Writing 121: College Composition (Fall 2014)

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Rust 121 Syllabus - 1 Writing 121: College Composition (Fall 2014) T/Th 8:30-9:50 am in IA-224 (CRN 24095) T/Th 1:00-2:20 pm in T-217 (CRN 20041) T/Th 2:30-3:50 pm in IA-277 (CRN 21054) Dr. Stephen Rust Contact: rusts@linnbenton.edu/541-917-4548 Office Hours: T/Th 10:30am-12pm in IA-222 Course Description: As a study of academic writing, this course covers processes and fundamentals of writing expository and narrative essays, including structure, organization and development, diction and style, revision and editing, mechanics and standard usage required for collegelevel writing. Through critical readings, class discussion, short lectures, several well-reasoned essays, and other in-class and homework assignments we will explore a variety of viewpoints within complex issues and you will gain skills in researching, drafting, composing and editing essays in preparation for collegelevel coursework and professional writing. Required Texts and Materials They Say, I Say (2 nd Edition), Publisher: W.W. Norton The Little Seagull Handbook, Publisher: W.W. Norton Access to my instructor website: http://cf.linnbenton.edu/artcom/english/rusts/web.cfm?pgid=7968 Three Blue Books and a folder to save ALL of your assignments, notes, handouts, etc. Type and format all work in Microsoft Word and save on a secure USB or web drive Learning Outcomes As a result of taking academically-oriented transfer-level writing classes at LBCC (WR 115, 121, 122, 123, 227), students will be able to: 1. Analyze the rhetorical needs (the interaction of audiences, purpose/outcome, and subject) of a variety of academic and practical writing assignments. 2. Apply appropriate levels of critical thinking strategies (knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, evaluation) in response to the rhetorical needs of an assignment. 3. Implement appropriate rhetorical elements and organization (introduction, thesis, development and support, rebuttal, visuals, narration, conclusion, etc.) in response to the rhetorical needs of an assignment. 4. Locate, evaluate, and integrate high-quality information and opinion in response to the rhetorical needs of an assignment. 5. Craft sentences and paragraphs that communicate their ideas clearly and effectively using words, sentence patterns, and writing conventions to make their writing clear, credible, and persuasive. While these are universal academic writing outcomes, each transfer-level writing class at LBCC emphasizes a different aspect of academic writing: WR 121 emphasizes expository and analytical writing. What I Expect From You I expect you to succeed in this class. To do that you will need to complete all reading assignments, homework, and essays on time and to the very best of your ability. I expect you to come to class prepared, awake, sober, rested, fed, and fully-engaged. Bring your books to class. Turn off your phone before class or sit by the door if you are waiting for an emergency call/text and need to step outside to answer. Ask questions, engage in discussion, and be prepared to work in groups with any and all class members. Bring an open-mind, a positive attitude, and act at all times as a professional.

Rust 121 Syllabus - 2 What You Can Expect From Me I will do my very best to respond to your questions and concerns as clearly and sincerely as possible and am always happy to talk about any aspect of the class. I will start class on time, attend office hours and respond to emails in a timely manner. I will grade fairly and provide detailed feedback on your course assignments. I will treat you with the utmost respect. Attendance and Late Work Attendance will be taken daily. Frequent absence will impact your ability to complete in-class assignments and earn participation points and thus will impact your overall course grade. Frequent tardiness equals absence. If you miss class, check with a classmate to see what you missed and send me an email, preferably before the class. Reading Responses and other homework assignments accepted up to 1 week late for ½ credit. I do not typically accept late essays unless you contact me prior to a missed deadline to explain the situation and make arrangements for catching up in a timely manner, typically at a 30% penalty. Academic Honesty All work submitted in this course must be your own and written exclusively for this course. The use of sources (for quotations, paraphrases, and ideas) must be properly documented. Please consult The Little Seagull Handbook for a definition of plagiarism and information on documentation. Violations in academic honest will result, at minimum, in a failing grade on the assignment and depending on the severity of the violation may result in course failure. Sustainability To reduce paper consumption, please print all documents double-sided and to use recycled paper whenever possible. Expand page margins to reduce white space and avoid waste. Grades (98% = A+; 93% = A; 90% = A -; 88% = B+, etc.): 20 % Reading Responses, Course Portfolio, and Class Participation 50 % Essays 30 % Final Exam Participation: Your active participation in class discussions and other activities is essential to your success in this class. It is impossible to discuss the assigned texts critically if you do not read them, respond to them, and bring them to class. I consider the use of electronics in class a distraction unless we are using them for research; turn off your devices before class. Writing Lab: A portion of your participation grade will be earned by visiting a writing tutor at least once during the term. Take any version of any paper (including outlines or proposals) to your visit; be sure to get the tutor to sign & date your work. The lab is FREE and open 9:00am-3:30pm, M-F in Willamette Hall and online. You must turn in a signed visitation form from your tutor with one of your three essays. Reading Responses & Quizzes: Complete your reading assignments before class on the days indicated on the schedule and type a one-page, single-spaced response and bring it to class (two-pages, single-spaced for handwritten responses). Each response will be three paragraphs and practice three key skills. Unless I give you alternative instructions in class, do the following: In the first paragraph provide a summary of the entire article (or articles). In the second paragraph, paraphrase or directly quote one specific passage from the article (or articles) and analyze the meaning and significance of that one passage. In the third paragraph, respond to the article (or articles) with your own ideas. Finally, write a discussion question to engage your classmates in conversation about the text. I do not generally quiz you over readings but maintain the option of using quizzes if necessary to stimulate discussion.

Rust 121 Syllabus - 3 Course Portfolio: Save all drafts of your essays, peer reviews, reflections, research, and other written work pertaining to each essay. At the end of the term you will turn in your work for all essay cycles along with your final drafts. Because this course relies on revision, final versions of essays without earlier versions will not be accepted. All essays drafts or final packets are due at the beginning of the class period on the due dates listed below. They should be typed, double-spaced, and in 12-point Times New Roman font with one-inch margins. Title each essay and put your name and a page number on every page. Your work must follow MLA formatting guidelines, which are outlined in the Little Seagull Handbook. Essays: Your final draft of each essay for this touchstone course in college composition should be a piece of writing that you will be proud of well into the future. Writing and thinking, like reading and speaking, are at the core of every department on this campus and therefore this course. You will compose three essays, or attempts which along with your outlines and drafts will strive to meet the college level benchmark of 10,000-12,000 words. Detailed guidelines for each essay cycle will be provided in class and posted to my instructor webpage. For Essay 1 you will work with a group of peers to explore the ideas presented in They Say/I Say in order to develop a response to a shared question at issue on the topic of current events on campus or the local community. Rather than simply identify a problem, you will also develop a clear plan of action that can reasonably implemented to address this issue. This essay cycle will consist of a) a 1-2 page presentation that will be delivered in class in the setting of a professional forum; b) a 4 page typed draft for peerreview; and c) a 3 page final draft with three to four references for grading and feedback. For Essay 2 you will work from a casebook of texts on the topic of Sustainability to identify a question at issue in the world today related to the topic of sustainability. Your research question should build off of one of the questions provided in the casebook introduction and the readings in the text to think globally and write locally. This essay cycle will consist of a) leading a class discussion over one of the assigned readings, b) a 3 page rough draft for peer review and a formal conference with me; and c) a 3 page final draft for grading and feedback. For Essay 3 you will develop an original thesis in response to a question that is currently at issue in your major, minor, or intended profession. This essay cycle will consist of a) a library research assignment; b) a 1 page formal proposal; c) a 2 page annotated bibliography of six sources appropriate for scholarly investigation; d) a 3 page outline for peer review; and e) a 5 page final draft for grading and feedback. Final Exam 30%: All students enrolled in WR 121 at LBCC take a common final exam. The exam consists of two one-hour tests on Monday from 12:00-12:50 and on Tuesday from 11:30am-12:20pm. Location TBA. Bring two blue books. On Monday you will be given two questions. You will choose one question and have 50 minutes to draft your short essay response. Your draft will be turned in at the end of the period. On Tuesday, you will revise, edit, and proofread your essay. You may use a dictionary. Extra time will only be allowed if you have a documented learning disability or if English is not your native language. Your final will be anonymously graded by two English Department faculty members using a 6 point scale. For sample essays and more details about the final visit: https://www.linnbenton.edu/current-students/student-support/departments-anddivisions/english/writing/process-for-taking-the-wr121-final

Rust 121 Syllabus - 4 Policies & Procedures Essay Cycles: Essays in this course are written in cycles. This means that they are submitted first in an early version, commented on, revised, and submitted again in a second version. Because the quality of teacher and peer feedback is a function of the quality of the first version of an essay, first versions are to be complete and written in formal, academic prose. Prerequisites: A satisfactory SAT-verbal score, placement exam, or completion of WR 115 is required for placement in WR121. Students who enroll in a course for which they have not met the prerequisites will be notified and dropped by the English Department. Academic advisors can assist students if they have questions about WR121 placement. See also the Linn-Benton Community College General Bulletin. Academic Honesty: All work submitted in this course must be your own and be written exclusively for this course. The use of sources (ideas, quotations, paraphrases) must be properly documented. Please consult The Little Seagull Handbook for a definition of plagiarism and information on documentation and refer to the summary of the Code of Student Conduct on the Office of Student Conduct and Community Standards website. In cases where academic dishonesty has been established, the award of an F for the final course is the standard practice of the Composition Program. Please see me if you have any questions about your use of sources. Incompletes: Course grades of Incomplete are only granted only in cases when some minor but essential aspect of the course cannot be completed by students through unforeseen circumstances beyond their control. As an adjunct instructor whose employment is not guaranteed beyond the present term, I will not give incompletes unless student approval is given by the English Department because I cannot guarantee that I will be available to grade after the term ends. Access: Linn-Benton Community College is working to create inclusive learning environments. Please notify me in week one if there are aspects of the instruction or design of this course that result in disability-related barriers to your participation. For more information, contact the Center for Accessiblity Resources at Red Cedar Hall, Room 105, 541-917-4789, ods@linnbenton.edu Registration Statement: The only way to add this class is online or through the Registrar s Office. The last day to add this or any writing class is listed on the Academic Calendar. Sexual Discrimination, Harassment, and Assault: I support Title IX and have a duty to report relevant information. LBCC is committed to providing an environment free of all forms of prohibited discrimination and sexual harassment, including sexual assault, domestic and dating violence and gender-based stalking. Any LBCC employee who becomes aware that such behavior is occurring has a duty to report that information to their supervisor or the Office of Affirmative Action and Equal Opportunity. The Counseling and Testing Center can provide assistance and have a greater ability to work confidentially with students.

Rust 121 Syllabus - 5 Essay Grading Guidelines Outstanding Essay (A-, A, A+) This essay makes a fluid, reasoned, well-supported argument. It jolts the readers, wakes them up, persuades, pleases, or delights them. It presents a clear thesis (enthymeme) and develops it logically and coherently, using vivid and concrete detail and appropriate evidence to back up the argument. In this essay, each paragraph will be coherent, beginning with a topic sentence that presents a point of your argument, that relates to your thesis, and that operates as a smooth transition from the previous paragraph. This essay goes beyond the obvious and has a clear sense of purpose and audience. This writing interests readers in what the author has to say. It invites reading. It is well-organized and features smooth transitions, varied sentence structure, fresh diction, strong voice, appropriate tone, and something memorable. The writing itself is strong; there are only insignificant grammatical and mechanical errors, if any. Meets word count, font size, MLA guidelines, and other formatting requirements. Proficient Essay (B-, B, B+) The writing shows the author s independent thought and gives evidence of the author s engagement with the topic. It demonstrates a sense of audience and is shaped to the needs and objections of that audience. Proficient writing is fluent, clear, and logical; it supports a thesis with consistently pertinent detail; the structure is suitable and sufficient i.e. each paragraph presents a coherent argument, beginning with a topic sentence that presents a point of your argument, that relates to the thesis, and that operates as a smooth transition from the previous paragraph. This essay contains no serious grammatical or mechanical problems. Meets word count and all formatting requirements. Satisfactory Essay (C-, C, C+) The writing conveys the author s meaning to his or her audience without distraction. The thesis is clear, and its development follows logically. Supporting details are adequate to the thesis and leave no major objections or challenges to the reasoning. There are no serious grammatical or mechanical problems. Meets word count and formatting requirements. Unsatisfactory Essay (D-, D, D+) The writing detracts from the essay s thesis and may make reading difficult. The essay will have a thesis that is insufficiently supported with specific detail. The thesis itself may not be suitable to the audience or the scope of the assignment, or the thesis and argument of the essay may not be in agreement. Organization may be sketchy or inadequate. There are such errors in grammar, mechanics, logic, sentence structure, or organization that the controlling idea of the essay is obscured rather than clarified, or the ideas themselves lack careful thought. The essay may not be the assigned length. May not meet word count or requirements. Unacceptable Essay (F) This essay has no discernable thesis and thus no structure stemming from it. Serious grammatical and mechanical errors abound. There is no attempt to identify or reach an audience with the writing. Unacceptable writing also includes writing that is plagiarized in part or as a whole. May not meet word count or formatting requirements. Borderline Essay (A-/B+; B-/C+; C-/D+) While this essay displays some important strengths of the higher grade level, it may also display too many weaknesses of the lower grade level.

Rust 121 Syllabus - 6 COURSE SCHEDULE All readings and assignments must be completed before class on the dates listed below. Week 1: The Purpose of College Writing T, 9/30 Course overview and begin assessment essay Th, 10/2 Read: Little Seagull Handbook p. 2-26 before you come to class Bring a Blue Book to Class to finish your assessment essay We will spend a brief portion of this class touring the campus Writing Center Week 2: They Say/I Say: Engaging the Conversation M, 10/7 Read: They Say p. 1-28, Discuss Essay 1 guidelines in class Due: Response 1 (complete exercise #2 on p. 15 and #2 on p. 29) W, 10/9 Read: They Say p. 30-66, Bring three articles on LBCC or local community issues Due: Response 2 (complete exercises #1 and #2 on p. 40-41) Week 3: Presenting Ethical Arguments in a Discourse Community T, 10/14 Read: PDF: Giving Presentations and They Say p. 68-74 Due: Group 1-3 Presentations in class Th, 10/16 Read: They Say p. 78-100 Due: Group 4-6 Presentations in class Week 4: Identifying Your Audience and Establishing Your Style & Voice T, 10/21 Peer Review in class; Due: Two copies of Essay 1.1 Rough Draft Th, 10/23 Read: They Say p. 141-155; Assign Essay 2 Due: Essay 1.2 Final Draft Due; in-class reflective writing Week 5: Focusing Attention: Thesis Statements and Introductions T, 10/28 Read: PDF Sustainability: Foundations Unit (download from instructor webpage) Due: Response 3, Groups 1 & 2 lead discussion Th, 10/30 Read: PDF Sustainability: Place, Community & Social Justice Unit Due: Response 4, Groups 3 & 4 lead discussion

Rust 121 Syllabus - 7 Week 6: Navigating Quotations, Paraphrases, & Summaries T, 11/4 Read: PDF Sustainability: Transportation & Green Consumerism Unit Due: Response 5, Groups 5 & 6 Lead Discussion Th, 11/6 Essay 2 Rough Draft Due for Peer Review and Conferencing Week 7: Rebuilding, Revising, Reflecting T, 11/11 Writing Conferences over Essay 2 Th, 11/13 Essay 2.2 Final Draft Due, in-class reflective writing, Assign Essay 3 Week 8: Strategies for Success: Incorporating Scholarly Evidence into an Argument T, 11/18 Read: Little Seagull Handbook p. 68-80 Meet in Library Computer Classroom for Librarian led research instruction Th, 11/20 Read: Little Seagull Handbook p. 80-92, Meet in (Room TBA) for Research Due: Response 6 - over one scholarly article you will use for Essay 3 Week 9: Strategies for Success II: Organizing Your Ideas T, 11/25 Read: Little Seagull Handbook p. 54-62 Due: Essay 3 Research Proposal and Annotated Bibliography Th, 11/28 Thanksgiving Holiday NO CLASS MEETING Week 10: Conclusions, Formatting and Citations T, 12/2 Due: Essay 3 Extended Outline for peer review W, 12/4 Due: Essay 3 Final Draft and Course Portfolio Final Exam Prep Finals Week: You will complete a two-day final exam that will require you to be on campus both Monday and Tuesday of finals week. See the syllabus above for a complete description. Exact times and room number assignment will be distributed in class week 10.