I.          ENGLISH 111             COMPOSITION I                3 CREDIT HOURS

 

II.         FALL 2001                              Dr. Catherine Vedder

                                                            Avery 115, phone 869-6339

                                                            cvedder@lmunet.edu

 

                                                Office Hours TR 9:30 - 11:00,   MWF 10-11,  and by appointment

 

III.            PREREQUISITES:  Acceptable ACT scores or successful completion of English 100, plus                                  demonstrated writing competence

 

IV.       COURSE DESCRIPTION / COURSE GOALS

            English 111 improves writing skills within a format stressing the relationship between reading and writing.  Students read essays and other literary works by a diverse selection of authors, learning to recognize and analyze various features of prose.  In becoming conscious of these features in their own and others' writing, students gain greater control at every level of the composition process, including word choice, sentence structure, paragraphing, and essay organization.  Class discussion of readings will encourage students to improve their ability to read critically and argue logically.

 

V.        TEXTS

                        The Millennium Reader, 2nd edition, Stuart Hirschberg and Terry Hirschberg, eds.

                        The Holt Handbook, 5th  edition, Laurie Kirszner and Stephen Mandell, eds.

                        A College Dictionary

 

VI.       COURSE OBJECTIVES

                        To achieve college-level proficiency in the following areas:

                                    Vocabulary development

                                    Mechanics (spelling, punctuation)

                                    Grammar and sentence structure

                                    Paragraph development

                                    Essay structure

                                    Editing and revising

                                    Critical reading and thinking

 


 

VII.      REQUIRED READING

                        10-15 essays from The Millennium Reader; selections from Handbook; occasional readings                        from other sources.

 

 

VIII.     COURSE REQUIREMENTS / EVALUATION METHODS

                        •Reading and writing assignments must be completed by the assigned date; late papers will                                receive a grade reduction unless an extension has been arranged before the deadline.                                   You are responsible for work assigned during an absence.

                        •All graded work should be kept until the end of the semester.

                        •Quizzes will be given frequently and will be both scheduled and unscheduled.  Make-ups of                           unscheduled quizzes will not be given.  I will drop your lowest quiz grade at the end of                           the semester, provided that you have not missed any quizzes.  Students who                                        participate in official University activities should give me a schedule at the                                                           beginning of the semester so that quizzes missed on scheduled activity dates will not be

counted.

                        •Final grade will consist of the averaged grades of 7-9 essays (60% ); the remaining                                              percentage of the course grade will be based on quiz average (20%), final exam (20%),                                     and class participation.   The course letter grade will be assigned according to the

                                    following percentages:

                                    A         93-100             B+       87-89               C+       77-79  

                                    A-        90-92               B          83-86               C         73-76  

                                                                        B-        80-82               C-        70-72  

                                    If a student does not achieve an average of at least 70, a grade of NC (no credit) will                               be assigned, provided that all work has been completed.  A grade of F is assigned

                                    when work is not complete.

                        •Computer lab facilities must be treated responsibly. 

                        •Plagiarism--representing another's work as one's own--will result in failure of the paper and                           possibly of the course.  All instances of plagiarism will be penalized.

                       

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