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CCCC 1997: Outcomes Forum (Session L.17)MASTER COURSE SYLLABUS ENGLISH 101 COURSE DESCRIPTION University-parallel freshman English. Fundamentals of effective prose writing, including required essays and a research paper. Prerequisite: Satisfactory writing score on the Placement Test or p2 grade in DVE 001. EXPECTED COURSE OUTCOMES: WRITING SKILLS-making decisions appropriate to purpose and audience: 1. Writing informative, analytical, and argumentative essays 2. Formulating thesis statements that are restricted, unified, and precise 3. Organizing the content into separate body paragraphs 4. Formulating topic sentences that are restricted, unified, and precise. 5. Developing body paragraphs with unity, coherence, and sufficient supporting materials 6. Selecting appropriate diction 7. Producing clear, emphatic sentences 8. Applying grammar fundamentals RESEARCH SKILLS-demonstrating basic research techniques: 1. Using the library efficiently to locate material relevant to a specific topic 2. Taking notes in sufficient detail and with sufficient citation 3. Documenting sources according to specified model 4. Understanding the concept of plagiarism; writing without plagiarizing 5. Synthesizing several different sources into a paper supporting a thesis 6. Quoting, summarizing, and paraphrasing responsibly within that paper RANGE OF SUBJECT MATTER DEFINED: RHETORIC ORGANIZATION REINFORCE Focusing on a main idea in paragraphs and essays Using outlines and other prewriting techniques Organizing data (for example, classification, comparison/ contrast, and other expository patterns) Revising for unity, completeness, structure, cohesiveness INTRODUCE Developing and supporting complex theses STYLE REINFORCE Writing with precision and economy INTRODUCE Writing with vividness, avoiding the trite Recognizing rhetorical devices, figurative language Using sentence variety and emphasis Developing tone appropriate for the situation, purpose, and audience WRITING SITUATION REINFORCE Assessing task (consider time constraints, appropriate length, degree of polish) Assessing audience Writing for self (discovery, exploration, record keeping) Writing for others Assessing purpose (explore, explain, analyze, prove) Working collaboratively INTRODUCE Understanding writing in a college culture (issues of proof, authority) Using format conventions (titles, paragraphs, headings, research conventions) SENTENCE-LEVEL CONCERNS GRAMMAR AND PUNCTUATION Reinforce conventional expectations of correct grammar, punctuation, usage and mechanics. SENTENCE RHETORIC INTRODUCE AND REINFORCE Parallelism for rhetorical effect Sentence variety and emphasis for rhetorical effect; for example, sentence combining and condensing Precision: connotations, concrete language Appropriateness: levels of formality EDITING SKILLS INTRODUCE AND REINFORCE Use of handbook: finding answers to common questions Proofreading: especially for omitted words and word endings, spelling, typos, and nonstandard English DEFINING SELF AS WRITER PROCESS INTRODUCE AND REINFORCE Analyzing one's writing processes in different rhetorical situations VOICE INTRODUCE AND REINFORCE Development of personal, academic, and public voices Understanding diverse contexts for writing Adapting one's voice for diverse audiences ROLES OF WRITERS INTRODUCE Becoming a college writer CRITICAL THINKING ABSTRACTION AND GENERALIZATION INTRODUCE AND REINFORCE Supplying concrete examples for abstract concept Supporting generalizations with sufficient examples Considering purposes and applications of comparison/contrast SORTING, SELECTING, REPORTING, AND SUPPORTING IDEAS INTRODUCE AND REINFORCE Distinguishing between fact and supported/unsupported opinion and bias Generalizing from personal experience to reasonable claim or hypothesis Developing habit of asking probing questions Synthesizing information from several sources using summary, paraphrase, and selective quotations ANALYSIS AND EVALUATION OF SOURCES INTRODUCE AND REINFORCE Analyzing information presented in single source Analyzing and comparing information from several sources Explaining progression of ideas (argumentative chain) in a text and analyzing for logic and development; identify cause-effect relationships OWNERSHIP AND ATTRIBUTION INTRODUCE AND REINFORCE Distinguishing between "common knowledge" and information requiring attribution of sources USING AND CITING SOURCES SOURCE SELECTION REINFORCE Distinguishing between relevant and irrelevant sources (oral and written) INTRODUCE Using primary and secondary sources Choosing appropriate sources in college library (recency, variety, credibility, balance) ANALYTIC READING REINFORCE Reading for the main idea and supporting points INTRODUCE Reading for point of view, reliability, credibility NOTE TAKING REINFORCE Summarizing and paraphrasing a source INTRODUCE Taking notes without plagiarizing Recording documentation information accurately DOCUMENTATION INTRODUCE AND REINFORCE Distinguishing between direct and indirect discourse Attributing sources Using quotation marks correctly Documenting sources with a standard system (e.g., MLA) INCORPORATION INTRODUCE AND REINFORCE Using source material to further writer's purpose Using signal phrases to integrate quotations and borrowed ideas Incorporating sources without plagiarizing EVALUATION OF STUDENT PERFORMANCE: Students write a minimum of five informative, analytical, and argumentative essays, one of which incorporates research from several sources. The course grade is based primarily on essay assignments, although instructors determine the weight of individual assignments. Essays are evaluated by these criteria: WORDS
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