1550 Syllabus

SYLLABUS 41475 and 43887

                 ENGLISH  1550-41475/43887: Composition I


Fall  2009
Jesse V. McClain III					
	                        Th. 5:10-7:50  /  (S)  9-11:40
DeBartolo B48/Metro                       				
	      Office: T. 5:10 Rm. 250
Home: 726-8343					
	                        vandevner@zoominternet.net

 

REQUIRED  MATERIALS

•	Lunsford,Andrea A.:     Easy Writer
•	Carnes, Jim:        Us and Them	
•	Youngstown State University:     Writing (as) Work     Bedford/St. 
Martin’s
•	One Flash Drive, minimum 1GB  memory required
•	One   ½” three-ringed notebook
•	A Magg Library Bar Code/Public Library Card
______________________________________________________________________________
_________________________


Prerequisite

Successful completion of English 1540 or its equivalent. Willingness to work 
collaboratively with others-which will mean planning, drafting, and writing 
in a team. Willingness to write and research on a computer. You must use the 
computers in the lab and other compatible machines to get your work done on 
time. You do not have to be a typist, but you will need to be willing to 
learn how to make a word processor and electronic search devices work for 
you. If your keyboarding skills are such that it takes you forever to hunt 
and peck to complete a paper or assignment, plan your schedule accordingly.

Course Description
  
This course is designed to achieve the goals stated in the English 
department’s 1550 syllabus. This composition class is designed to give you 
intensive practice in critically reading and writing short expository essays 
of approximately 400-600 words. The course emphasizes the writing process—
generating and organizing ideas, accurately analyzing audience needs, and 
attending to the quality of the final presentation (including such basics as 
spelling, punctuation, and usage) through an extended drafting process. In 
addition, 1550 will provide you with numerous opportunities to formulate 
reasonable arguments and to support them with relevant evidence—evidence that 
you will learn to gather from the selected anthology and other sources. There 
will be four papers and about a dozen short, semi-formal assignments giving 
you experience summarizing, paraphrasing, quoting, and citing material from 
assigned readings. Impromptu essay writing, the kind that might be written 
for in-class examinations, will also be written. As the department syllabus 
states, you must write a minimum of 4000 words. To fulfill the requirements 
for this class, you will write essays for a variety of audiences and 
expository purposes and strengthen your essays by revising preliminary drafts 
and by editing your writing to conform to the standards of educated English. 
In this course you will also think critically about and write responses to 
assigned readings as well as planning writing tasks effectively by using 
prewriting strategies.



The Work

In general, college courses assume that you will work outside the class. For 
years now, the usual expectation has been that students will put in 3 hours 
outside of class for every hour spent in class. English 1550 meets for 3 
hours a week; therefore, we assume that you will put in 9 hours of effort 
into your assignments outside of class. If writing isn’t your strong suit, or 
if your work schedule will prevent you from putting more than a couple of 
hours a week into your class work, or if you’re prone to blowing off class, 
you should set your sights on passing rather than on ‘acing’ this course. As 
stated previously, you will write at least 4000 words in this course. 2000 
words will be of a graded nature, written both in and out of class. Your 
reading assignments will come from a variety of sources and not limited to 
the chosen text, reader and instructor-provided selections.


Course Procedures and Basic Expectations

Never tell me that “I know the paper’s a little short but I couldn’t find 
anything in the anthology or my life to write on.” If you can’t dig up enough 
material in anthology to write a serious paper on, you need try harder. 

Revision and feedback are the heart of this course and necessary for good 
writing. Each paper must undergo a series of drafts before it can be 
submitted for a grade. Papers that do not go through the drafting/revision 
process will not be graded.

Each paper must include selected quotes from the selected essays. For each 
paper you must consult the chosen anthology and any essays provided in-class. 
A selected reader will also be used as a primary material in this class. You 
must quote from at least one of each of these kinds of sources. Obviously you 
needn’t limit the amount of quoted material to one citation per category.

“How long do you want these papers to be?” Students always ask this question 
and the answer is always the same, “until it is done!”

“Do we have to use these computers?”  Yes!

“Does format matter?”  Yes, but the basic rule for all final drafts is to 
make sure your work is appealing to the eye and easy to read. In general 
though, use one-inch margins all around, a serif font, and 12 pt. Plain type. 

“What’s the attendance policy?”  It is requested that you show up whenever 
class is scheduled. Given the nature of this class, blowing off a day of 
class is inconsiderate to others in your class. For this reason, I reserve 
the right to reduce your grade 5% for every unexcused absence.

“What about late papers?”  No late papers will be accepted.”



Grading and Standards of Evaluation

	*For each major writing assignment, you will be provided with an 
assignment sheet detailing the specific requirements and objectives. Final 
grades are ‘weighed’ this way:

	Paper One			20 pts.             1000 words or 
more       *20%
	Paper Two			20 pts.             1000 words or 
more       *20%
	2  Searches/Assignments  TBA	10 
pts.                                                     *10 %
	Paper Three		 20 pts.               500 words or more      
*10%
	Final Paper/Portfolio  		30 pts.             2500 words or 
more       *40%

TOTAL			                100 pts.


	*Grades for major individual assignments will be assigned according 
to the following scale:

			A			95-100
			A-			91-94
			B+			89-90
			B			83-88
B-	82
       		C+			72-76
			C			72-76
C-	71
D  (No Credit)		66-70
F   (No Credit)		65

		


		A-an ‘excellent’ paper

	fulfills minor as well as major purposes of the assignment
	clearly articulates a thesis based on good audience analysis
	demonstrates an appropriate pattern of organization
	features a flawless bibliography in MLA format
	has smooth transitions
	uses language appropriately
	is well-written, interesting, and easy to read
	grammatically correct, punctuated appropriately and fewer than 3 typos

B- a ‘good’ paper
	fulfills the major purposes of the assignment
	clearly articulates a thesis
	demonstrates an appropriate pattern of organization
	has a clear, concise, and appropriate writing style
	is adequately developed
	has a slightly flawed bibliography
	may have some awkward spots and fewer than 4 ‘mechanical’ errors

C- a ‘satisfactory’ paper

	articulates a thesis
	demonstrates an acceptable pattern of organization
	follows the conventions of standard written English
	may be inadequately developed in places
	may have minor errors in style, tone, or organization
	a good (B) paper with a major flaw in logic, organization or tone
	a good (B) paper with numerous editing errors

D- an ‘unsatisfactory’ paper
	shows some evidence of having attempted to articulate a thesis
	has many errors in organization, development, style, citation or tone
	a satisfactory (C) paper with a major flaw in logic, tone or style

F- an ‘unacceptable’ paper
	fails to address the assignment
	does not articulate a thesis
	contains an unacceptable number of errors in style, tone or 
development
	an unsatisfactory (D) paper with major flaws in tone, organization or 
style



Plagiarism

Passing off the work of others as your own original work is a serious matter. 
While some have found it tempting to download papers from the web 
or ‘recycle’ the work of their friends, the consequences can be devastating 
if you are caught. The minimum penalty for plagiarism is automatic failure of 
this course and having a disciplinary action report placed in your student 
file; the maximum includes dismissal from the university. 



Tentative  Calendar

Week One		Course Introduction, Diagnostic Essay
		Part One: Section 1    Personal Views of  Work
		Handbook:Writing Process

Week Two		Part One  Section 1 Continued
		The Library
		Assignment One Due
		Handbook: Writing Process

Week Three	Part One  Section 1 Continued
		Evaluating Sources From The Library
		Handbook: Writing Process
		Assignment Two-Rough Draft Due..Revision and Editing

Week Four		Part One   Section 1 Continued
		Individual Conference Presentations
		Assignment Two Due
		Handbook: Sentence Grammar

Week Five		Part One   Section 2 Wage Labor
		Handbook: Computers In Writing
		Assignment Three-Rough Draft Due..Revisions and Editing


Week Six		Part Two  Section 2   Continued
		Handbook: Sentence Style
		Assignment Three Due
		


Week Seven	Part Two    Section 2 Continued
		Handbook: Punctuation Mechanics
		Assignment Four-Rough Draft Due..Revisions and Editing

Week Eight	Peer Response
		Handbook: Language
		Individual Conferences
		Assignment Four Due

Week Nine	Section 2   Continued
		Handbook: Multilingual Writers
		Assignment Five-Rough Draft Due..Revisions and Editing

Week Ten		Part Two   Section 3  Theories about Work, Labor, and 
Class
		Handbook: Research
		Assignment Five Due

Week Eleven	 Conferences

Week Twelve	Section  3  Contin ued
		Assignment Six-Rough Draft Due..Revisions and Editing
		Handbook: Research

Week Thirteen	Section  4  Issues, Problems, and Dilemmas
Conferences
		Handbook: Documentation
		Assignment Six Due

Week Fourteen	Section 4  Continued
		Handbook: Documentation

Week Fifteen	Assignment Seven--Final Paper 

Week Sixteen	Conferences
		Return Grades					







Class Web Site (s):

http://teacherweb.com/OH/YoungstownStateUniversity/JesseVMcClain

MUST CHECK SEVERAL TIMES PER WEEK


and

turnitin.com

MUST CHECK NUMEROUS TIMES PER WEEK


Success

"Those who want to succeed will find a way; those who don't will 
find an 
excuse."  Leo Aguila


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