Syllabus: Writing 2

Ben Spanbock

Writing California

Course description:

The state of California encompasses a tremendous amount of social, cultural, environmental and regional diversity. Operating under the premise that our diverse community stands to benefit from intellectually informed ideas and opinions, the purpose of this class is to introduce the writing process as a method for engaging with problems faced in California today. Together we will examine a number of short texts related to California history and culture, and engage with problems that draw from and speak to a variety of specific academic discourses, including film, journalism, literature, history, and cultural studies. Beginning with an overview of the place of Californiainwriting, we will work together to define the limits of the “California imaginary” to serve as a common ground while students identify and pursue issues relevant to their own interests. Students will practice both formal and informal writing techniques with the goal of forming their own perspectives on these issues through acts of writing.

Course Website:

http://www.benspanbock.net/writing-2.html

List of Texts:

Michaels, Reid and Scherr. West of the West: Imagining California

Murray, Donald M. Write to Learn

Yamashita, Karen Tei. Tropic of Orange

Other short texts available on eCommons

List of Assignments:

Newspaper article summary and report 3 pages

Origins position paper 3 pages

Close reading paper 4 pages

Newspaper article revision project 4 pages

Prospectus with annotated bibliography 4 pages

Research project 8-10 pages

(Specific details and requirements for each assignment will be distributed prior to the due date)

Grading:

Writing Program faculty determine a student’s final grades for Writing 2 by considering all of that student’s work at the end of the quarter. During the quarter, students will receive written assessment and advice concerning what their work has accomplished and how it can be improved rather than letter grades on individual assignments.

Portfolios: At the end of the quarter, students will submit all completed work including drafts, cover sheets, final versions and comments together in a portfolio. This will establish a collection of your work that you can refer back to, and that will enable me to reference all of your work and my comments for final evaluation. Be sure to keep all completed work from the quarter together in a folder as we move along through the quarter!

Course Requirements:

1. Attendance is crucial to successful completion of this course. If you must be absent, please notify me in advance. Regardless of your reason for missing class, you will want to keep up with your work. Because of the condensed nature of the quarter system, more than three unexcused absences will result in the drop of a full letter drop to your final grade.

2. Over the course of the quarter you will be expected to keep a writing journal and complete several informal free-writing and exploratory writing assignments. Because some of these

3. Students will work together over the course of the quarter in revision groups which will meet frequently during class, in some cases before, after or between classes, and for group check-in meetings with the instructor.

4. Students will be responsible for coming to class ready to discuss all readings assigned to them for that meeting. You will be expected to engage in informed discussions pertaining to a text’s content, its formal features, its cultural context, or other relevant aspects

Course Policies:

·  Please feel free to make use of office hours or talk with me whenever you have a question

·  Written work should be submitted in hard copy, not by email.

·  Bring the texts to be discussed to class each lecture and session.

·  If you qualify for classroom accommodations because of a disability, please get an Accommodation Authorization from the Disability Resource Center (DRC) and submit it to me in person outside of class (e.g. office hours) within the first two weeks of the quarter. Contact DRC at 459-2089 (voice) or 459-4806 (TTY) or http://drc.ucsc.edu for more information on the requirements and/or process.

Schedule:

Week 1: Introduction/Paradise

Tuesday: Introductions and course overview; Distribution and discussion of syllabus; Imagining California YouTube exercise on responding to advertisement; Distribution and discussion of “Reader/Writer’s statement” assignment

Thursday: Group discussion of readings; In-class free-write activity on advertisement; Distribution and discussion of “Newspaper article” assignment

Read: Julián Marías, “California as Paradise” Joan Didion, “Notes from a Native Daughter” (West of the West) “Read as a Writer” (Write to Learn, 44-51)

Bring: Reader/Writer’s Statement

Week 2: Origins

Tuesday: Group discussion of readings; Newspaper article free-write and group workshop; Class activity on focusing and planning a written argument

Read: “Focus” (WTL 95-110) “Plan” (WTL138-171)

Bring: Two newspaper articles related to a current issue or problem in California

Thursday: “Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Plagiarizing” exercise; Hand out and discuss “Origins position paper” assignment; Class discussion on effective written arguments

Read: Richard Henry Dana Jr., Two Years before the Mast (selection on ERES), Maidu Creation Myth (ERES), and Henry Miller, “In the Beginning” (WOTW)

Bring: “Newspaper article summary and report’

Week 3: Water Wars

Tuesday: Discussion of reading and responding to a rough draft; Peer-editing activity and coversheet workshop on “Origins” paper

Read: “Draft” (WTL172- 201)

Bring: “Origins position paper” draft

Thursday: Discussion of readings; In-class viewing of scenes from Cadillac Desert

Read: Mary Austin, The Land of Little Rain (Selections on ERES), view PBS video: Agriculture’s Effect on Frogs, “The Revision Checklist” (WTL 212-216)

Week 4: City Life

Tuesday: Discussion of readings; Hand-out and discuss “Close Reading” assignment; In-class discussion and workshop on effective close reading skills

Read: “Cities” [excerpts from Simone de Beauvoir, Rudyard Kipling, Frank Norris, Jack Kerouac, Maxine Hong Kingston] (WOTW 145-163) Hernandez, David. “When Mother Nature Visits California” (ERES)

Bring: “Origins paper” with cover sheet

Thursday: Discussion of readings; In-class free-writing exercise and workshop: California’s Urban Spaces; Class activity using topic paragraphs: “Topic statements vs. thesis statements”

Read: Watch Gangs Wars: Oakland parts 1 and 2, and “Fit Your Process to Your Task” (WTL 241-250)

Bring; topic paragraph for “Close reading” essay

Week 5: Immigration and Labor

Tuesday: Peer-editing and coversheet workshop; Distribute and discuss “Research project” prompt and potential topics list

Read: Takaki, Ronald. Gam Saan Haak: The Chinese in Nineteenth Century America (Excerpt on ERES 80-112) “Edit to Clarify Meaning” (WTL 225-236)

Bring: “Close reading” essay

Thursday: In-class journal exploratory and guided class debate: Immigrants and immigration; Newspaper article tabling project; Distribute and discuss “Newspaper article revision project”

Read: Pitti, Steven: The Devil in Silicon Valley (Excerpts on ERES)

Bring: Revised “Newspaper article” assignment from earlier in the quarter

Friday: Special evening showing of Chinatown (Polanski, 1971) Time/Place TBD

Week 6: Film, Media, News

*** Library visits happening this week/details TBD ***

Tuesday: Class discussion of the film/readings; In-class free write workshop on topics and thesis statements

Read: Bugliosi, Vincent. “Saturday, August 9th, 1969.” Thompson, David. “Driving in a Back Projection” (WOTW 16-29). Begin reading sources

Bring: “Close reading” revisions and cover sheet

Thursday: Class discussion of film/readings continued; In-class workshop on finding sources in the library; Group activity on thesis statements

Bring: Three thesis statements for “Research project” and “Newspaper revision project”

Week 7: Exploring, Researching, and Refining

Tuesday: Discussion of Readings; Peer review of research materials and potential sources;

Read: Yamashita, Karen Tei. Tropic of Orange: Monday, Summer Solstice.

Bring: “Research project” topic paragraph and four potential sources

Thursday: Discussion of Readings; In-class writing activity using topic paragraphs and new sources; In-class discussion of writing prospectus and annotated bibliography

Readings: Tropic of Orange: Tuesday, Diamond Lane; Continue reading sources

Bring: Topic paragraph plus eight potential sources

Week 8: Writing about Research

Tuesday: Discussion of Readings; Return topic paragraphs and sources; Group discussion and free write: “the struggles of research”

Read: “Tips for writing a research project” (WTL 250-254); Tropic of Orange: Wednesday, Cultural Diversity

Thursday: Discussion of Readings; Peer editing exercise on prospectus drafts; In-class discussion of turning a prospectus into a full draft

Read: Tropic of Orange: Thursday, The Eternal Buzz

Bring: “Prospectus and annotated bibliography” (5-6 annotations)

Week 9: Pulling it all Together

Individual meetings on final assignments held throughout the week.

Tuesday: No class (individual meetings: please bring revised prospectus and annotated bibliography with cover sheet)

Thursday: Discussion of Readings; In-class journal exploratory: “Finding place in California”

Read: Tropic of Orange: Friday, Artificial Intelligence and Casey, Edward. “Getting Back into Place” [excerpts on ERES]

Week 10: Conclusions and Portfolios

Individual meetings on final assignments held throughout the week.

Tuesday: In-class discussion on assembling portfolio; Peer review and cover sheet activity

Read: Tropic of Orange: Saturday, Queen of Angels and Sunday: Pacific Rim

Bring: Completed “Research project”

Thursday: Final discussion of Tropic of Orange; Class summary

***COMPLETED PORTFOLIOS DUE DURING FINALS WEEK***