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POLICIES

COURSE DESCRIPTION:

ENG 101 is based on the premise that critical thinking generates clear writing. In this course, the student learns to read critically, a skill that involves distinguishing central ideas from supporting material and identifying an author’s purpose, assumptions, attitudes, and biases. Additionally, the student in ENG 101 learns a writing process that involves generating ideas, drafting, composing, revising, and editing. The student also learns to locate, use, and accurately reference various sources of information. This course meets General Education Core Goal 1: Communication Skills: Writing; and Core Goal 5: Information Literacy (as part of a 2-course requirement),

MEETING TIMES:

Section AC: MWF 8:00 AM—8:55 5AM, Parkhouse Hall 319
Section BC2: MWF 9:05—10:00, Parkhouse Hall  319

PREREQUISITE(S):


Students must have successfully completed or tested out of REA 017 or REA 018, ESL 011 or ENG 011.

CO-REQUISITE(S): None

LEARNING OUTCOMES:

Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to:

1.      Read critically

2.      Evaluate a writing task for purpose, audience, context, and point of view

3.      Address a topic using a rhetorical strategy appropriate to the writing task

4.      Locate and use outside information sources with basic proficiency

5.      Develop coherent and persuasive essays that present carefully developed and well-supported theses

6.      Use formal, standard usage, grammar, and punctuation

7.      Cite the work of others using a standard model of documentation

8.      Adopt ethical writing standards

To address these skills goals, I have designed the course around a specific theme: education and identity.

COURSE CONTENT

My courses are designed to deal with adult issues often centering on controversial cultural and historical conflicts. At times, the class readings, lectures, and discussions may question ideas or beliefs that individual students hold dear. In addition, the language used in the course may range from highly technical jargon to the vernacular, including profanity. Students who wish to avoid such a classroom environment should seek another section of the course.

TEXTBOOK AND REQUIRED MATERIALS:

  • A Writer's Reference--Hacker
  • Downloaded Course Readings (provided by instructor and also available in the "Course Documents" section of  Blackboard)
  • Pen and paper for each class

COURSE REQUIREMENTS:

English 101 will be one of the most challenging courses of your academic career because it moves quickly, requires a wide range of academic skills, and demands more time than the average course. We will complete four major essay cycles consisting of content readings, skills readings, prewriting, drafting, peer revisions, and final drafts. A breakdown of the assignments and relative point values is as follows:

Major Research Paper

300 Points

Final drafts of major papers

200 points

MS Word Formatting Assignment

21

Annotated bibliographies

50 points

Individual drafts of papers

5 points if completed
-5 if not

In-class essay

50 points/essay, 5 points/card

Required emails and posts

1 point if completed
-5 if not

Submitting Final Drafts to Turnitin.com

Zero on final draft if not done

Reading checks

5 points

Formal responses and formal peer reviews

20 points

Formal grammar revisions

50 points

Late to class

-2 points for each occurrence

Attendance

1 point for each class attended
-5 points for each absence or as otherwise noted on daily assignments; 5th absence means F in course

Missed conference

-10 points

Two-minute presentation

10 points

Your grade is calculated by adding the total points earned and then dividing them by the total points possible. That average will then be plugged into the college's grading scale.

Transcript/Entry
Numerical Grade 

Corresponding letter grade

Percent Equivalent

4.0

A

93.6-100%

3.7

A-

89.5-93.5%

3.3

B+

87.5-89.4%

3.0

B

83.5-87.5%

2.7

B-

79.5-83.5%

2.3

C+

77.5-79.5%

2.0

C

69.5-77.4%

1.3

D

63.5-69.5%

0.0

F

0-63.5%

Be advised that you must complete all major papers and in-class essays in order to pass the course. Even if your paper is too late to be accepted under the late work policies, it must be completed by the end of the semester. If it is not, then you will automatically fail for the course, regardless of what your point total is.

MAJOR PAPER REWRITE OPTION

In order to allow students to benefit from the three-step writing process and to turn in the best possible work for evaluation, students will be permitted to revise the first graded major paper in the course for an entirely new grade provided the assignment/essay was handed in on time and without plagiarism. Late or plagiarized papers are ineligible for revision.

Note: Just turning in a revision does not guarantee a higher grade. In the event that the revised draft grade is actually lower than the original assignment, you will receive the higher of the two grades; however, a higher revision grade always replaces the original grade, so if you are prepared to work hard, your grade will most likely benefit. See the class web page for more information on the major paper rewrite. Please see the class web page's assignments section for more explicit details.

COLLEGE POLICIES:

All College policies must be followed and are a binding part of this syllabus. Details on the Student Code of Conduct can be found at http://www.mc3.edu/policy/sa/conduct.htm.

PLAGIARISM AND ACADEMIC DISHONESTY:

Plagiarism constitutes a serious breach of academic honesty and will not be tolerated. Unless I deem an act of plagiarism or cheating an honest mistake, I routinely assign students an "F" in the course for any act of academic dishonesty without the option of withdrawing from the course. Especially egregious acts will receive an "FX" with an additional notation of academic misconduct on the student's transcript. Please note that submitting work from another class as original work for this course constitutes academic dishonesty. For a full discussion of the Academic Honesty policies, please see http://www.mc3.edu/policy/aa/ethics.htm.

All students in my English courses will submit their papers to TurnItIn.com, a tool that checks your papers against other sources. You will have a chance to see your report and revise it before the final draft is due, should you choose.

SERVICES FOR STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES:

Montgomery County Community College (MCCC) welcomes qualified students with disabilities and endorses the principles of nondiscrimination and reasonable accommodation as described in Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (504) and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA). To see if you are eligible for services and reasonable accommodations in this course please review the policy on the Disabilities web site at http://www.mc3.edu/policy/sa/disable.htm.

ATTENDANCE POLICY:

Regular attendance and punctuality are expected. Students may miss four class meetings and remain in the course. The fifth absence will result in either a required withdrawal from the course (before the March 11, 2014 deadline) or an automatic F in the course (after the March 11, 2014 deadline for withdrawal without a signature).  At the start of the semester, each student will receive 12 points of extra credit for attendance.  Points lost for tardiness or absences will initially be taken from this pool of points, giving students the flexibility to miss two classes without injury to their grades.  Each absence will subtract five points from a student's total points scored for the semester. Each late arrival will subtract two points from the total points scored. A point will be awarded for each class attended. If a student knows he or she will miss a class, that student should alert Dr. Halbert beforehand. Under special circumstances (usually involving a documented medical emergency or a death in the family), you may request permission to remain enrolled in the course if your absences have exceeded four, but such circumstances are rare. Attendance will be taken by sign-in sheet at the start of class: students arriving after the sign-in sheet will be marked tardy. If you arrive late, please wait until the end of class to sign the sheet. Failure to sign the sheet at all constitutes an absence. Students who leave class early must ask for permission prior to the start of class; if you leave without permission before I dismisses the class, you will be marked absent for the whole period. Good manners suggest that if you know you will miss a class meeting, you will contact me and let me know.

CLASS CANCELLATION:

In the event of inclement weather or other emergency, the MCCC School Closing Code is 320 for day classes and 2320 for evening classes. Announcements will be made on KYW (1060 AM) and other local stations. In the event that I have to cancel a class, I will email the class and post a message on Blackboard (assuming I have power at home to access the Internet).

WITHDRAWAL POLICY, INCOMPLETES, AND AUDITS:

Should you wish to withdraw from the course, the deadline to withdraw without my signature is March 11, 2014. If you do not formally withdrawal, you will receive an F for the course even if you stop attending. After March 11, 2014, I will not sign any withdrawal requests unless you have a documented emergency. If I have not returned the first paper by this date, I will extend the deadline until one week after that paper is returned. March 11, 2014, is also the last day to ask to audit.

Applications for an "Incomplete" will only be entertained in cases of documented medical emergencies, incarceration, or military call-ups. Audits will not be permitted unless you start the course as an audit student and can convince me that you are willing to do all that work for no grade.

TURNING IN MAJOR PAPERS

When the final draft of a major paper is due, you will need to do the following:

·       Submit a copy to the appropriate Dropbox located in Blackboard as either an MS Word, Pages, or Rich Text Format file.  When required, a works cited page should be included in the same file.  This file is what will actually be graded.

·       Post a copy to the discussion board in the "Final Draft" forum.

·       Submit the paper to Turnitin.com and get a receipt. Papers not submitted to Turnitin.com receive zeros.  See handout for log-in information.

LATE WORK

All work is due at the beginning of class on the day listed for the syllabus unless otherwise noted. I hate late work from students: it complicates my ability to grade or simply keep track of your work. More importantly, it devalues the efforts of your classmates who work very hard to meet their deadlines. To discourage late work, I have the following policy:

  • Final drafts of papers lose 25 points (out of the possible 200 points) for each 24-hour period they are late. This penalty includes Saturdays and Sundays.
  • Other late assignments have a 24-hour period to be submitted. They will be graded, and that grade will be divided by 2 and entered into the grade spreadsheet.

Late work will kill your grade, so don't do it. If you know ahead of time that you will not be able to complete a task, contact me for an extension. I reserve the right to make an exception to the late policy in the case of an extreme (and documentable) emergency, but that almost never happens.

TUTORIAL SERVICES:

Tutorial Services: Free subject-area tutoring, academic workshops, and study skills specialists are available at Blue Bell Campus’s Tutorial Services in College Hall 180, across from the Cafeteria. Tutorial Services helps students develop learning strategies based on their unique learning styles with the goal of creating successful students and independent learners.  Contact them at 215-641-6452 or log into the portal and find us online at https://mymccc.mc3.edu/allcampusresources/academicaffairs/lal/Pages/default.aspx. Please note that Tutorial Services houses the Writing Center where faculty-tutors are more than happy to assist with revising papers.   

CLASSROOM POLICIES:

As adults, students and the instructor should know to do the following in class:

  • Be prepared for class with work completed and required materials available.
  • Refrain from non-class related conversations once class has started.
  • Keep cell phones and pagers in "silent" mode and refrain from answering them or using them to send text messages. Should a student expect an important call (because of family emergencies or issues of similar magnitude), please make the instructor aware of that possibility before class.
  • Inform the professor if you will be recording the class.
  • Treat each other with mutual respect: while we can challenge each other's ideas in class, personalized attacks or use of inappropriate language directed at another member of the class community is unacceptable.
  • Ask for help if you need it.
  • Make the most of this course. It will help in the future.

FINAL WORD:

I enjoy teaching writing courses: I believe they can be the most empowering classes a person can take in college because the skills you learn can help you in virtually every part of your life. I took this job to help people discover their potential: as long as you are willing to do the work, I will do everything in my power to help you not only pass the course, but to be the best writer you can be.

 

 

 

 

 
 

Site URL: http://www.halhalbert.com/classes/fall2013/eng101
Site designed and owned by Dr. Harold William Halbert
Site published on January 12, 2014