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Course Planning by Program

2024-25

Essential Objectives

Course Syllabus


Revision Date: 01-Aug-24
 

English Composition




Credits:
Semester Dates: Last day to drop without a grade: 09-16-2024 - Refund Policy
Last day to withdraw (W grade): 11-04-2024 - Refund Policy
This course has started, please contact the offering academic center about registration

Faculty

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Course Description

In this course, students develop effective composition skills and research techniques. Students learn strategies for organizing, evaluating, and revising their work through extensive reading of a variety of essay styles and literary texts; apply writing and research techniques to their papers; and demonstrate proficiency in first-year college-level writing and information literacy.


Essential Objectives

1. Consistently apply an appropriate writing process that includes planning, drafting, revising, and editing.
2. Demonstrate in written work an awareness of the relationship among writer, subject, audience, and purpose.
3. Demonstrate writing proficiency with a range of rhetorical approaches to include narration, exposition, argument, and critical analysis and recognize the stylistic and structural strategies in the writing of others.
4. Discuss writing by authors from diverse (such as racial, ethnic, socioeconomic and gender) backgrounds to explore how perspectives and experiences may shape voice in composition.
5. Focus written work around an explicit central thesis, a position statement or proposition advanced by the writer that is arguable and supportable and develop the thesis systematically, using specific details and supporting evidence.
6. Compose written work that demonstrates effective use of sentence structure, paragraphing, grammar, syntax, punctuation, and spelling.
7. Demonstrate proficiency in research writing skills by completing one or more papers that:
a) Develop and support an arguable thesis;
b) Locate, evaluate, and incorporate appropriate scholarly and professional sources, including primary and secondary evidence as needed, to address an academic research question;
c) Appropriately acknowledge and document sources, using standard MLA or APA styles.


Required Technology

More information on general computer and internet recommendations is available on the CCV IT Support page. https://support.ccv.edu/general/computer-recommendations/

Please see CCV's Digital Equity Statement (pg. 45) to learn more about CCV's commitment to supporting all students access the technology they need to successfully finish their courses.


Required Textbooks and Resources

This course uses one or more textbooks/books/simulations.

Fall 2024 textbook details will be available on 2024-05-20. On that date a link will be available below that will take you to eCampus, CCV's bookstore. The information provided there will be specific to this class. Please see this page for more information regarding the purchase of textbooks/books.

Link to Textbooks for this course in eCampus.

The last day to use a Financial Aid Advance to purchase textbooks/books is the 3rd Tuesday of the semester. See your financial aid counselor at your academic center if you have any questions.


Methods

English Composition teaches students writing skills necessary for college success, with a primary focus on grammar and composition. Among the many other writing-centered activities we’ll engage in, this class requires students to practice brainstorming, free-writing, sentence construction (in the context of short writing assignments), paragraph construction, the organization of ideas, and the several types of, purposes of, and audiences for general essays. Students will build on these basic skills by planning, writing, and revising essays, and experiencing writing and reading as a multi-step process. As an added bonus, students will also learn the process and value of peer-to-peer editing.

Students are expected to be on-time with their work. As this course is one among many, and we all have lives and academics to balance, it is essential that work is done when it should be done. Late work will not be graded.

This course requires the use of or access to the

The Norton Field Guide to Writing: with Readings and Handbook (Fifth Edition)

The Norton Field Guide to Writing: with Readings and Handbook (Fifth Edition) The Norton Field Guide to Writing: with Readings and Handbook (Fifth Edition)
Paperback
Edition:
Fifth
Richard Bullock
Publisher:
W. W. Norton & Company
Release Date:
2019
ISBN-10:
0393655806
ISBN-13:
9780393655803

Grading Criteria

CCV Letter Grades as outlined in the Evaluation System Policy are assigned according to the following chart:

 HighLow
A+10098
A Less than 9893
A-Less than 9390
B+Less than 9088
B Less than 8883
B-Less than 8380
C+Less than 8078
C Less than 7873
C-Less than 7370
D+Less than 7068
D Less than 6863
D-Less than 6360
FLess than 60 
P10060
NPLess than 600


Weekly Schedule


Week/ModuleTopic  Readings  Assignments
 

1

Getting acquainted and writing in college

  

Writing in College

  

Critical Thinking Diagnostic Essay

 

2

Defining a Problem

  

Critical Thinking in Context

  

Critical Thinking Response

 

3

Defining a Problem (II)

  

Pitfalls of Critical Thinking

  

What Impairs Critical Thinking?

 

4

Defining a Problem (III)

  

More Pitfall of Critical Thinking

  

Response Writing

 

5

Speculating about Cause and Effect

  

Cultural Literacy

  

Argument Essay

 

6

Speculating about Cause and Effect

  

Critical Thinking about Colonialism

  

Hannah Arendt's 'On Revolution' response

 

7

Cause and Effect (III)

  

Poetry is not a Luxury

  

Strength, Power, Authority, Violence Essay

 

8

Cause and Effect (IV)

  

Racism and Reality

  

Political Literacy analysis

 

9

Thinking Toward 'Better'

  

Revolution and Rhetoric

  

Critical Thinker Short Response

 

10

Thinking Toward 'Better (II)

  

Lorde, Masters

  

Argument Writing

 

11

Thinking Toward 'Better (III)

  

How to Tame a Wild Tongue

  

Solutions Essay

 

12

Thinking Toward 'Better' (IV)

  

Pippin and Allport

  

Short Response

 

13

Analyzing a Story

  

Short Story Texts

  

Text Analysis Essay

 

14

Analyzing a Story (III)

  

Short Story Texts

  

Creating a Literary Response

 

Attendance Policy

Regular attendance and participation in classes are essential for success in and are completion requirements for courses at CCV. A student's failure to meet attendance requirements as specified in course descriptions will normally result in a non-satisfactory grade.

  • In general, missing more than 20% of a course due to absences, lateness or early departures may jeopardize a student's ability to earn a satisfactory final grade.
  • Attending an on-ground or synchronous course means a student appeared in the live classroom for at least a meaningful portion of a given class meeting. Attending an online course means a student posted a discussion forum response, completed a quiz or attempted some other academically required activity. Simply viewing a course item or module does not count as attendance.
  • Meeting the minimum attendance requirement for a course does not mean a student has satisfied the academic requirements for participation, which require students to go above and beyond simply attending a portion of the class. Faculty members will individually determine what constitutes participation in each course they teach and explain in their course descriptions how participation factors into a student's final grade.


Participation Expectations

Being present in an online course is determined by participation, timeliness, task completion, and logs-in.



Missing & Late Work Policy

Late work will not be graded.

If there is an emergency or an issue that impacts performance in this course, please contact the instructor and/or your college counselor to see if a solitary exception may be made.


Accessibility Services for Students with Disabilities:


CCV strives to mitigate barriers to course access for students with documented disabilities. To request accommodations, please
  1. Provide disability documentation to the Accessibility Coordinator at your academic center. https://ccv.edu/discover-resources/students-with-disabilities/
  2. Request an appointment to meet with accessibility coordinator to discuss your request and create an accommodation plan.
  3. Once created, students will share the accommodation plan with faculty. Please note, faculty cannot make disability accommodations outside of this process.


Academic Integrity


CCV has a commitment to honesty and excellence in academic work and expects the same from all students. Academic dishonesty, or cheating, can occur whenever you present -as your own work- something that you did not do. You can also be guilty of cheating if you help someone else cheat. Being unaware of what constitutes academic dishonesty (such as knowing what plagiarism is) does not absolve a student of the responsibility to be honest in his/her academic work. Academic dishonesty is taken very seriously and may lead to dismissal from the College.