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Monday, August 18, 2014

SYLLABUS


                                                                  English 1102-12 CRN: 82702, 3 credit hours
Fall 2014
WRC – Room 110
12:30 P.M. – 1:45 P.M., M/W
Instructor: Mrs. Sharon Aiken, H/SS, 248
Emails will be answered within 48 hours of receipt. If there is a situation requiring immediate attention, call 478-471-2893
Office Hours: M/W: 12:30-2:00 P.M., PSC, first floor
T/TH: 1:45-2:30 P.M., WRC
Office phone: 478-471-2893
Website: aikenenglish1102fall2014.blogspot.com
English 1102-33 CRN: 26535  Syllabus and Policy Statement:

Course Description/Purpose:
English 1102 is an introduction to literature that continues the writing principles studied in English
1101. ENGL 1102 introduces students to the three basic genres of literature—fiction, drama, and
poetry—their conventions, and associated literary terms, with some introduction to critical approaches.
ENGL 1102 students are asked to respond to literary works with essays that not only analyze themes,
but also analyze literary techniques.

Policy Statements

Required Prerequisite: A minimum grade of C is required in ENGL 1101 (or its equivalent) before a student may take English 1102.

30-Hour Rule: In accordance with Board of Regents policy, students must complete ENGL 1101 and ENGL 1102 before earning thirty hours of course credit.

Withdrawal Policy: Students may withdraw from the course and earn a grade of “W” up to and including the midterm date, Wednesday, October 15, 2014. After midterm, students who withdraw will receive a grade of “WF.” A WF is calculated in the GPA as an “F.” New MGSC policy limits the total number of withdrawal hours that students may accrue to 15 hours. 

Exit Requirements: All students must complete ENGL 1102 with a grade of A, B, or C to receive Area A credit and proceed to 2000-level English survey courses.

Regents Exemption: Students who complete both ENGL 1101 and ENGL 1102 with grades of A, B, or C have fulfilled the University System of Georgia Regents Reading and Writing Requirements.

MGSC Academic Misconduct Statement: As a Middle Georgia State College student and as a student in this class, you are responsible for reading, understanding, and abiding by the MGSC Student Code of Conduct. The Student Code of Conduct is included in the MGSC Student Handbook and is available online at http://www.mga.edu/student-affairs/docs/MGSC_Student_Handbook.pdf.  “The institutional penalty for academic misconduct is a grade of zero for the work involved.”

MGSC Policy on Disability Accommodations: Students seeking academic accommodations for a special need must contact the Middle Georgia State College Office of Disability Services in Macon at (478) 471-2985 or in Cochran at (478) 934-3023. Students may also visit the Disability Services Office in room 266 of the Student Life Center on the Macon campus or in Sanford Hall on the Cochran campus.

 “Technical Policy” (re: plagiarism detection): a plagiarism prevention service is used in evaluation of written work submitted for this course. As directed by the instructor, students are expected to submit or have their assignments submitted through the service in order to meet requirements for this course. The papers may be retained by the service for the sole purpose of checking for plagiarized content in future student submissions.

End of Course Evaluations: Student evaluations of faculty are administered online at the end of each term/session for all courses with five or more students. Students will receive an email containing a unique link to a survey for each course in which they are enrolled.  All responses are anonymous and completion of evaluations is voluntary.

The Writing Center: Individual writing assistance is available for any MGSC student in The Writing Center. Please visit any of our locations: Cochran Campus, Russell Hall 309; Dublin Campus, Dublin Building, Room 224; or Macon Campus, The Education Building 226.

A.     Student Learning Outcomes:

Upon successful completion of ENGL 1102, students will be able to:

  • demonstrate a collegiate competency to read critically and communicate ideas in well-developed written forms (MGSC General Education Learning Goal A1 [Communications]),
  • read and respond to various texts for purposes of interpretation, analysis, synthesis, evaluation, and judgment,
  • have a working knowledge of literary terms and understand the effect of narrative, dramatic, and poetic conventions upon meanings,
  • use recursive processes that include collecting information, focusing, ordering, drafting, revising, and editing,
  • demonstrate the techniques and skills of research, integration of source material, and documentation,
  • use conventions of writing mechanics, usage, and style to communicate effectively for the given audience, purpose, and format
    (guidelines recommended by the Board of Regents Advisory Committee on English). 

Definition of Plagiarism:
The following definition of plagiarism expands upon the Student Code’s description of plagiarism and has been adopted as standard by the English Department. For further explanation and illustrations, refer to the English Department’s “Plagiarism Definition,” available online at http://www.mga.edu/liberal-arts/english.
1. It is plagiarism to copy another’s words directly and present them as your own without quotation marks and direct indication of whose words you are copying.  All significant phrases, clauses, and passages copied from another source require quotation marks and proper acknowledgment, down to the page number(s) of printed texts.
2. It is plagiarism to paraphrase another writer’s work by altering some words but communicating the same essential point(s) made by the original author without proper acknowledgment.  Though quotation marks are not needed with paraphrasing, you must still acknowledge the original source directly.
3. Plagiarism includes presenting someone else’s ideas or factual discoveries as your own.  If you follow another person’s general outline or approach to a topic, presenting another’s original thinking or specific conclusions as your own, you must cite the source even if your work is in your own words entirely.  When you present another’s statistics, definitions, or statements of fact in your own work, you must also cite the source.
4. Plagiarism includes allowing someone else to prepare work that you present as your own.
5. Plagiarism applies in other media besides traditional written texts, including, but not limited to, oral presentations, graphs, charts, diagrams, artwork, video and audio compositions, and other electronic media such as web pages, PowerPoint presentations, and online discussion postings.

Required Texts: The Bedford Introduction to Literature,10th ed., Michael Meyer, Bedford/St. Martin’s.

Technology RequirementsThe following technical competencies are necessary and expected in this class: working knowledge of Microsoft Word; the use of a jump drive; internet use and willingness to learn more.

Attendance Policy, per MGSC:
“Students whose number of absences is more than twice the number of class meetings per week may be assigned a failing grade for the course at the discretion of the instructor.  Students  who  have more absences than the number of class meetings per week but less than twice the number of class meetings per week, may be penalized at the discretion of the instructor.  Students who have absences which are less than or equal to the number of class meetings per week will not be penalized.”
NOTE: If you have a medical condition and see that you will be missing a number of days, be prepared to present a doctor’s excuse to me. You must have written documentation. If a member of your immediate family has a health condition requiring your absence from class, remember:  that is still an absence.  English 1101 and 1102 have been known to cause sprains, eczema, stress, high blood pressure, hyperventilation, dandruff, seizures, stress, hospitalizations, broken bones, accidents, stress, and the plague. [Students and their families are most susceptible one to two days before a deadline. Do your work, plan ahead and protect yourself and your loved ones.]

Class Behavior Expectations and Consequences for Violation
“The primary expectations of all Middle Georgia State College students are integrity and civility. Each student should approach his/her academic endeavors, relationships and personal responsibilities with a strong
 commitment to personal integrity and interpersonal civility”. http://www.mga.edu/student-affairs/docs/MGSC_Student_Handbook.pdf#48.  (A full description of these responsibilities is found in the Student Handbook.)

“This class calls for you to use common courtesy in all interactions with your peers and the instructor. It requires students to listen to each other respectfully and without interruption.  You should approach the instructor in a professional manner, including in all of your email correspondence.

Any activity that disrupts classroom activities will result in the student(s) being asked to leave the classroom.  These disruptive activities include, but are not limited to,: using a cellphone/pager/smartphone, bringing children to class, talking during lectures, using a laptop for anything other than taking notes for this class, and making potentially offensive comments.  In addition, students who come in late or leave early disturb students and the instructor. The instructor reserves the right to deduct points at her/his discretion rom the course grade of any student who persistently participates in disruptive behavior. If the problem becomes chronic, the student(s) will be assigned a grade of “F” in the course and face other consequences determined by the institution’s administration.”

Class Policies:
1.       Please be on time. If you drive a distance to get here, plan accordingly. Being in class, ready to work says a great deal about your serious attention to this class and does not go unnoticed.
2.       Essays are to be typed. Writing on class computers is part of the class; there will be both in-class and out-of-class essays.  Title all essays and use correct MLA format {we will be going over this before an essay is due}.
3.       Papers are due on time. You may email a copy of the paper the day it is due, without penalty.  I will not accept papers after the due date.
4.       Students have the option of revising the first and second essays with the following stipulations:
a.       The original essay and grade sheet must be handed in with the revised essay
b.      If the only edits made to the paper are for grammar/mechanics/corrections  the grade will remain the same (the student has only copied and corrected)
c.       Substantive revisions could gain the student as much as one letter grade
d.      Revisions are due one week from the day the corrected essay is returned
5.       If you plan to print out of class essays in class, please attend to them within the first 10-15 min. of class.
6.       IF YOU USE ANY WORD PROCESSING PROGRAM OTHER THAN MS WORD, SAVE YOUR PAPER AS AN .rtf  (Rich Text Format) file or as a .pdf.  Your paper cannot be opened, cannot be read, cannot be printed otherwise. Not even the tech gurus in the Student Success Center can help.
7.       If you miss a daily assignment, you may NOT make it up; if you miss a major essay, your grade will result in a zero. You MUST complete all major assignments to pass the class.
8.       I give letter grades; if you have a question about a grade, drop by my office or make an appointment to see me after class; if you wish to challenge a grade, do so in writing, no sooner than a day after getting your paper back, and no later than three class days after the assignment is returned.
9.       The final exam in English 1101 is a two-hour essay over our final major reading assignment, typically a drama. Active Participation is expected from every student in class and is worth ten percent of your final grade. It begins but does not end with attendance.  Refer to http://aikenenglish1102fall2014.blogspot.com/  for more information.

10. Please be aware that failure IS an option.

1102 Course Requirements:

Assignment
Percent of Grade
Tentative Due Date
 The Week of:
Quiz #1: Fiction
10
08/25
Quiz # 2: Poetry
10
10/27
Quiz #3: Drama
10
11/10
Essay #1: FICTION
10
09/17
Essay #2:  RESEARCH
20
10/06
In class Essay #3: Poetry Explication
10
10/27
Essay #4: Drama
10
11/10
 FINAL EXAM
20
Thursday, Dec. 11, 3:30-5:30 p.m.

Grading Policy:

Grade
Average
Description
A
90-100
Excellent work
B
80-89
Good work
C
70-79
Satisfactory work
D
60-69
Passing work
F
<60
Failing work

The best way to develop your writing is to read, read, read. There are no shortcuts, no easy outs, and no simple solutions. Read everything, good and bad, exciting and mediocre, suspenseful and boring. You will gradually begin to develop a sense of identifying good writing that is coherent and clear, complete, as well as concise. Bad writing will show you what to avoid; good writing will show you what to emulate. This class does not meet every day, but if you truly want to succeed and develop, not only in this class, but in college and in life, it is in your best interest to read every day and, if at all possible, to write every day. Seek help when you need it. Find your voice and remain true to it; take pride in your work. Do your best, whether your best is a “C” or an “A.”

“Writing is easy; all you have to do is sit staring at a blank sheet of paper until the drops of blood form on your forehead.”    Gene Fowler

TENTATIVE SCHEDULE by the week:
Note: stories, poems, assignments should be completed BEFORE coming to class

08/18: Syllabus; introduction to the class blog; begin introduction to the elements of fiction and to the first stories: “The Far and the Near,” “Popular Mechanics,” and “Solomon and the Two Mothers.”

08/25:  QUIZ #1 this week over syllabus, literary terms, and stories

09/01: Labor Day Holiday; discussion of “A& P,” p. 201 and “That Room,” p. 222

09/08:  stories: “Job History,” p. 77 and “Romero’s Shirt,” p. 258; also for discussion: writing about literature

09/17: Essay # 1 – DUE – reading selections: “Young Goodman Brown” and “The Minister’s Black Veil”

09/22 and 09/29: writing the literary research paper

10/06: Essay #2 – DUE – introduction to the difference between literal and figurative language and an introduction to poetry, with a partial number of associated terms

10/13: continued discussion of poetry, with terms, examples, and selected poems: “The Raven,” for sound effects; “Richard Cory” for irony in poetry and focus on Emily Dickinson and Robert Frost

10/20: continued discussion of Dickinson and Frost

10/27: QUIZ #2 over poetry, terms and selections and the in-class essay over poetry [Essay #3]

11/03: introduction to Greek drama and study of  Oedipus

11/10: conclude discussion over the drama of Oedipus with QUIZ #3 and Essay #4

11/17: begin discussion of August Wilson’s Fences

11/24:  Thanksgiving Holidays

12/01: conclude discussion of Fences

12/09-12/13: Final Exams; please refer to the Academic Calendar for date and time: http://www.mga.edu/registrar/docs/Exam_Schedule_F




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