Instructor: Maria Eliades ENGL 112.02

Office: 115-17 Anderson Hall Spring 2015

E-mail: Expository Writing II

Office Hours: Th 1-5pm & by appointment Syllabus

Class Hours: W 1-3pm, F 4-5pm

About me:

I’m here to help you be successful in this class, so please see me in my office if you need to talk about anything. However, don’t wait until the day before an assignment is due to stop by or ask for an appointment! If my office hours don't work for you, do get in touch or talk to me after class and we’ll find an alternative. E-mails are also a good way to get in touch and ask for help. I generally don’t respond to work e-mails late at night or at the last minute before an assignment.

Why you should attend class:

You won’t learn most of what you need to do with the readings or listed assignments. This syllabus is designed to inform you of the due dates and assignments for the term, but without coming to class, the techniques you’ll need to get them done and to get other university assignments done will be missing.

Course Objectives:

This course aims to improve your ability to write clearly, uniformly, and comprehensively in English. At the end of this course, you'll be able to create and defend an argument, as well as compare and contrast ideas with descriptive writing. By the end of the course, each member of our section will be able to form a thesis statement, conduct library research, and write a well-argued research paper with points of analysis.

We’ll have regular short writing assignments that I will periodically collect during the semester. These assignments are an essential part of your development not only as a writer, but also as a thinker. Assignments will vary and will not be graded, though the completion of each assignment will count toward your short writing assignments grade.

Revisions are an essential part of the writing process. Half of your grade on your essay and research paper will come from the extent of your revisions. Remember that you are part of a community of writers and scholars in training. The material and assignments in this course will form the basis of your academic writing and can serve as a reference point for your future work.

How to succeed in this class:

Show up and participate. I cannot stress enough how important it is not only to show up to class but also to come prepared (which means at the very least you’ve done your reading for the class and/or the assignment) and to take an active role in the class itself. Showing up is good -and in fact attendance has a direct correlation with your performance in your academic writing - but it won’t be enough to help you learn. You must take charge of your own learning experience - which means you must be prepared to speak up in class.

Note: You must attend 75% of all classes to turn in your Research Paper, which counts as a final exam. This is a department policy.

Turn in assignments in their proper format and on time. Format is a stupid area to lose points on. Look at the sample papers and follow their notation style, font, and layout. When I say the font is to be 12-pt Times New Roman and double-spaced with 1” margins, that does not mean that 16-pt Arial single-spaced is okay, nor does it mean that extra spaces between paragraphs are okay. I’ve been a commercial editor for years. I’ll spot any of these infractions right away, and yes, I will deduct points if you do that.

If you are having problems with resetting spell check to American English for your assignments, please seek out one of your classmates or one of our campus IT staff to fix it. Not following formatting and spelling conventions looks sloppy and unprofessional.

For every day after a due date, I’ll subtract 10 points from your original grade. Losing points due to turning things in late is another stupid way to kill your grade.

On a final note, I do not accept assignments sent via e-mail. Sending them in this way makes it both difficult for me to make comments on them and easy for me to forget them. Call me a Luddite, but they have to be printed out if you expect all the goodies from a writing class –commentary, credit, and a grade.

Be responsible by making sure that all parts of an assignment are present. If I say that I want you to hand in the first draft with the final draft, I mean it. I don’t haul around more paper for my own exercise. Both the first draft and final draft must be handed in on the final due date so that I’ll be able to compare your progress from your first draft and to give you better feedback.

Do your reading. Occasionally I will “pop” a quiz on you to make sure you’ve been doing your reading and that you’ve been staying on top of your work. I’ll mainly ask about central ideas and content to check that you’ve prepared for class.

Revise. I cannot stress this enough. Turn in a final draft which looks almost exactly like your previous draft with the exception of a few cosmetic changes (such as changing the format or changing a few sentences) and I will give you a grade at least a whole letter below the quality of the writing, organization, and research. A first draft is never perfect. Every researcher and writer needs to make significant changes between their first and final draft to create a strong and worthwhile paper.

Create original work. Plagiarizing is a serious offense. Writing down some else’s ideas or work without giving them credit is stealing. At Boğaziçi, we take plagiarism seriously. A plagiarized paper will get you an F on that paper and will quite probably be reported to the university disciplinary committee. For more information on plagiarism, see the “About Plagiarism” entry by BU’s Department of Western Languages and Literatures (http://bit.ly/1oiOOam), as posted by BU’s Department of Philosophy.

Required texts:

-Course Reader, available at Hısar Fotokopi

Recommended Resources:

Brundage, Anthony. Going to the Sources: A Guide To Historical Research and Writing. Wheeling, IL: Harlan Davidson, 2008.

Burke, Peter. Eyewitnessing: The Uses of Images as Historical Evidence. Ithaca, NY: Cornell, 2001.

Cullen, Jım. Essaying the Past: How to Read, Write, and Think about History. Great Britain: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009.

McDowell, W. H. Historical Research: A Guide. Great Britain: Pearson, 2002.

-Dictionaries:

Merriam-Webster's College Dictionary

Compact Oxford English Dictionary

-Thesauri:

Roget's Thesaurus

Oxford Learner's Thesaurus

-Online:

The Chicago Manual of Style Online (http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/16/contents.html) (for academic formatting)

Research papers:

You will produce two original research papers during this course, based on material from HIST

102, HIST 106, or ENGL 112. If you are not currently taking these history courses or would like to use material from other courses (or from outside of your courses) to write your paper, please ask me.

Grades:

Participation (Attendance, speaking up in class, pop quizzes, and other in­class assignments): 25%

Research Paper 1: 25%

Research Paper 2: 25%

Reaction Papers: 25% (8.3% each)

Class Schedule and Assignments:

Week 1

February 9­13

Wednesday

Introduction to approach and methods for ENGL 112

Assignment 1 in class

Friday

Research Methods I ­Secondary Sources

+ Research Paper I Assignment

HW: evaluate sources

Reading: Going to the Sources, p. 19­32; Essaying the Past, p.129­147

Week 2

February 16­20

Wednesday

On writing a reaction paper

Research Methods II ­ Primary Sources

Assignment 1 Due

Reading: Going to the Sources, p.95­117

Bonus reading: “Finding Monographs and Using Catalogues” and “Finding Journals, Magazines, and Newspapers: Using Indexes,” The Information-Literate Historian, p. 44-85

Friday

Writing and revising introductions review

Reading: “Shitty first drafts,” Bird by Bird

HW: Chart the differences between CMS and APA as seen in the CMS and APA papers

Week 3

February 23-27

Wednesday

On Chicago Style

Reading:

The Chicago Manual of Style Online

CMS/APA difference chart due

Friday

Peer Review

First half of Research Paper I Due

Week 4

March 2-6

Wednesday

Creating an annotated bibliography

Reading: “Writer’s Block,” Bird by Bird

Friday

Formatting Day -Class location TBA

Research Paper I Annotated Bibliography Due

Week 5

March 9-13

Wednesday

Research Paper Activity + Peer Review

First Full Draft Due

Friday

How to give a presentation, part 1

Week 6

March 16-20

Wednesday

How to give a presentation, part 2

Reading:

“What was the hipster?”, Ch. 7

Friday

Assignment 3 (mini presentations) Due in Class

Research Paper I Due

Week 7

March 23-27

Wednesday

Research Paper I Presentations

Friday

Research Paper I Presentations

Week 8

March 30 ­ April 3

Wednesday

Research Paper I Presentations

Reading:

A History of the Modern Middle East, p.133­170

Friday

Assignment 4

Assessment and critical thinking of a reading

HW: Reaction Paper 1

Reading:

Going to the Sources, p.57­94

Week 9

April 6-10

Wednesday

Film/Documentary Screening ­Film TBA

Reading: Eyewitnessing, Introduction and Chapter 1

Friday

Film/Documentary Screening continued

Reaction paper 1 Due

Week 10

April 13­17

Wednesday

Analyzing Images and Writing Review

Reaction Paper 2 due

Research Paper II Annotated Bibliography Due

Reading:

From Essaying the Past:

“Making a Case” p.71­88, “Strong Bodies (I)” p.90­97, “Strong Bodies (III)” p.107­114

Bonus Reading:

“Evaluating source material” and “Research Notes,” Historical Research: A Guide, p. 109-132

Friday:

Peer Review

First half of Research Paper II due

Week 11

April 20­24

SPRING BREAK ­ NO CLASSES

Week 12

April 27 ­ May 1

Wednesday

Peer Review

Full first draft of Research Paper II Due

Friday

NO CLASS (May Day)

Week 13

May 4-8

Wednesday

Research Paper II Presentations

Research Paper II due

Friday

Research Paper II Presentations

Week 14

May 11-13

Wednesday

Research Paper II Presentations