Course
Policies and Syllabus
Office:____________________ Office Hours:
______________________________
E-mail: _____________________ Department Website: http://utminers.utep.edu/omwilliamson
Class Member: _______________________Phone #:
___________ E-mail: _________________
Class Member: _______________________Phone #:
___________ E-mail: _________________
TEXTS AND MATERIALS
Reading Across The Disciplines
custom edition by Kathleen T. McWhorter
Newsweek
(student will order online and pay by credit card)
Novel
Dictionary (recent copyright)
8 ˝” X 11” (or 10 ˝”) standard ruled notebook paper
Two 3 ˝” diskettes (double sided, high density, IBM)
Additional Materials:
_______________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
ENGLISH 0310 will introduce students to
effective reading habits for meaningful application to a variety of texts. The reading habits for success in college
level course work will be strongly stressed.
The course emphasizes the development of vocabulary, comprehension
techniques, critical analysis, and written responses to various types of
reading materials.
2.
Using the various stages of the writing process—prewriting, drafting,
revising, revision,
and proofreading—students will
compose paragraphs, summaries and essays to understand how to construct meaning
in a text.
3. Students will respond to
readings and practice expressive writing through journal entries.
A. All major papers written
outside of class must be word-processed.
B. Students must get a UTEP
e-mail account.
A.
Satisfactory
attendance is a course requirement. For
the purpose of this course, satisfactory and unsatisfactory are respectively
defined:
*
The student must come to class prepared.
Assigned texts should be brought to class
and out-of-class assignments should already be prepared. In class, students are expected be alert, attentive, and focused on the subject
at hand. If a student’s preparation is unsatisfactory, his/her
attendance will be considered unsatisfactory.
* The student must be present in the
classroom throughout the entire class period.
Excessive tardiness or leaving the classroom early will be considered
unsatisfactory attendance.
B.
In
a MWF class, a student is allowed five absences, and in a TR or MW class, a
student is allowed three absences. When
a student has accumulated six instances of unsatisfactory attendance in a MWF
class or four in a TR or MW class, he/she will be dropped with a “W’ if the
infractions occur prior to the official drop deadline (October 31). However, if the unsatisfactory attendance
instances happen after October 31, the student will fail the course.
3.
Deadlines
A.
All
assignments are due at the beginning of the class period. All major papers and exams completed late
will be penalized a letter grade for each class day the exam or assignment is
late. Instructors are not obliged to
accept late daily work.
B.
Students
who are unable to attend class are responsible for acquiring class notes and
completing make-up assignments prior to the next class meeting.
4.
Academic Integrity
A.
Plagiarism
(stealing someone else’s ideas or writing) or any other type of academic
dishonesty
will not be tolerated.
B.
Cases of plagiarism will be reported to the Dean of Students.
5.
Please observe classroom etiquette
A.
Turn
off cell phones.
B.
Arrive
to class on time in order to prevent class disruption.
C.
Do not talk when someone else is speaking.
A.
The
student’s final grade will be determined by his/her performance in the
following areas:
10% One
Summary Paragraph
10% One
10%
Novel Assignment (Evaluation is at the discretion of the instructor)
20%
Reading Response Essay
40% Daily
work (journal, exercises, quizzes)
10%
Final Examination
1. To earn a passing grade (“A,” “B,” or “C”)
students must have completed all exams, paragraphs, and essays and
achieved an average of 70% or better for the course.
2. Students who have not met the course
requirements or have not earned an average of 70% or better for the complete
course will need to retake ENGL 0310.
IMPORTANT DATES
August 25 First
day of classes
September 1 Labor Day – UTEP Closed
September 10 Census Day-Classes dropped by this day are deleted from
record
October 31 Last day to drop a class with an automatic “W”
November 27-28 Thanksgiving
December 4 Last day of classes
December 5 Dead Day – NO CLASSES
December 8-12 FINAL EXAMS
DISABILITY STATEMENT
If
a student has or suspects a disability and needs an accommodation, he/she
should contact the Disabled Student Services Office (DSSO) at 747-5148 or at dss@utep.edu
or go to Room 106 Union East Building.
The student is responsible for presenting to the instructor any DSS
accommodation letters and instructions.
DESCRIPTION OF MAJOR ASSIGNMENTS AND
JOURNALS
1. Summary
It is
fundamental to your academic experience to be able to summarize
information. You may be asked to summarize
a lab report, a movie, an article, or a chapter. Summarizing consists of two important skills:
(1) identifying the important material in the text and (2) restating the text
in your own words. Since writing a
summary consists of omitting minor information, it will always be shorter than
the original text.
2. Reading Analysis
Also
important for academic success is the ability to identify and classify specific
information from a text. In your reading analysis paragraphs, you will be asked
to extract information from a text and paraphrase it in a well-developed
paragraph.
3. Reader Response
A reader
response asks the reader to examine, explain, and defend her/his personal
reaction to a reading. You will be asked
to explore why you like or dislike the reading, explain whether you agree or
disagree with the author, identify the reading’s purpose, and critique the
text. There is no right or wrong answer
to a reader response. Nonetheless, it is
important that you demonstrate an understanding of the reading and clearly
explain and support your reactions.
4. Journal Entries
Keeping a journal is helpful when clarifying your
ideas and improving the fluency of your writing. Though different teachers will have their own
grading standards, in most cases, they do not revise spelling or grammar errors
when evaluating journals. Instead, a
student’s journal entry will be evaluated on dedication and engagement. Journal entries can consist of summaries,
analyses, responses, reflections, syntheses, or refutations.
Calendar
Instructor reserves the right to modify calendar to
meet the needs of the class
or learning community.
Week |
|
Newsweek |
Novel |
Assignments |
1 8-25/8-29 |
Chapter 1 Chapters 24 & 25 will be assigned as needed throughout the
semester |
Online order due by: |
Instructor
will assign reading schedule |
Journal 1 |
2 9-1/9-5 |
Chapter 2 |
|
|
Journal 2 |
3 9-8/9-12 |
Chapter 3 |
|
|
Journal 3 |
4 9-15/9-19 |
Chapter 4 |
|
|
Journal 4 |
5 9-22/9-26 |
Chapter 5 |
|
|
Journal 5 |
6 9-29/10-3 |
Chapter 6 |
|
|
Summary Paragraph Journal 6 |
7 10-6/10-10 |
Chapter 7 |
|
|
Journal 7 |
8 10-13/10-17 |
Chapter 9 |
|
|
Journal 8 |
9 10-20/10-24 |
Chapter 10 |
|
|
Analysis Paragraph Journal 9 |
10 10-27/10-31 |
Chapter 11 |
|
|
Journal 10 |
11 11-3/11-7 |
Chapter 17 |
|
|
Journal 11 |
12 11-10/11-14 |
Chapter 18 |
|
|
Reader Response Essay Journal 12 |
13 11-17/11-21 |
Chapter 19 |
|
|
Journal 13 |
14 11-24/11-28 |
Chapter 20 |
|
|
Journal 14 |
15 12-1/12-5 |
Chapter 22 |
|
|
Due: Reader Response Essay Journal 15 |
16 Dec. 9 Tuesday |
Final Exam |
|
|
|
For educational purposes only. |
Owen M. Williamson - Education Bldg 211E - phone: (915) 747 7625 - fax: (915) 747 5655 |
The University of Texas at El Paso - 500 W. University Ave. - El Paso, TX 79968 |
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Open Courseware | OCW |This work is dedicated to the Public Domain..