendance policy above. (Department Policy)
Department Paperless Policy
As of Fall 2006, the English Department implemented a “paperless” policy in its classrooms. Therefore, all materials (handouts, assignment sheets, notes, etc.) will be made available online. Students may print these necessary course documents, including the syllabus, on their home computers or using a computer lab on campus.
Late Work and Make Up Work Policy
Assignments will not be accepted after the due date; therefore, you will not make up assignments after the due date.
Plagiarism & Excessive Collaboration Policy
Plagiarism & Academic Dishonesty
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.
See also, excessive collaboration. Any student turning in plagiarized material will receive an F for the course.
The University policies for handling Academic Dishonesty are found in the following documents:
The Faculty
Handbook,
sections 207 and 208.0401
http://www.westga.edu/~vpaa/handrev/
Student
Uncatalog:
"Rights and Responsibilities"; Appendix J.
http://www.westga.edu/handbook/
Excessive Collaboration
By the end of the term in both ENGL 1101 and 1102, students should demonstrate the ability to produce independent writing (writing without collaborative assistance of peers, writing tutors, or professionals in the field) that shows an acceptable level of competence. Although classroom activities and out-of-class assignments may highlight collaborative learning and collaborative research, excessive collaboration (collaboration that results in the loss of a student's voice/style and original claims to course-related work) is considered another form of academic dishonesty and therefore will not be permitted.
Recycled papers
Turning in work from another class is strictly prohibited. All assignments must fit the requirements. You will not be allowed to write outside of the assigned topics without conferencing with me ahead of time.
Role of the Writing Center
The role of the Writing Center is to offer consultation in which tutors question, respond to, offer choices, and encourage revision in student essays. Tutors do not evaluate or prescribe solutions to problematic areas in student essays, and tutors are specifically trained to avoid appropriating the student's work. For more information, visit the Writing Center online at http://www.westga.edu/~writing.
Disability Pledge
I pledge to do my best to work with the University to provide all students with equal access to my classes and materials, regardless of special needs, temporary or permanent disability, special needs related to pregnancy, etc.
If you have any special learning needs, particularly (but not limited to) needs defined under the Americans with Disabilities Act, and require specific accommodations, please do not hesitate to make these known to me, either yourself or through Disability Services in 272 Parker Hall at (770) 839-6428.
Students with documented special needs may expect accommodation in relation to classroom accessibility, modification of testing, special test administration, etc. This is not only my personal commitment: it is your right, and it is the law. For more information, please contact Disability Services at the State University of West Georgia.
Revision Policy
You will have the opportunity to revise your work throughout the writing process. We will do much of the drafting in class, and you will be expected to attend the Writing Center twice during the semester. You will attend before essays one and two. You must provide documentation that you attended. If you fail to attend, I will not accept your final draft of essays one and/or two.
Extra Credit
You will have the opportunity to have points added to quizzes for attending events on campus, which I will make you aware of prior to the event. You must have proof of attendance to receive points. Proof of attendance includes a ticket-out-the-door provided at the event or your name on a sign up sheet at the event. I will determine the point value based on the event, which I will tell you prior to the event.
COURSE STATEMENTS
Writing Center Statement
TLC 1201 678-839-6513
Writing@westga.edu www.westga.edu/~writing
The University Writing Center works with students and other members of the UWG community to improve writing skills.
What We Do:
· Discuss ideas, read drafts, and work through revisions of essays; we do not proofread
· Regents’ Test Preparation (both the reading and essay sections)
· Creative Writing Consultations
· MLA, APA, Chicago/Turabian, and other citation formats
Policies:
· Please make appointments in advance. We accept walk-ins, but we cannot guarantee that a tutor will be available.
· If you cannot keep your appointment, you must call or email us 24 hours in advance to cancel. If you do not notify us 24 hours in advance, you will be counted as a No Show.
· Please arrive at your appointment on time. If you are 10 minutes late or more, you will be counted as a No Show and will not be able to have your appointment.
· If you have 3 No Shows in one semester, you will not be able to have any more appointments for that semester.
Hours:
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 10:00am-7:00pm
Thursday 10:00am-3:00pm
Friday 10:00am-12:00pm
Course Catalogue Description:
A composition course focusing on skills required for both effective writing for various rhetorical situations and critical reading of texts. In writing, students must demonstrate competency in argumentation, and writing that is strengthened by the use of multiple textual sources.
General Learning Outcomes:
· To read, understand, and interpret a broad range of written and visual texts from a variety of genres (including but not limited to nonfiction, fiction, poetry, drama, and film).
· To understand literary principles and use basic terms important to critical writing and reading.
· To develop skills in all the tools necessary for effective argumentation.
· To develop facility with the whole writing process from invention through revision.
· To understand and employ a variety of rhetorical modes and techniques of persuasion.
· To acquire reasonable mastery of conventions of college-level prose writing.
· To incorporate and document additional textual materials to strengthen and support argument.
Specific Learning Outcomes:
Critical Reading and Analysis
Writing Process and Rhetorical Objectives
Minimal Competency Requirements
Essay Level
Paragraph Level
Sentence Level
Documentation Style
Use the MLA style for documenting sources.
Technological Objective
Demonstrate the ability to use word processing and to find and evaluate electronic resources.
Assessment and Assignments:
Essay #1 15%
Essay #2 15%
Essay #3 20%
Final 25%
Reading Quizzes and Class work 10%
In-Class Writing Assignments 15%
** If you do not attend the workshop(s) for an essay, you cannot turn in a final copy. You must bring a draft on the workshop days. If you do not, this will count as a absence.
You will submit all essays via the drop box in Course Den by 5 p.m. of the due date. You must save the file as an RTF with a file name of your first and last name and essay number. Example: Marian Muldrow essay1.rtf
Texts:
Regents’ Statement
The Regents’ Examination is a two-part test of minimum-level reading and writing proficiency. Students are required to take this examination during their first semester of coursework at UWG. Students who wish to seek preparation for the exam beyond that provided by this course may visit the Writing Center or the Excel Center. For more information about the exam, please visit http://www.westga.edu/~lst/RegFAQ.htm. For general info: http://www.gsu.edu/rtp and for sample topics: http://www.gsu.edu/~wwwrtp/topics.htm
Links to FYW rubrics
Link to in-class rubric http://www.westga.edu/~engdept/FirstYearWriting/ENGL1101and1102/InClassWritingAssessment.htm
Link to
out-of-class rubric
http://www.westga.edu/~engdept/FirstYearWriting/ENGL1101and1102/OutOfClassWritingAssessment.htm
Grading summary with the letter to numeric scale:
In-Class Essay:
4=95%; 4/3=92%; 3/4=88%; 3=85%; 3/2=82%; 2/3=78%; 2=75%; 2/1=72%; 1/2=68%; 1=65%; 1/0=62%; 0=50
Out-of-Class Essay:
A+=98%; A=95%; A-=92%; B+=88%; B=85%; B-=82%; C+=78%; C=75%; C-=72%; D+=68%; D=65%; D-=62%; F=50%
Students must have a C or higher to progress to the next course.
IMPORTANT DATES:
October 6- Last day to withdraw with W
October 15-16- No class- Fall break
November 25-28 - Thanksgiving break
December 2- Last day of MW classes
December 7-11- Final Exams
December 14- Grades due