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Syllabus English 102 SU 2017
College Writing and Rhetoric
Instructor: Caitlin Hill
Email: cjhill@uidaho.edu
Office: Brink 102
Phone: 885-6156 (UI English Dept. Main Office, messages only)
Office Hours: By appointment, on campus or via Skype
Course time & place: CLASS Outreach, June 12 – August 4, 2017
COURSE DESCRIPTION
English 102 is an introductory composition course, designed to improve your skills in
persuasive, expository writing, the sort you will be doing in other courses in college and in
many jobs. Sometimes this kid of writing is called transactional writing; it is used to
transact something—persuade and inform a reasonably well-educated audience, conduct
business, evaluate, review, or explain a complex process, procedure, or event.
This section of English 102 is designed around a theme of place. You will develop these
course goals through the analysis and argument of how our environments affect who we
are what takes place within them.
COURSE GOALS
By the end of the course, you should be very good at doing the following:
• Accurately assessing and effectively responding to a wide variety of audiences and
communication situations.
• Comprehending college-level and professional prose and analyzing how authors
present their ideas in view of their probable purposes, audiences, and occasions.
• Presenting your ideas as related to, but clearly distinguished from, the ideas of
others (includes the ability to paraphrase, summarize, and correctly cite and
document borrowed material).
• Developing a central idea or argument logically, supporting and illustrating it
clearly.
• Writing critical analyses and syntheses of college-level and professional prose.
• Being able to make the connection between questions and problems in your life both
within and outside of college.
• Gather and evaluate information and use it for a rhetorical purpose in writing a
research paper.
• Using a variety of strategies during the prewriting or “invention” process.
• Revising effectively.
• Accurately proofreading your own work in order to produce writing that maintains
the conventions of publishing English.
• Giving and receiving constructive feedback from peers.
Of course, I expect that you are able to carry out some of these tasks already.
DEADLINES & LATE WORK POLICY
Administrative Deadlines
The university has certain deadlines of which you need to be aware if you want to drop the
course at some point during the term.
Wednesday, June 14th – Last day to add or drop Session II classes with a W.
Friday, July 14th – Last day to drop the course with a W.
Course Deadlines
The due dates for all homework assignments and drafts are posted under the appropriate
Unit and Week on the course BbLearn site. Late daily homework will receive a 10%
deduction for every day it is late, including weekends. Late major assignments will be
ineligible for a grade higher than a C. Not completing a major assignment will be grounds
for failure of the course.
REQUIRED TEXTBOOK (available at the UI Bookstore)
• Ramage, Bean and Johnson, The Allyn & Bacon Guide to Writing, 7th edition.
• There will be additional course readings outside of the textbook, which will be
available on the course BbLearn site as PDF documents.
COURSE WEBSITE
As a class conducted entirely online, frequent activity on the BbLearn site is required in
order to pass the course. All major writing assignments, process homework, and blogs will
be submitted through the course BbLearn site. All assignment sheets and other course
materials will also be posted in the BbLearn site. Log on into BbLearn
(http://bblearn.uidaho.edu) using your University of Idaho NetID and password, and
locate English 102.
ATTENDANCE
As an online course, attendance is tracked through timely completion of assignments and
discussion activities, as well as frequently accessing the BbLearn course. Instructors can
see dates of last access for students on BbLearn and it will play a part in the participation
score for each unit. Acceptable attendance is accessing the course at least three times a
week. One week of no documented course access is grounds for failure of the
course. If there is some significant reason for your continued absence on BbLearn, you
must email your instructor before this absence to avoid penalty.
COURSE ETIQUETTE
Online classroom citizenship. The online classroom is a learning community. Be
respectful of your fellow students and your instructor. If you have a problem with
anything in the course, please email your instructor about it. Disruptive or hostile
behavior on the online forum may result in expulsion from the course.
Email etiquette. I welcome your emails and questions – if you have questions about the
course, your work, meeting times, etc., please contact me at the address listed above and
on the BbLearn home page. When you contact me, please treat it as a professional
correspondence—your message should have a greeting, be written in complete sentences,
and signed with your name at the bottom. Generally, you can expect a response during
regular business hours (Monday-Friday, 8-5 PM). If there is a particular reason why I
should be away from email for an extended period of time, I will inform the class promptly.
OFFICE HOURS / SKYPE CORESPONDENCE
My office number is listed above and on the BbLearn home page and meetings can be
made by emailing me. However, I do not expect many students in this course to be on or
near the Moscow campus. If you are away from Moscow and would like to discuss your
work or a particular issue in more detail than over email, please let me know and we will
organize a Skype consultation. I welcome you to discuss your work, questions about the
course, etc., at any time during the duration of the course.
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
Major Assignments
There will be four major composition assignments. Each major assignment will develop
the University of Idaho ENGL 102 requirements through a focus on environments:
• Personal Narrative: Place-Identity
• Annotated Bibliography
• Place & Crisis Research Essay
• Multi-Genre Project Assignment: Analysis of Spatial Rhetoric
Daily Assignments/Homework
There will be shorter process work writing assignments due regularly. These assignments
are specifically designed to help you generate material to compose the major assignments.
Points for these assignments will, for the most part, go into your participation points for
the unit.
Journals
Weekly free-writes will be incorporated into our online course through the BbLearn blog
system. There is a forum for each week that has a prompt to respond to. You will record
your responses to the free-write prompts each week by Wednesday. In addition, you will
be required to respond to one peer’s post by Friday. Each original post should be at least
150 words, and each response should do more than simply stating “good job” or “that’s
interesting.” Communicate directly with the poster.
Optional Rough Drafts
There are no rough drafts required for this course. Instead, if you’d like to turn in a
complete rough draft to me for feedback, you can do so. If you take advantage of this
opportunity you will receive 25 points on the final assignment. Your final draft will then
be graded out of 75 points instead of 100. However, if you wish to also Skype with me to
consult in more detail about your draft, you will receive 50 pointes toward the 100 total
points. Either of these options are not extra credit opportunities.
If you want to turn in a rough draft, you must turn in a draft to me via email before or on
the designated optional rough draft due date, which is listed on the course schedule and
will be at least one week before the final draft due date.
GRADING
Major Assignment Grading System
All major writing assignments are graded by a rubric. Each assignment will be worth a
total of 100 points, distributed among specific criteria. All rubrics will be posted at the
beginning of the course, and it is a good idea to review rubrics closely while composing the
major assignment.
Course Grading System
Here is the distribution of the total points for the four units this semester:
Unit One Journal - 50 Major
Assignment- 100
Process and
Participation -
50
Total Points
Possible: 200
Unit Two Journal – 50 Major
Assignment- 100
Process and
Participation -
50
Total Points
Possible: 200
Unit Three Journal - 50 Major
Assignment- 100
Process and
Participation -
50
Total Points
Possible: 200
Unit Four Journal - 50 Major
Assignment -100
Process and
Participation -
50
Total Points
Possible: 200
Total Course
Points: 800
All of these scores will be posted on Blackboard under the My Grades link promptly and
regularly. I will recommend an F in the course if you fail to submit any major assignments.
Course Grades possible:
A
Represents achievement that is outstanding or superior relative to the level
necessary to meet the requirements of the course.
B
Represents achievement that is significantly above the level necessary to meet
the requirements of the course.
Grades of A or B are honors grades. You must do something beyond the minimum
required in order to earn an A or B.
C
Represents achievement that meets the basic requirements in every respect. It
signifies that the work is average, but nothing more.
W
Stands for Withdrawal. This is the grade you will receive if you withdraw from
the course after Wednesday, January 11 but on or before Wednesday,
January 25th. A W has no effect on your GPA, but you can have only 20 W
credits during your time as an undergraduate at UI (about six courses. After
Wednesday, January 25th you can no longer withdraw from the course.
N
Stands for No Credit. A grade of N has no effect on your GPA, but it does mean
that you need to take the course again. You will earn a grade of N if your grade
is an N and you have done all the work for the course. You also must have made
a good faith effort to complete all the assignments. Handing in just any piece of
writing just to avoid getting an F will not work.
F
Stands for Failure. A grade of F has a negative effect on your GPA. If you fail to
hand in any major writing assignment or do not make a good-faith effort to
succeed at a major assignment, you will automatically earn an F. If your average
grade is an N but you did not complete one of the major components of the course
(one of the major papers of all of the homework assignments or drafts), you will
automatically earn an F in the course. There is no reason for receiving an F in
this course, unless you simply fail to submit the required work.
I
Stands for incomplete. Under very unusual circumstances you could be assigned
an Incomplete in the course if something happened to you within the last two
weeks of the semester that made it impossible to complete the course (a serious
accident or illness that left you hospitalized and very significant personal
tragedy, etc.)
Disability Support Services Reasonable Accommodations Statement
Reasonable accommodations are available for students who have documented
temporary or permanent disabilities. All accommodations must be approved through
Disability Support Services located in the Idaho Commons Building, Room 306 in
order to notify your instructor(s) as soon as possible regarding accommodation(s)
needed for the course.
Disability Support Services
Phone: 208-885-6307
Email: dss@uidaho.edu
Web: http://www.uidaho.edu/studentaffairs/asap/dss
Policy on Plagiarism in English 102
At the University of Idaho, we assume you will do your own work and that you will work
with your instructor on improving writing that is your own. Plagiarism—using someone
else’s ideas or words as yours own without proper attribution--is a serious matter.
The Council of Writing Program Administrators defines plagiarism in the following way:
“In an instructional setting, plagiarism occurs when a writer deliberately uses someone
else’s language, ideas, or other original (not common-knowledge) material without
acknowledging its source. This definition applies to texts published in print or on-line, to
manuscripts, and to the work of other student writers.” (From “Defining and Avoiding
Plagiarism: The WPA Statement on Best Practices,” http://wpacouncil.org/node/9).
Also, turning in work you have previously completed for another course—either an entire
paper or significant portions of it—can also be considered an unethical use of your own
work and can be considered a form of plagiarism worthy of reporting as an instance of
academic dishonesty.
The consequences of plagiarism:
If evidence of plagiarism is found in student work in English 101, the instructor is
empowered by Regulation 0-2 of the general catalog to assign a grade of F for the course,
a penalty that may be imposed in particularly serious cases. In most cases of plagiarism,
the instructor will also make a complaint to the Dean of Students Office, which is
responsible for enforcing the regulations in the Student Code of Conduct. So in addition to
the academic penalty of receiving an F in the course, you may also be subject to other
disciplinary penalties, which can include suspension of expulsion. Although such severe
penalties are rarely imposed for first-time offenders, the Dean of Students Office
maintains disciplinary records as part of a student’s overall academic record.
Instructors may demonstrate that a paper involves plagiarism in two ways: 1) by
identifying the source, and 2) by showing the discrepancy of style between previous papers
and the paper I questions.
If a paper involves misuse of sources or other materials--which the CWPA defines as when
a writer “carelessly or inadequately [cites] ideas and words borrowed from another
source”-- the instructor may ask you to rewrite the paper, using correct forms of
documentation.
When you need to use words or ideas from another person—whether an idea, a picture, a
powerful statement, a set of facts, or an explanation—cite your source!

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Syllabus engl102 su17

  • 1. Syllabus English 102 SU 2017 College Writing and Rhetoric Instructor: Caitlin Hill Email: cjhill@uidaho.edu Office: Brink 102 Phone: 885-6156 (UI English Dept. Main Office, messages only) Office Hours: By appointment, on campus or via Skype Course time & place: CLASS Outreach, June 12 – August 4, 2017 COURSE DESCRIPTION English 102 is an introductory composition course, designed to improve your skills in persuasive, expository writing, the sort you will be doing in other courses in college and in many jobs. Sometimes this kid of writing is called transactional writing; it is used to transact something—persuade and inform a reasonably well-educated audience, conduct business, evaluate, review, or explain a complex process, procedure, or event. This section of English 102 is designed around a theme of place. You will develop these course goals through the analysis and argument of how our environments affect who we are what takes place within them. COURSE GOALS By the end of the course, you should be very good at doing the following: • Accurately assessing and effectively responding to a wide variety of audiences and communication situations. • Comprehending college-level and professional prose and analyzing how authors present their ideas in view of their probable purposes, audiences, and occasions. • Presenting your ideas as related to, but clearly distinguished from, the ideas of others (includes the ability to paraphrase, summarize, and correctly cite and document borrowed material). • Developing a central idea or argument logically, supporting and illustrating it clearly. • Writing critical analyses and syntheses of college-level and professional prose. • Being able to make the connection between questions and problems in your life both within and outside of college. • Gather and evaluate information and use it for a rhetorical purpose in writing a research paper. • Using a variety of strategies during the prewriting or “invention” process. • Revising effectively. • Accurately proofreading your own work in order to produce writing that maintains the conventions of publishing English. • Giving and receiving constructive feedback from peers. Of course, I expect that you are able to carry out some of these tasks already.
  • 2. DEADLINES & LATE WORK POLICY Administrative Deadlines The university has certain deadlines of which you need to be aware if you want to drop the course at some point during the term. Wednesday, June 14th – Last day to add or drop Session II classes with a W. Friday, July 14th – Last day to drop the course with a W. Course Deadlines The due dates for all homework assignments and drafts are posted under the appropriate Unit and Week on the course BbLearn site. Late daily homework will receive a 10% deduction for every day it is late, including weekends. Late major assignments will be ineligible for a grade higher than a C. Not completing a major assignment will be grounds for failure of the course. REQUIRED TEXTBOOK (available at the UI Bookstore) • Ramage, Bean and Johnson, The Allyn & Bacon Guide to Writing, 7th edition. • There will be additional course readings outside of the textbook, which will be available on the course BbLearn site as PDF documents. COURSE WEBSITE As a class conducted entirely online, frequent activity on the BbLearn site is required in order to pass the course. All major writing assignments, process homework, and blogs will be submitted through the course BbLearn site. All assignment sheets and other course materials will also be posted in the BbLearn site. Log on into BbLearn (http://bblearn.uidaho.edu) using your University of Idaho NetID and password, and locate English 102. ATTENDANCE As an online course, attendance is tracked through timely completion of assignments and discussion activities, as well as frequently accessing the BbLearn course. Instructors can see dates of last access for students on BbLearn and it will play a part in the participation score for each unit. Acceptable attendance is accessing the course at least three times a week. One week of no documented course access is grounds for failure of the course. If there is some significant reason for your continued absence on BbLearn, you must email your instructor before this absence to avoid penalty. COURSE ETIQUETTE Online classroom citizenship. The online classroom is a learning community. Be respectful of your fellow students and your instructor. If you have a problem with anything in the course, please email your instructor about it. Disruptive or hostile behavior on the online forum may result in expulsion from the course. Email etiquette. I welcome your emails and questions – if you have questions about the course, your work, meeting times, etc., please contact me at the address listed above and on the BbLearn home page. When you contact me, please treat it as a professional correspondence—your message should have a greeting, be written in complete sentences,
  • 3. and signed with your name at the bottom. Generally, you can expect a response during regular business hours (Monday-Friday, 8-5 PM). If there is a particular reason why I should be away from email for an extended period of time, I will inform the class promptly. OFFICE HOURS / SKYPE CORESPONDENCE My office number is listed above and on the BbLearn home page and meetings can be made by emailing me. However, I do not expect many students in this course to be on or near the Moscow campus. If you are away from Moscow and would like to discuss your work or a particular issue in more detail than over email, please let me know and we will organize a Skype consultation. I welcome you to discuss your work, questions about the course, etc., at any time during the duration of the course. COURSE REQUIREMENTS Major Assignments There will be four major composition assignments. Each major assignment will develop the University of Idaho ENGL 102 requirements through a focus on environments: • Personal Narrative: Place-Identity • Annotated Bibliography • Place & Crisis Research Essay • Multi-Genre Project Assignment: Analysis of Spatial Rhetoric Daily Assignments/Homework There will be shorter process work writing assignments due regularly. These assignments are specifically designed to help you generate material to compose the major assignments. Points for these assignments will, for the most part, go into your participation points for the unit. Journals Weekly free-writes will be incorporated into our online course through the BbLearn blog system. There is a forum for each week that has a prompt to respond to. You will record your responses to the free-write prompts each week by Wednesday. In addition, you will be required to respond to one peer’s post by Friday. Each original post should be at least 150 words, and each response should do more than simply stating “good job” or “that’s interesting.” Communicate directly with the poster. Optional Rough Drafts There are no rough drafts required for this course. Instead, if you’d like to turn in a complete rough draft to me for feedback, you can do so. If you take advantage of this opportunity you will receive 25 points on the final assignment. Your final draft will then be graded out of 75 points instead of 100. However, if you wish to also Skype with me to consult in more detail about your draft, you will receive 50 pointes toward the 100 total points. Either of these options are not extra credit opportunities. If you want to turn in a rough draft, you must turn in a draft to me via email before or on the designated optional rough draft due date, which is listed on the course schedule and will be at least one week before the final draft due date.
  • 4. GRADING Major Assignment Grading System All major writing assignments are graded by a rubric. Each assignment will be worth a total of 100 points, distributed among specific criteria. All rubrics will be posted at the beginning of the course, and it is a good idea to review rubrics closely while composing the major assignment. Course Grading System Here is the distribution of the total points for the four units this semester: Unit One Journal - 50 Major Assignment- 100 Process and Participation - 50 Total Points Possible: 200 Unit Two Journal – 50 Major Assignment- 100 Process and Participation - 50 Total Points Possible: 200 Unit Three Journal - 50 Major Assignment- 100 Process and Participation - 50 Total Points Possible: 200 Unit Four Journal - 50 Major Assignment -100 Process and Participation - 50 Total Points Possible: 200 Total Course Points: 800 All of these scores will be posted on Blackboard under the My Grades link promptly and regularly. I will recommend an F in the course if you fail to submit any major assignments. Course Grades possible: A Represents achievement that is outstanding or superior relative to the level necessary to meet the requirements of the course. B Represents achievement that is significantly above the level necessary to meet the requirements of the course. Grades of A or B are honors grades. You must do something beyond the minimum required in order to earn an A or B. C Represents achievement that meets the basic requirements in every respect. It signifies that the work is average, but nothing more.
  • 5. W Stands for Withdrawal. This is the grade you will receive if you withdraw from the course after Wednesday, January 11 but on or before Wednesday, January 25th. A W has no effect on your GPA, but you can have only 20 W credits during your time as an undergraduate at UI (about six courses. After Wednesday, January 25th you can no longer withdraw from the course. N Stands for No Credit. A grade of N has no effect on your GPA, but it does mean that you need to take the course again. You will earn a grade of N if your grade is an N and you have done all the work for the course. You also must have made a good faith effort to complete all the assignments. Handing in just any piece of writing just to avoid getting an F will not work. F Stands for Failure. A grade of F has a negative effect on your GPA. If you fail to hand in any major writing assignment or do not make a good-faith effort to succeed at a major assignment, you will automatically earn an F. If your average grade is an N but you did not complete one of the major components of the course (one of the major papers of all of the homework assignments or drafts), you will automatically earn an F in the course. There is no reason for receiving an F in this course, unless you simply fail to submit the required work. I Stands for incomplete. Under very unusual circumstances you could be assigned an Incomplete in the course if something happened to you within the last two weeks of the semester that made it impossible to complete the course (a serious accident or illness that left you hospitalized and very significant personal tragedy, etc.) Disability Support Services Reasonable Accommodations Statement Reasonable accommodations are available for students who have documented temporary or permanent disabilities. All accommodations must be approved through Disability Support Services located in the Idaho Commons Building, Room 306 in order to notify your instructor(s) as soon as possible regarding accommodation(s) needed for the course. Disability Support Services Phone: 208-885-6307 Email: dss@uidaho.edu Web: http://www.uidaho.edu/studentaffairs/asap/dss Policy on Plagiarism in English 102 At the University of Idaho, we assume you will do your own work and that you will work with your instructor on improving writing that is your own. Plagiarism—using someone else’s ideas or words as yours own without proper attribution--is a serious matter. The Council of Writing Program Administrators defines plagiarism in the following way: “In an instructional setting, plagiarism occurs when a writer deliberately uses someone else’s language, ideas, or other original (not common-knowledge) material without acknowledging its source. This definition applies to texts published in print or on-line, to manuscripts, and to the work of other student writers.” (From “Defining and Avoiding Plagiarism: The WPA Statement on Best Practices,” http://wpacouncil.org/node/9).
  • 6. Also, turning in work you have previously completed for another course—either an entire paper or significant portions of it—can also be considered an unethical use of your own work and can be considered a form of plagiarism worthy of reporting as an instance of academic dishonesty. The consequences of plagiarism: If evidence of plagiarism is found in student work in English 101, the instructor is empowered by Regulation 0-2 of the general catalog to assign a grade of F for the course, a penalty that may be imposed in particularly serious cases. In most cases of plagiarism, the instructor will also make a complaint to the Dean of Students Office, which is responsible for enforcing the regulations in the Student Code of Conduct. So in addition to the academic penalty of receiving an F in the course, you may also be subject to other disciplinary penalties, which can include suspension of expulsion. Although such severe penalties are rarely imposed for first-time offenders, the Dean of Students Office maintains disciplinary records as part of a student’s overall academic record. Instructors may demonstrate that a paper involves plagiarism in two ways: 1) by identifying the source, and 2) by showing the discrepancy of style between previous papers and the paper I questions. If a paper involves misuse of sources or other materials--which the CWPA defines as when a writer “carelessly or inadequately [cites] ideas and words borrowed from another source”-- the instructor may ask you to rewrite the paper, using correct forms of documentation. When you need to use words or ideas from another person—whether an idea, a picture, a powerful statement, a set of facts, or an explanation—cite your source!