English
102: Writing for a Liberal
Education
Fall 2006
Dr. Barbara
J. Bass
Li 218A /
HH403A
410-704-4573
bbass@towson.edu
Texts and Supplies:
Paperback: 304 pages
Publisher: Vintage; 1st Vintage Books ed edition
(October 11, 1994)
ISBN: 0679756760
Rebecca Rule, Susan Wheeler, True Stories: Guides for Writing from Your Life
Paperback: 352 pages
Publisher: Heinemann (March 15, 2000)
ISBN: 0325000468
Ellsworth,
Blanche, English Simplified, Latest Edition, Harper and Row
Paperback: 64 pages
Publisher: Longman; 10 edition (May 28, 2003)
ISBN: 0321104293
102 Reading
Packet
1 - light-colored cardboard folder with pockets across the bottom, no center brads.
Course
Conduct:
á
All
beepers and cell phones must be turned off before you enter class and must be
kept in your pocket or backpack.
You may not send or receive calls or text messages during class. If your cell phone vibrates, you may
not leave class to answer the phone.
á
No
headphones are to be worn in class.
á
Any
student who is disruptive to the class will be dismissed from the course.
á
Plagiarism
will result in dismissal from the course with a grade of F.
á
Please
take care of trips to the restroom and the water fountain before and after
class begins. Refrain from leaving
in the middle of class except in extreme emergencies.
Course
Objectives:
Through
this course, you should learn to be more comfortable with writing. You will
have the opportunity to explore the many individual approaches available for
developing essays, and you will work on improving the way you develop and
organize your essays. You each
will also be able to work on improving your grammar, style, and use of language
in essay writing. This is a
revision-based course, an approach that allows you to work on your drafts over
time, thinking about what you need to add, delete, or change in order to
improve your work. Because you
will be submitting drafts rather
than final drafts, you will not receive a grade on them until your drafts are
in final form at the end of the semester.
Syllabus:
We will
generally follow the syllabus, but be sure to check on Blackboard for changes
if you must miss a class.
Additions and changes often occur.
Finding out about such changes is your responsibility.
Course
Requirements:
á
You
are expected to attend every class.
á
If
you do miss class, your grade will be adversely affected.
á
You
must arrive on time. I take
attendance at the beginning of each class.
á
You
must submit all homework on the dates assigned. Homework is meant to be a springboard to class discussion
á
All
writing pieces must be typed on standard paper, double-spaced, 2-3 typed pages,
stapled in the upper left-hand corner. Each must be typed in Arial 14 point
font. No unstapled essays will be
accepted.
á
All
Reading/Journal assignments must be typed in Arial 14.
á
You
must bring the appropriate books to class with you each day.
Assignments:
á
Reading/Journal
entries
á
Class
participation
á
Blackboard/Learnonline
web-based work
á
Group
work
á
Creative
nonfiction essays
Final
Portfolio:
Over the
course of the semester, you will write five at-home creative nonfiction writing
pieces that you will have the opportunity to revise. At the end of the semester, you will put these pieces into
an autobiography with a beginning, middle, and end. You will submit this autobiography on the last day of
class. There will be no separate
final exam.
General
Goals of this Course:
á
Improvement
in writing, including grammar, mechanics, usage, and expression and development
of ideas in essay form.
á
Opportunities
to work collaboratively.
á
Opportunities
to reflect on improved skills.
á
Opportunities
to learn through film, video, and Internet resources.
Computer
Lab:
We will be holding some of our classes this semester in the Department of English Computer Lab (Li 207). Paper and computer time will be provided free of charge. The lab is equipped with IBM-compatible computers that use Microsoft Word. If you have your own laptop, you may bring it to the lab and use it there as well as at home. If you have a computer other than an IBM-compatible, you may use that computer for writing your at-home essays, but you will have to use the lab computers for your in-class work. If you do your work at home, on lab days you will need to bring another English assignment with you to class.
All of your essays will be pieces of creative non-fiction. Below is a description of this kind of writing, which is based upon your life experiences.
Creative
non-fiction
On Top
All this new stuff goes on top
turn it over. Turn it over
wait and water down.
From the dark bottom
turn it inside out
let it spread through, sift down,
even.
Watch it sprout.
A mind like compost.
Gary
Snyder
Gary Snyder is describing what happens in a compost heap in
this poem, but he is also describing the thinking/writing process. Revising writing means turning our
ideas over, waiting, letting our ideas spread, sift down, and sprout. Revision is an integral part of the writing
process. It means
"re-seeing." When we
begin to write, we may envision our thoughts as words for the first time. "Vision" means "to bring
before the eye of the mind."
It also implies intelligent foresight. When we revise, we look again at what our imagination has
produced. When we see it again, we
can try to come to a deeper understanding of what we mean. Revision is an act of looking back, of
seeing with fresh eyes, of entering an old text from a new direction. When we revise, we turn inward to find
truth, but we also turn outward for guidance. Having a guide is an essential part of the process.
Your job as a writer this semester is to reflect
thoughtfully about the essays that you write, to ask deep questions about your
meaning, and to make caring connections between what you have read and what you
will write. My job is to guide you
through the process.
Over the course of the semester, you will be asked to write
five at-home essays. You will have
the opportunity to revise those essays before submitting them in a final
portfolio at the end of the semester.
The portfolio, which you may assemble both at home and in the computer
lab, will take the place of your final exam in this class.
You will
also be submitting a minimum of two (2) revisions of your essays over the
course of the semester. The dates
they are due are listed in your syllabus. Although only a total of three
revisions is required, you are encouraged to submit as many revisions as you
like.
Please make an appointment to see me if you have any questions or concerns.