COURSE DESCRIPTION:
ENG 102 focuses on writing
the college-level research paper and develops each student’s mastery of
communication, information literacy, and analytic skills with emphasis placed
on research and documentation methods. Students use writing, reading, listening,
and observations skills to understand, organize, receive, and convey
information. Using research gleaned
from diverse sources, students employ logic, reasoning, and analysis to craft
effective essays.
PREREQUISITE:
Students must have successfully
completed or tested out of REA 017 or REA 018, ESL 011 or ENG 011.
LEARNING OUTCOMES:
Upon successful completion of this course, the
student will be able to:
1. Address a question
using an appropriate research strategy
2. Compose a coherent thesis that addresses an audience and purpose appropriate
to the writing task
3. Locate and critically evaluate information from written, oral, graphic, mass
media, and scholarly sources
4. Access and use information ethically and legally, employing the appropriate
format and documentation
5. Integrate research into an argument
6. Draw reasonable conclusions based on research
7. Write well-edited essays that show substantial attention to organization and
grammar
To address these skills goals, I have
designed the course around a specific theme: horror and the monstrous in art.
COURSE CONTENT
My courses are
designed to deal with adult issues often centering around 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 Pocket Style Manual--Hacker
- I Am Legend--Richard Matheson (ISBN-10: 031286504X)
- Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde--Robert
Louis Stevenson (Signet Classics ISBN-13: 978-0451528957)
- Downloaded Course Readings (provided by instructor via
Blackboard)
- Book-Tab Post-Its.
- Pen and paper for each class
COURSE REQUIREMENTS: English 102 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 points
|
Scholarly Article Analysis
|
20 points
|
Annotated bibliographies
|
50 points
|
Two-minute Presentation
|
10
|
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 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
|
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-
|
79.5-83.4%
|
2.3
|
C+
|
77.5-79.4
|
2.0
|
C
|
69.5-77.4%
|
1.3
|
D
|
63.5-69.4%
|
0.0
|
F
|
0-63.4%
|
Be advised that you must complete all major papers 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 one of the first two papers 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 you
will receive 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 an automatic F in
the course. 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 or as part of a homework
check: students arriving after the sign-in sheet or homework check 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 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).
If the College
closes, the class is automatically canceled. If you haven’t signed up for MCCC’s
texting service, you should.
WITHDRAWAL POLICY,
INCOMPLETES, AND AUDITS:
Should you wish to withdraw from the course, If you
do not formally withdrawal, you will receive an F for the course even if you
stop attending. Applications for an "Incomplete" will only be
entertained in cases of documented medical emergencies 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.
Students may withdraw without my signature between May 22th and June
7th by following the instructions at https://mymccc.mc3.edu/allcampusresources/studentaffairs/srr/Pages/withdraw.aspx
- new. Students can withdraw with my signature
between June 8th and June 14th, but my general practice is to not
sign any withdrawal requests unless you have a documented emergency.
Students seeking my signature will need to complete the Withdrawal Permission Form. After the15th you will need
to appeal to the Office of Academic Affairs and plead extraordinary
circumstances.
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
dropbox on Blackboard for the paper. This file is what will actually be graded,
so make sure it is the final version and not a prior draft.
·
Post a copy to the
discussion board in the "Final Draft" forum.
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,
located on the lower floor of College Hall in Room 180, has computers that
students may use. In addition, help from professional tutors on papers for
English and other courses is available on a walk-in basis. Use of the Tutorial
Services is strongly encouraged: I've run centers like this, used centers like
this, and I believe they are a valuable resource for both struggling and gifted
writers because they provide a pair of professional eyes to review a paper and
give writers the kind of feedback we all want. 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.
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 composition 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.