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University of Puerto Rico
                                      Río Piedras Campus
                                    College of General Studies
                                       English Department




                                                                      Dr. Eva de Lourdes Edwards
                                                                              eedwards@uprrp.edu
                                                                    787-764-0000, Ext. 2685, 2182
                                                                        Office: 129, ERA Building
                                                                Office Hours: Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu
                                                                       6:30-7:00; 10:00-11:00 a.m.


Course Title:                  Intensive Basic English I
Course Code:                   INGL 3161
Credits/hours:                 3 credits per semester /3 class hours weekly
Requirements:                  469 or less on the CEEB-ESLAT Exam
                               (ACTFL proficiency guidelines)
Co-requisite:                  INGL 3161 Lab (Intensive Basic English Laboratory I)

Course Description:

This course fulfills the English requirement for the general education component. This course is
designed for students to develop the Basic English language skills for understanding academic
texts and communicating ideas orally and in writing at an intelligible level. The course provides
students with conversational and writing competencies. Using nonfictional selections with an
interdisciplinary thematic content as the focus of discussion, oral and critical thinking skills are
fostered. Writing reinforces listening, speaking, and reading skills so that students can express
ideas through the thoughtful articulation of vocabulary and grammar. This course requires
laboratory sessions.

General Course Objectives:

Consistent with the English Department’s general objectives, by the end of the INGL 3161
course, the students will be able to:

   A. communicate orally and intelligibly in a variety of academic situations
   B. read and comprehend a variety of texts with the aid of a dictionary
   C. interpret and analyze written texts utilizing elements of the essay
   D. evaluate a text’s relevance and validity by connecting it to personal experience
   E. critically examine aesthetic, ethical, humanistic and cultural values underlying texts
   F. demonstrate progress towards the INGL 3161 goal of writing unified and coherent four
      (4) paragraph essays that are intelligible to a non-Spanish speaker
   G. demonstrate the ability to use the library and computer technology for preliminary
      research and writing
   H. ability to foster the inclusion of classmates with disabilities
   I. collaborate in the inclusion of students with disabilities into all class activities
Outline and Time Distribution

Week of …                        Lecture/Outline                          Source
Aug 20-24       -   The course syllabus                          Syllabus (bring to all
                -   The study of English                         classes)
                -   Keeping a journal
                -   Elements of the essay                        Unit 1
                -   “My Early Memories” (p. 3)
                        o narrative writing
Aug 27-31       -   Diagnostic                                   Unit 1
                -   “Peer Influences on Achievement” (p. 10)
                        o understanding research                 Library Systems
                -   Introduction to Blackboard and online
                    communication                                Journal
                -   Library systems/research skills
                        o Ecocriticism
Sep 3-7         -   September 3-Labor Day                        Unit 1
                -   “It’s OK to Be Different” (p. 15)
                        o cause and effect                       Movie
                -   Movie: “Miracle Worker”
                        o compare and contrast
Sep 10-14       -   “People on the Move: Moving Young” (p. 30)   Unit 2
                        o ecocritical perspective
Sep 17-21       -   “Bibi and Rajini” (p. 37)                    Unit 2
                        o interviews
                        o argumentative writing reactions        Journal
Sep 24-28       -   Movie: “The Visitor”                         Movie
                        o ecocritical perspective
                -   Exam 1
Oct 1-5         -   “Multitasking Madness” (p. 60)               Unit 3
                        o organizing information from sources
                        o interpretation                         Journal
Oct 8-12        -   “In the Blink of an Eye” (p. 66)             Unit 3
                        o acronyms
                        o writing reflection
Oct 15-19       -   “Advertisers Try New Ways to Get Into Your   Unit 3
                    Head” (p. 71)
                        o extended metaphor                      Journal
Oct 22-26       -   “Students Think Love Conquers All” (p. 85)   Unit 4
                        o interpreting, writing about research
Oct 29 -        -   “Googling Your Date” (p. 95)                 Unit 4
Nov 2                   o reviewing main idea and paragraph
                            topics                               Journal
                -   Exam 2


                                           2
Week of …                          Lecture/Outline                                  Source
Nov 5-9           -   November 7-8: Voting Recess                         Unit 5
                  -   “Entrepreneurs Recognize Opportunities”
                      (p. 114)
                          o strategies for reading academic
                              textbooks
Nov 12-16         -   “How to Be Fair” (p. 128)                           Unit 5
                          o scanning articles
Nov 19-23         -   November 19 – Discovery of Puerto Rico              Unit 6
                  -   November 22-23 – Thanksgiving Recess
                  -   “The Foundations of the Theory of Multiple
                      Intelligences” (p. 144)
                          o using examples
                          o responding to an inventory
Nov 26-30         -   Presentations                                       Unit 6
                                                                          Journal
Dec 3-7           -
                “No Job is Beneath You” (p. 161)                          Unit 6
                   o arguments in favor or against
                   o reviewing idioms, informal/formal                    Journal
                      language, paraphrasing
             - Presentations
Dec 10-12    - Review
             - Final Exam
TOTAL = 45 HOURS


Instructional strategies

This course is based upon collaborative discussion among students and teacher, therefore oral
participation is required. A variety of learning and assessment experiences are used to create an
interactive environment to promote reflection, critical thinking and collaboration. Language and
cross-disciplinary literature are integrated to underscore the power of multiple perspectives in
illuminating an object of study.

Required resources

Regular classroom
Language laboratory/Computer lab/Library system
Educational resources (Blackboard, movies, Internet sources, audio-visual equipment)




                                                3
Evaluation Strategies

Evaluation Strategy                                 Grading System

Oral collaboration     15%                          A 100 – 90
Exams                  25%                          B 89 – 80
Lab                    40%                          C 79 – 70
Written assignments 20%                             D 69 – 60
 (including portfolio)                              F 59 – 0
           TOTAL 100%

English Department Attendance Policy

Six contact hours of absence may lower average one whole letter grade. Failure to take the final
exam on the scheduled date and time may result in a zero or an incomplete grade.

Law 51

In accordance with the recommendation of the Dean of Students’ Office (Division for Persons
with Disabilities), students who are clients of the Office of Vocational Rehabilitation must
contact the professor at the beginning of the semester in order to make arrangements for
reasonable accommodations and for any necessary auxiliary equipment. Other students with
special needs who require any kind of assistance or reasonable accommodations should also
contact the professor.

Textbooks

Baker-González, J., & Blau, E. K. (2009). World of reading 2: A thematic approach to reading
comprehension. White Plains, NY: Pearson Longman

English/English Dictionary:

       The Merriam Webster Dictionary, Collegiate, 11th Edition

Bibliography

Dixon, R. J. (2004). Grammar Essentials. NY: Longman.

Longman Dictionary of American English Now with Thesaurus and CD ROM. (2004). NY:
Pearson.

Pearson Casanave, C. (2011). Journal writing in second language education. University of
Michigan Press.

Robinson, F. L. (2006). College Reading 2. NY: Houghton Mifflin.

The Merriam-Webster Dictionary. (11th ed.). (2004). Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster, Inc.

                                                4
Internet Resources

Dictionary online with pronunciation. http://www.merriam-webster.com/

Essay writing. http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/685/05/

Presentation skills. http://lorien.ncl.ac.uk/ming/dept/tips/present/present.htm

Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. (2004). http://idea.ed.gov/

Teaching for Inclusion. Loevinger, N. (1994). Teaching a diverse student body. University of
Virginia. http://ctl.unc.edu/tfi13.html

English language and other related references:

http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/esl/eslstudent.html
http://www.english-the-easy-way.com/
http://www.eslcafe.com/
http://marksesl.com/student_links.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/webcast/tae_whoonearth_archive.shtml
http://www.corpse.org/ (Andrei Codrescu’s online journal)
http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ERM0751.pdf (Wikis and Podcasts and Blogs! Oh, My!)

Other Information:

Work is due on the date announced. Please, hand in all assignments – even late ones – during
your assigned class period.

If you are absent to any class, please contact a classmate to discuss the assigned material and
come prepared to the next class meeting. You are responsible for all material covered in class
and for all assigned work, even if you are absent or late.

Quizzes may or may not be announced. There are no make-ups for missed quizzes. There will be
no make-ups for missed exams. One exam, and only one exam, may be eliminated. If absent to
one exam, that zero may be eliminated.

You must bring your own dictionary to class. Sharing dictionaries is not allowed during exams.

You are encouraged to attend workshops and tutoring sessions offered by the Centro para el
desarrollo de destrezas lingüísticas. The last day to withdraw from this course is October 19,
2012.

Please turn off and put away cell phones during class unless you have made arrangements with
the professor prior to the class period.

As our course develops, other reading selections may be integrated or omitted to satisfy the
needs of the students.

                                                 5

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Syllabus 3161 12

  • 1. University of Puerto Rico Río Piedras Campus College of General Studies English Department Dr. Eva de Lourdes Edwards eedwards@uprrp.edu 787-764-0000, Ext. 2685, 2182 Office: 129, ERA Building Office Hours: Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu 6:30-7:00; 10:00-11:00 a.m. Course Title: Intensive Basic English I Course Code: INGL 3161 Credits/hours: 3 credits per semester /3 class hours weekly Requirements: 469 or less on the CEEB-ESLAT Exam (ACTFL proficiency guidelines) Co-requisite: INGL 3161 Lab (Intensive Basic English Laboratory I) Course Description: This course fulfills the English requirement for the general education component. This course is designed for students to develop the Basic English language skills for understanding academic texts and communicating ideas orally and in writing at an intelligible level. The course provides students with conversational and writing competencies. Using nonfictional selections with an interdisciplinary thematic content as the focus of discussion, oral and critical thinking skills are fostered. Writing reinforces listening, speaking, and reading skills so that students can express ideas through the thoughtful articulation of vocabulary and grammar. This course requires laboratory sessions. General Course Objectives: Consistent with the English Department’s general objectives, by the end of the INGL 3161 course, the students will be able to: A. communicate orally and intelligibly in a variety of academic situations B. read and comprehend a variety of texts with the aid of a dictionary C. interpret and analyze written texts utilizing elements of the essay D. evaluate a text’s relevance and validity by connecting it to personal experience E. critically examine aesthetic, ethical, humanistic and cultural values underlying texts F. demonstrate progress towards the INGL 3161 goal of writing unified and coherent four (4) paragraph essays that are intelligible to a non-Spanish speaker G. demonstrate the ability to use the library and computer technology for preliminary research and writing H. ability to foster the inclusion of classmates with disabilities I. collaborate in the inclusion of students with disabilities into all class activities
  • 2. Outline and Time Distribution Week of … Lecture/Outline Source Aug 20-24 - The course syllabus Syllabus (bring to all - The study of English classes) - Keeping a journal - Elements of the essay Unit 1 - “My Early Memories” (p. 3) o narrative writing Aug 27-31 - Diagnostic Unit 1 - “Peer Influences on Achievement” (p. 10) o understanding research Library Systems - Introduction to Blackboard and online communication Journal - Library systems/research skills o Ecocriticism Sep 3-7 - September 3-Labor Day Unit 1 - “It’s OK to Be Different” (p. 15) o cause and effect Movie - Movie: “Miracle Worker” o compare and contrast Sep 10-14 - “People on the Move: Moving Young” (p. 30) Unit 2 o ecocritical perspective Sep 17-21 - “Bibi and Rajini” (p. 37) Unit 2 o interviews o argumentative writing reactions Journal Sep 24-28 - Movie: “The Visitor” Movie o ecocritical perspective - Exam 1 Oct 1-5 - “Multitasking Madness” (p. 60) Unit 3 o organizing information from sources o interpretation Journal Oct 8-12 - “In the Blink of an Eye” (p. 66) Unit 3 o acronyms o writing reflection Oct 15-19 - “Advertisers Try New Ways to Get Into Your Unit 3 Head” (p. 71) o extended metaphor Journal Oct 22-26 - “Students Think Love Conquers All” (p. 85) Unit 4 o interpreting, writing about research Oct 29 - - “Googling Your Date” (p. 95) Unit 4 Nov 2 o reviewing main idea and paragraph topics Journal - Exam 2 2
  • 3. Week of … Lecture/Outline Source Nov 5-9 - November 7-8: Voting Recess Unit 5 - “Entrepreneurs Recognize Opportunities” (p. 114) o strategies for reading academic textbooks Nov 12-16 - “How to Be Fair” (p. 128) Unit 5 o scanning articles Nov 19-23 - November 19 – Discovery of Puerto Rico Unit 6 - November 22-23 – Thanksgiving Recess - “The Foundations of the Theory of Multiple Intelligences” (p. 144) o using examples o responding to an inventory Nov 26-30 - Presentations Unit 6 Journal Dec 3-7 - “No Job is Beneath You” (p. 161) Unit 6 o arguments in favor or against o reviewing idioms, informal/formal Journal language, paraphrasing - Presentations Dec 10-12 - Review - Final Exam TOTAL = 45 HOURS Instructional strategies This course is based upon collaborative discussion among students and teacher, therefore oral participation is required. A variety of learning and assessment experiences are used to create an interactive environment to promote reflection, critical thinking and collaboration. Language and cross-disciplinary literature are integrated to underscore the power of multiple perspectives in illuminating an object of study. Required resources Regular classroom Language laboratory/Computer lab/Library system Educational resources (Blackboard, movies, Internet sources, audio-visual equipment) 3
  • 4. Evaluation Strategies Evaluation Strategy Grading System Oral collaboration 15% A 100 – 90 Exams 25% B 89 – 80 Lab 40% C 79 – 70 Written assignments 20% D 69 – 60 (including portfolio) F 59 – 0 TOTAL 100% English Department Attendance Policy Six contact hours of absence may lower average one whole letter grade. Failure to take the final exam on the scheduled date and time may result in a zero or an incomplete grade. Law 51 In accordance with the recommendation of the Dean of Students’ Office (Division for Persons with Disabilities), students who are clients of the Office of Vocational Rehabilitation must contact the professor at the beginning of the semester in order to make arrangements for reasonable accommodations and for any necessary auxiliary equipment. Other students with special needs who require any kind of assistance or reasonable accommodations should also contact the professor. Textbooks Baker-González, J., & Blau, E. K. (2009). World of reading 2: A thematic approach to reading comprehension. White Plains, NY: Pearson Longman English/English Dictionary: The Merriam Webster Dictionary, Collegiate, 11th Edition Bibliography Dixon, R. J. (2004). Grammar Essentials. NY: Longman. Longman Dictionary of American English Now with Thesaurus and CD ROM. (2004). NY: Pearson. Pearson Casanave, C. (2011). Journal writing in second language education. University of Michigan Press. Robinson, F. L. (2006). College Reading 2. NY: Houghton Mifflin. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary. (11th ed.). (2004). Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster, Inc. 4
  • 5. Internet Resources Dictionary online with pronunciation. http://www.merriam-webster.com/ Essay writing. http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/685/05/ Presentation skills. http://lorien.ncl.ac.uk/ming/dept/tips/present/present.htm Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. (2004). http://idea.ed.gov/ Teaching for Inclusion. Loevinger, N. (1994). Teaching a diverse student body. University of Virginia. http://ctl.unc.edu/tfi13.html English language and other related references: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/esl/eslstudent.html http://www.english-the-easy-way.com/ http://www.eslcafe.com/ http://marksesl.com/student_links.html http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/webcast/tae_whoonearth_archive.shtml http://www.corpse.org/ (Andrei Codrescu’s online journal) http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ERM0751.pdf (Wikis and Podcasts and Blogs! Oh, My!) Other Information: Work is due on the date announced. Please, hand in all assignments – even late ones – during your assigned class period. If you are absent to any class, please contact a classmate to discuss the assigned material and come prepared to the next class meeting. You are responsible for all material covered in class and for all assigned work, even if you are absent or late. Quizzes may or may not be announced. There are no make-ups for missed quizzes. There will be no make-ups for missed exams. One exam, and only one exam, may be eliminated. If absent to one exam, that zero may be eliminated. You must bring your own dictionary to class. Sharing dictionaries is not allowed during exams. You are encouraged to attend workshops and tutoring sessions offered by the Centro para el desarrollo de destrezas lingüísticas. The last day to withdraw from this course is October 19, 2012. Please turn off and put away cell phones during class unless you have made arrangements with the professor prior to the class period. As our course develops, other reading selections may be integrated or omitted to satisfy the needs of the students. 5