Syllabus

English 3360: Current Approaches to Composition and Literature
Fall 2010, Section 203: TR 2:00-3:15 (CCH 232)

Dr. Catherine Quick
FC 266, 825-3025
catherine.quick@tamucc.edu
Office Hours for Fall 2010:

Mon: 11:00-noon; Tues: 12:00-2:00; Thurs 3:30-5:30
Other times by appointment

 

Course Home Page: http://falcon.tamucc.edu/~cquick/eng3360F10home.htm
Students enrolled in English 3360 may access full course information by logging on to Blackboard.

 

Catalog Course Description
Significant contemporary approaches to written discourse in English, including the study of composition and literature. Prerequisite: one reading course.

Student Learning Outcomes
Students in English 3360 will:

  1. Apply contemporary theories of writing and literature pedagogy to design and evaluate classroom materials
  2. Evaluate K-12 student writing using a variety of response and assessment methods
  3. Write in multiple academic and personal genres to improve their own writing skills

 

Course Goals
As part of accomplishing these outcomes, students will meet the following goals:

  1. identify the complex relations among literacy, learning, and language use
  2. identify the theoretical principles behind local, state, and national standards, and apply them, along with a wide range of professional resources, to curriculum development
  3. explain the ways that contexts for teaching and/or learning are influenced by global and local factors such as: divergent notions of literacy; matters of race, gender, class, economics, technology; cultural and environmental elements; and socio-cognitive development
  4. apply process pedagogy and the workshop model of writing instruction to curriculum development
  5. develop a critical vocabulary for teaching writing and literature at an age-appropriate level
  6. design strategies for teaching writing and literature in a high stakes testing environment
  7. generate and apply appropriate criteria for responding to and assessing student writing
  8. develop effective strategies for integrating technology into the English language arts classroom
  9. articulate the theoretical principles behind the methods that inform one's pedagogy

 

Texts and Materials

  1. Ray, Katie Wood. The Writing Workshop: Working Through the Hard Parts (And They're All Hard Parts). Urbana, IL: National Council of Teachers of English, 2001.
  2. Anderson, Jeff. Mechanically Inclined: Building Grammar, Usage, & Style into Writer's Workshop. Portland, ME: Stenhouse, 2005.
  3. Library reserve materials for midterm
  4. A notebook or a journal for your Writer's Notebook (or you may choose to keep it electronically)
  5. Storage medium to provide access to files in class (e.g. flash drive, Dropbox, Google docs, etc.)
  6. Registration fee ($25) for required attendance at the Coastal Bend Writing Project Conference, Nov. 6. See ELA Pedagogy Critique under "Writings" in the next section for information about an alternative if the cost is prohibitive or you cannot attend on that date. Note that this cost is a significant discount over what regular attendees will pay.

 

Grade Distribution
Grades will be based on the following assignments:

  1. Writings (60%)
  2. Responding to Student Writing Activity (10%): we'll practice responding to writing by children using principles learned in class. Then each student will write a reflective paper explaining his/her theory of response and how it was put into practice.
  3. Midterm & Final exams (20%): essay questions, based on course content. The final will also include a reflective component on your own writing.
  4. Writers'/Teachers' Workshop (10%): daily grades for participation in class activities.

 

For full descriptions of the assignments, see the Assignments page on Blackboard. Due dates of the assignments are on the Reading and Assignment schedule, also available on Blackboard.

 

Submitting assignments:

All final drafts of the major assignments must be submitted through Blackboard (rough drafts and in-class work will be handed in to the instructor). If you do not have a Blackboard account already, please go to Island Online (http://iol.tamucc.edu) and select "I am a new user" for instructions on obtaining your Blackboard userid & password.

If you have problems with Blackboard while attempting to submit your assignments, contact the Island Online help desk (361-825-2825)--not your instructor. They are open 8:00 am until midnight everyday.

Please do not send coursework of any kind to the instructor via email. The only exception is if you have technical difficulties with Blackboard. You may then email the work to the instructor to make sure it is in by the due date. However, the instructor will not respond to your work until it is uploaded to Blackboard, so contact the Help Desk immediately to resolve the problem.

Before uploading your assignment to Blackboard, make sure it is saved in a readable format. Acceptable formats are Microsoft Word, Open Office, and Rich Text Format. If you are not sure what format your documents are saved in, please look at the file extension, the three letters after the "dot" in the file name. You should see one of the following: .doc, .docx, .rtf, .odt. If you see anything else there (such as .wpd), you must resave the file. Open the document in your word processing program, and choose "Save As" under the file menu. Under "File Type," please select Word 2003, Word 2007, Open Document Text, or Rich Text Format before saving. Save the file, and make sure you send the correct version to Blackboard. If you upload a file that is not saved in a proper format, the file will be deleted, you will be asked to resubmit the assignment in the correct format, and be subject to any resulting late penalties.

 

Course Policies

 

Attendance/Late Work
The majority of reasons for missing class or turning in work late are legitimate, but many are not and, as much as I hate to say it, people do lie. I do not wish to be in the business of judging excuses or questioning a student's veracity.

 

So the responsibility is yours to determine if your reasons are legitimate or worth it, based on the following attendance & late work policies. These policies are designed so that you may miss class or turn in late work without having to tell me why or fear that you will suffer dire consequences. They are not penalty-free, however. Instead, they function as a safety net, similar to sick-leave policies in a workplace. If you do have problems that require late work or absences, they will keep you from failing the course outright just because you get sick, run into technical difficulties, have family issues, etc.--as long as you use them sparingly. But they are set up so that you will think twice, weigh the pros and cons, before using them indiscriminately.

 

In-class Conduct
In general, treat each other and the instructor with respect and follow simple standards of common courtesy. Here are a few specifics:

 

About the TExES Exam
Do not rush into the professional development segment of your career by attempting to take your TExES certification exams too soon. The College of Education can give you advice on when to take your professional development exams and will be your main source of information about the TExES if you are working toward EC-4 certification. For those of you who will be taking the English Language Arts & Reading (ELAR) 4-8 or 8-12, please do the following:

 

Academic Honesty/Plagiarism
The University will not tolerate plagiarism or any other form of intellectual/academic dishonesty. Plagiarism is a serious violation of departmental and University policies, but it is sometimes difficult to understand what plagiarism actually is. Often, students commit unintentional plagiarism (not citing sources properly, for example), because they are unaware of the standards that apply. Regardless, work that is turned in for the course that is plagiarized will be failed. If you are unsure about your use of sources, please consult with me or visit the writing center (in the TLC, in Library 216) for advice on source documentation BEFORE the item is due. For this course, you must use either MLA or APA citation style. Any grammar handbook and many web sites have directions on correct citation. Click here for an excellent review of the various forms of plagiarism, good for any teacher to review/use. It is long, but worthwhile.

Click here for site on MLA documentation rules and here for APA documentation rules.

 

Acceptance of Diversity
We are the most diverse campus, in terms of racial identity, in the Texas A&M system. This means that we are all meeting and working with people who are different from ourselves in terms of their identities: whether that is defined by their race, ethnicity, class, gender, sexual orientation, and/or religion. Respecting and accepting difference is vital to your success in this class, on this campus, as a future teacher in your own classroom, and in the global community.

 

Reminder to English Majors
As part of the English undergraduate capstone course (ENGL 4351), all English majors are required to submit a portfolio of writings in different discourse genres that they have completed for their college classes. To help you prepare for this assignment, you should keep a copy of all essays, research papers, literary analyses, creative and report writing, etc., so that you will have an ample selection from which to choose when the portfolio comes due.

 

Notice to Student with Disabilities
Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi complies with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) in making reasonable accommodations for qualified students with disabilities. If you suspect that you may have a disability (physical impairment, learning disability, psychiatric disability, etc.), please contact the Services for Students with Disabilities Office, located in Driftwood 101, at 825-5816. If you need disability accommodations in this class, please see me as soon as possible.

 

Academic Advising
The College of Liberal Arts requires that students meet with an Academic Advisor as soon as they are ready to declare a major. The Academic Advisor will set up a degree plan, which must be signed by the student, a faculty mentor, and the department chair. The College's Academic Advising Center is located in Driftwood 203E, and can be reached at 825-3466.

If your major is in another College (e.g., Education), please contact that college for information and requirements about advising.

 

Grade Appeal Process
As stated in University Rule 13.02.99.C2, Student Grade Appeals, a student who believes that he or she has not been held to appropriate academic standards as outlined in the class syllabus, equitable evaluation procedures, or appropriate grading, may appeal the final grade given in the course. The burden of proof is upon the student to demonstrate the appropriateness of the appeal. A student with a complaint about a grade is encouraged to first discuss the matter with the instructor. For complete details, including the responsibilities of the parties involved in the process and the number of days allowed for completing the steps in the process, see University Rule 13.02.99.C2, Student Grade Appeals, and University Procedure 13.02.99.C2.01, Student Grade Appeal Procedures. These documents are accessible through the University Rules Web site at http://www.tamucc.edu/provost/university_rules/index.html. For assistance and/or guidance in the grade appeal process, students may contact the Office of Student Affairs.

 

Questions?
If you have any questions or concerns regarding this syllabus, please speak with me as soon as possible. You are responsible for understanding and adhering to the policies of this course and the University.