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W131 Syllabus

Eng 131
Introductory Composition
Fall 2006

Instructor: Mark Sidey

Office: CM 143

Office hours: T/R 9:45-10:15, 1:15-1:45, and by appointment

Phone: 481-6762 (during office hours only)

E-mail:

Website:http://users.ipfw.edu/sideym/

Section Info:Section 30 TR 10:30-11:45 CM 232

Section 34 TR 12:00-1:15 SB 304

Syllabus

What is a syllabus and why do you receive one? The policies and procedures that govern the course are explained in a syllabus. Thus a syllabus is a contract—by staying in the class, you agree to abide by the rules in the syllabus. Rereading the syllabus can help you feel less lost the first few weeks of class. As we progress through the semester, knowing the policies and procedures can help you be aware of your responsibilities.

A syllabus also lists what we will be doing each class session. The daily schedule allows you to plan ahead thereby avoiding all-nighters. The syllabus is not engraved in stone. Depending on how the semester progresses, I may make modifications.

Course Outcomes

Students who complete W131 should be able to demonstrate their competence in four areas:

  • Rhetorical Knowledge: Upon completion of the course, students should be able to focus on a purpose; define a thesis; respond to the needs of different audiences; adopt an appropriate stance toward audience and topic; and write in several genres.
  • Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing: Upon completion of the course students should be able to use writing and reading for inquiry, learning, and thinking; be able to paraphrase and summarize the work of others; and integrate their own ideas with those of others.
  • Processes: Upon completion of the courses, students should use multiple drafts to complete an effective text; develop flexible strategies for generating, revising, and editing; engage in a recursive process of writing; demonstrate that they understand the collaborative and social aspects of writing processes; learn to critique their own and others’ work; and use various technologies to address a range of audiences.
  • Knowledge of Conventions: Upon completion of the courses, students should demonstrate that they can recognize and use common formats for different genres of texts; practice appropriate means of documenting their work; and control syntax, grammar, punctuation, and spelling.

Course Overview

In your years in school, education may have been something that was done to you. The result of this top down education is often resistance on the part of students. Also, you may have had teachers who employ reward and punishment motivation. For example, points for attendance and meeting deadlines and extra work for missed classes. This class will be somewhat different.

Going to college is a choice therefore I assume that you want to be here. I will not treat you as someone who is resistant to education and who needs to be rewarded with points for every activity. [D&MS1]Your grade will be based entirely on your project grades. I will work with you, throughout the semester, to help you achieve course goals and in meeting assignment criteria. If you choose to not work incrementally throughout the semester,I will not catch you up at the end of the semester and you will fail the class.

Projects

According to The IPFW Writing Handbook, students in W131 should produce “15-20 pages of ‘final’ polished writing.” Here is how we will get there:

Profile 2 pages

Annotated Bibliography 3 pages (or the equivalent of)

Researched Paper 7 pages

Research Report 2 pages

Evaluation2 pages

A page is 300 words. The above page lengths are the minimum requirement for each assignment—you can always write more.

Grade Computation / Grading Scale
Profile / 10% / A / 90-100
Annotated Bibliography / 20% / B / 80-89
Researched Paper / 30% / C / 70-79
Research Report / 20% / D / 60-69
Evaluation / 20% / F / 0-59

You must earn at least a D on all assignments to avoid an F for the class.

As you may know, the IPFW grading system does not include plus or minus grades. For example, there is no A- or B+. If you are on the borderline of the next higher grade, your participation will determine whether you receive the higher grade. Participation includes attendance, meeting deadlines, and involvement in class discussions and workshops.

Draft Submission

Procrastination and writing go hand in hand—but in order to learn to write more effectively, and to meet course goals, you need to work steadily throughout the semester rather than writing in a few bursts here and there. There are draft due dates on the syllabus with the expectation for each draft. Draft due dates serve several purposes. First, reviewing your work in progress is how writing is taught—you submit a draft and we discuss where you are and where you need to go. Second, intermediate deadlines help overcome the tendency to procrastinate. Third, these deadlines break larger projects up into smaller pieces thus making the projects seem more doable. Fourth, reviewing drafts helps prevent and identify plagiarism.

I realize that occasionally people get a little behind and may miss a deadline. If this happens, I recommend that you catch up quickly. I will look at no more than one draft per week per student. If you miss a deadline, I may be busy and not get to you work as soon as you would like. Further, I will look at your work sequentially. For example, I will not respond to the rough draft of the research paper until you have completed the annotated bib.

I will not grade any papers for which I have not seen at least a preliminary draft, a revised draft, and a polished draft. “Revised” means that the draft is substantially different than the prior submission.

Progress Reports

For each draft you submit, you will write a progress report. Progress reports help you learn to evaluate your writing, demonstrate your knowledge of writing fundamentals, tell me where you think you are in the process, and serve as starting points for conversations on your work.

In the progress report, tell me how far along the draft is. Make sure you cover these areas:

  • what the strengths of the draft are
  • what the weak areas of the draft are
  • what you plan to revise and why
  • what revisions you made and why

You can also ask specific questions about the draft.

Feedback

Drafts that do no meet the formatting criteria and that are submitted without a progress report will not be reviewed. Revised drafts that are submitted without prior drafts and progress reports will not be reviewed.

For the most part, feedback on your drafts will be in conferences and workshops. At the conference, we will discuss your work and make a plan for revision. If you miss a conference or draft submission deadline, it will be up to you to talk to me about when we can meet to discus your work.

Conference Expectations

You will need to take an active role in conferences by discussing where you are and where you are trying to go in the draft. If you need further explanation of something from class or are having trouble seeing how something from class relates to your draft, we will certainly discuss these concerns. However, conferences are not a time to re-teach material we have gone over in class. I expect that when you come to the conference you will know what we have discussed in class. If not, conferences will be unproductive and I will tell you to reschedule when you have gone over your notes more thoroughly.

Formatting

All out of class work must be word-processed using 12 point Arial or Times New Roman font and one-inch margins.

In the top left-hand portion of the first page, place a heading that consists of: your name, ENG W131, the assignment, and the level of the draft (e.g. 1st draft, Revised draft, Final draft), two blank lines and the title of your paper centered on the page. Thus the first page of each draft will begin something like this:

Jane Doe

ENG W131

Annotated Bibliography, 1st Draft

An Annotated Bibliography of Sources on Euthanasia

On subsequent pages, insert a header with your last name and the page number.

All citations will be in MLA format unless you want to use the documentation style used in your discipline.

Attendance

I will take attendance—so I learn names and because attendance is one indication of your involvement in the class. Similarly, notifying me in person or via email that you will be absent, while not required, indicates involvement in the class. While you are in college, going to class and doing class assignments is one of your jobs. Would you miss work or get behind without letting your supervisor know why and what you plan to do about it?

If you miss class, it is your responsibility to ask another student what you missed.

Chronic lateness is disruptive and rude—show up on time.[D&MS2] If you are late, it is your responsibility to remind me AFTER CLASS to note that you were late not absent.

In all but the most unusual of circumstances, missing six or more classes will result in an F for the course. The drop deadline is October 27. If a situation arises that prevents you from attending class after October 27th, you should contact your advisor to see about petitioning for a late withdrawal.

Students who miss class for a university-sponsored event in which they are required to participate (e.g. team sports) are not exempt from the attendance policy. I will take the fact that you were required to be elsewhere into account when calculating your participation. Please provide a written schedule signed by your coach or sponsor for any classes you may miss because of university-sponsored events.

Additional Course Policies

  • All reading and writing assignments are to be completed before the class meets.
  • There is no make up for missed in-class writings.
  • Writing for this course is public writing. You will exchange drafts in small groups and we will discuss drafts in class. (I will not use a student’s work as an example of what not to do.) If you are uncomfortable having other students read a particular piece of writing, let me know.
  • Plagiarism. The IPFW 2004-2006 Undergraduate Bulletin defines plagiarism as the “adoption or reproduction of ideas or statements of another person as one’s own without acknowledgement” (280). Any deliberate act of plagiarism will result in an “F” for the assignment, possibly failing the class, and possible sanction from the University. Deliberate plagiarism is knowingly passing someone else’s words and/or ideas off as your own.

[D&MS1]

[D&MS2]