Google Doc version of the Syllabus

Spring 2024 English 1121 – D438

Professor: Jody R. Rosen (she/her/hers)

Email: jrrosen@citytech.cuny.edu

Course Site: https://openlab.citytech.cuny.edu/rosen-eng1121-s2024/

Course meeting times: Mondays and Wednesdays, 11:30am-12:45pm

Classroom: Namm 602A

Weekly student support hours (also called office hours): Mondays 12:45-1:45 (N520 or Zoom); Wednesdays 10:30-11:30 (N520 or Zoom); and by appointment.

Welcome:

Welcome to the Spring 2024 semester and English 1121.

Being a college student is exciting but stressful, as is starting at a new school. I am sharing with you my intention to conduct this semester with humanity, compassion, flexibility, grace, and a little bit of humor, and I hope you will, too. I invite you to challenge yourself, to explore, to learn and grow, to establish yourselves as college students with futures in your chosen fields–or to explore what field to choose!–but also to know when you need to step back, or step away, and to know when you’re ready to come back. I’m here to talk, to listen, to work with you, to accommodate and support, not to penalize or judge.

In our classroom and in-person meetings, I will wear a high-quality mask in the interest of health and safety. I will bring extra masks as well for anyone interested.

Course Description:

An advanced course in expository essay writing that requires a library paper. Further development of research and documentation skills (MLA style). Assigned literary and expository readings. Prerequisite: English 1101 or equivalent

Every City Tech (and CUNY) student takes Composition I, which features reading and writing assignments that will help prepare you for college and beyond. Moving into Composition II, we will work together on communicating effectively, building an argument, adapting your writing for different needs and situations, interpreting and responding to a text, incorporating and citing secondary source material. We will be reading pieces both for their inherent literary and informational value and also as models for our own writing projects. Sharing your own ideas and experiences and adding your voice (spoken, written, or otherwise) to our discussions will enrich our class community.

Course Meetings:

This course will meet in person twice a week for an hour and fifteen minutes. CUNYfirst has information about our official class meeting times and place: Mondays and Wednesdays, 11:30am-12:45pm in Namm 602A. Both weekly class meetings are required.

Each week, I will post an agenda that outlines the next week’s work. It will include instructions for you and links to readings, discussion questions, and other work that you will complete throughout the week–this work is also required. We will work on developing community both in our classroom, optional Zoom meetings, and in our online community space.

Teaching and Learning Methods:

This course is discussion-based. Students share their writing, both informal and formal, and use feedback–from the instructor, classmates, self-reflection, and optionally the Writing Center and other readers–to revise work. We will use a portfolio system, meaning you will compile and revise all work when it is initially due and again by the end of the semester, so that you can reflect on what you have learned throughout the semester to revise your work.

Since this course relies on students’ collaboration and providing feedback to each other, it is important that everyone share ideas in the spirit of helping and learning from classmates. I provide feedback, both written and spoken, on your work in the spirit of supporting your writing development. Respect, consideration, and shared responsibility are central to this approach: individually, between students, and between instructor and students.

Course Website: 

Although this course takes place on campus, we will use our OpenLab site extensively. It’s where you will find course documents, weekly agendas, announcements, discussion questions, and project instructions, as well as where you will respond, share ideas, and communicate with classmates, and post your drafts, final work, and reflections. Please take some time to get started on the OpenLab, including setting up an OpenLab account if you haven’t already, exploring what’s available, and joining our course if you haven’t already been added. Even if you haven’t created an account or joined our course, it’s still open to read and comment on, so be sure to explore the site and find where everything is, and to ask questions or make suggestions so the site works well for you. Since we’ll use the site to communicate throughout the semester, please check in on the website often so you can stay up-to-date with our course. As content gets added to this site, you will get a notification email to your City Tech email account, so please check your City Tech email frequently and regularly. Please ask for help if you have any concerns!

Course Tools and Required Materials:

  • All readings for our course are Open Educational Resources/Zero Textbook Costs (OER/ZTC), which means instead of buying a textbook, you will use materials that are freely or openly available–at no cost to students–not only throughout the semester but after the end of the semester. These materials are linked from our OpenLab course site in the schedule and the weekly agendas.
  • Some of the texts we’ll read in this course are part of Core Books at CUNY, a CUNY-wide initiative funded by a Teagle Foundation grant. Reading these texts will help us engage with broad humanistic questions that we will use to inspire our writing
  • A New York Times account (create a free Academic Pass account with your City Tech email)
  • A notebook or other system to take notes in class
  • A system to record, store, and organize your work, both on digital and on paper. It is very important that you save all of your work for this class. Devise a filing system that allows you to maintain prior drafts and final copies of all major assignments, as well as your research notes, outlines, and evaluations. Do not throw away or delete drafts or notes until after you have received your final grade.

Technology

  • For our course, you will need an OpenLab account (and membership in our course site), as well as your City Tech email account and CUNYfirst login. And your passwords for each!
  • The Student Technology Survey on our site will help me understand your access to technologies we will use in the course.
  • To complete your coursework, you will need a reliable internet connection and a device to access our shared spaces (OpenLab site, Zoom, etc) to share your work.
  • Although a printer is not required, you should consider how you read and compose best and decide if you would benefit from printing your materials, either by visiting one of the computer labs at City Tech or by investing in a printer.
  • You may be able to complete some of your work using your phone, such as shorter readings and writing assignments. You will likely find it difficult to conduct all of your work on your phone. If your phone is the only device you have regular access to, please inquire about borrowing a laptop or other technology. Also, consider using computer labs at City Tech, including G600, the library, and in Voorhees. Your local public library (Brooklyn Public Library, New York Public Library, Queens Public Library) will also have time-slots for using computers that you can reserve using your (free) library card.
  • You’ll need storage space for your work. I strongly recommend cloud storage. As a CUNY student, you have an unlimited-storage CUNY Dropbox account for free. You will likely want to use Google Drive and/or Microsoft 365 for your work (see below).
  • Even with all of this digital technology, you may still want to use pen or pencil on paper–these are technologies, too! I recommend having a notebook to keep reading notes, ideas, freewrites, sketches, etc, together throughout the semester. It can be the same as the required notebook that you bring to class specifically for class notes.
  • The camera on your phone or tablet can be very useful for quickly digitizing non-digital materials, such as work in your notebook, or written comments on drafts, that you can then share on the OpenLab. You can also download a free program that lets you use your phone’s camera to create PDFs, such as Adobe Scan or CamScanner, or your camera app may have this feature built in.
  • A word-processing program can be helpful if you don’t exclusively write in OpenLab posts. You might use Google Docs or, if you’re interested, Microsoft Office: The City University of New York provides Microsoft Office 365 for Education to students at participating colleges, including City Tech via the Microsoft Office in Education program. You sign in using your CUNYFirst/Blackboard credentials (this is different than your regular CityTech email) and have online access to MS Word, Powerpoint, Excel and other programs in the MS Office Suite. You may also be eligible to download the Suite to your computer.  Read more about and download Microsoft Office 365.
  • A digital folder on your computer and in any cloud storage, named for each course you take this semester to store files.

Grading:

Project 1: Discourse Communities: 20%

Project 2: Opinion Essays: 20%

Project 3: Multimodal Composing: 20%

Project 4: Final Reflection and Portfolio: 10%

Informal Writing and Participating: 30%

Projects

For each of our projects, you will work incrementally, producing drafts in stages and synthesizing smaller work into the larger project draft, and then revising that into the finished version. You will post your work on our OpenLab site. Your grade for each project will be based on your final formal work. Your informal writing and participation will be graded separately, but remember, all that incremental work that helps improve your finished project, including informal writing, drafting, participation, group work, presentations, reflections, etc, will have an impact on your projects’ grades. Each project’s instructions will also include grading criteria to help guide you see what you need to do and how your work will be evaluated.

Participation

In this class, your weekly informal writing and participation is essential for your successful completion of your projects. Demonstrate your engagement with our course activities with work shows that you are present and participating. In this class, you’re not learning how to write one particular paper, or how to do one particular thing, you are learning about the process of writing (and reading, and researching) and developing discipline and routine. All of those small pieces are as important as the formal work.

Participation happens in different ways, but can include being present and active in our shared spaces–our classroom, OpenLab site, student support hours, group work, etc–and in a variety of formats–spoken, written, resource-sharing, etc. If I see that you aren’t participating, that tells me that something is keeping you from attending to and participating in our class. I will take attendance daily to note your presence or absence to help you stay on track, and to make sure you get the support and feedback you need to succeed in this course. Completing the course becomes more difficult if you fall behind with the daily work; we can develop a plan for time management if this is helpful. If you need to step away from our course for any reason—health, family, work, etc—and you are able to be in touch with me (easiest way is via email, jrrosen@citytech.cuny.edu), please keep in contact. It is much easier for me to help you if I know your intentions for completing the course, or if I can help you develop a plan for completing the course. You are welcome to talk to me about anything, but please know that you can reach out and get my help to make a plan even without disclosing what you’re going through.

Late Work Policy:

Each project and informal assignment has a due date to give you a guideline to stay on track. There is no grade penalty for late work, but there is a functional penalty because it becomes harder to complete the informal work building to the project when you fall behind, which makes it harder for you to complete projects, and it is harder for me and your classmates to give you feedback on late work, and harder for you to complete all of the work for the course in a shorter time frame while also working on all of your current work.

If you are having difficulty completing any of your work, please know that I am a resource for you and am available to talk to plan a personalized work schedule. Waiting until the end of the semester is not a viable plan, so let’s avoid that stressful situation!

Revision Policy

In this course, you can—and will!—revise your projects as you get more feedback from me. Please come to student support hours to talk about about your work, learn more about my comments, or get additional feedback. When you want to revise a project, we will need to meet to develop a revision plan.

For Project 4, the Final Reflection and Portfolio assignment, you will reflect on your revision process, as well as revise your final submissions.

Your new grade on a revised project entirely replaces your old grade.

English 1101 and 1121 Learning Outcomes  

Departmental Learning Outcomes:

It is expected that at a minimum, students in ENG 1101 and 1121 will:

Read and listen critically and analytically in a variety of genres and rhetorical situations: Identify and evaluate exigencies, purposes, claims, supporting evidence, and underlying assumptions in a variety of texts, genres, and media.

Adapt to and compose in a variety of genres: Adapt writing conventions in ways that are suitable to different exigencies and purposes in a variety of contexts, including academic, workplace, and civic audiences. When appropriate, repurpose prior work to new genres, audiences, and media by adjusting delivery, design, tone, organization, and language.

Use research as a process of inquiry and engagement with multiple perspectives: Learn to focus on a topic and develop research questions that lead to propositions and claims that can be supported with well-reasoned arguments. Persuasively communicate and repurpose research projects across a variety of contexts, purposes, audiences, and media. Demonstrate research skills through attribution and citation gathering, evaluating, and synthesizing both primary and secondary sources. Learn how to use appropriate citation styles depending on disciplinary and situational requirements (MLA, APA, Chicago, etc.).

Use reflection and other metacognitive processes to revise prior assumptions about reading and writing and transfer acquired knowledge into new writing situations. Students write reflections of their own reading and writing process from the beginning and throughout the semester with the intention to transfer their acquired knowledge about genre and composing practices into new writing situations.

Demonstrate the social and ethical responsibilities and consequences of writing: Recognize that first-year writing includes academic, workplace, and civic contexts, all of which require careful deliberation concerning the ethical and social ramifications concerning fairness, inclusivity, and respect for diversity. Write and revise for academic and broader, public audiences accordingly.

Compose in 21st– Century Environments: Learn to choose among the most current and effective delivery methods for different composing situations. Students learn to compose in new media environments, including alphabetic texts, still and moving images, sonic, and mixed media compositions. Use digital media platforms appropriate to audience and purpose.

CUNY Pathways Learning Outcomes:

A course in this area must meet all of the following learning outcomes. A student will:

  • Read and listen critically and analytically, including identifying an argument’s major assumptions and assertions and evaluating its supporting evidence.
  • Write clearly and coherently in varied, academic formats (such as formal essays, research papers, and reports) using standard English and appropriate technology to critique and improve one’s own and others’ texts.
  • Demonstrate research skills using appropriate technology, including gathering, evaluating, and synthesizing primary and secondary sources.
  • Support a thesis with well-reasoned arguments, and communicate persuasively across a variety of contexts, purposes, audiences, and media.
  • Formulate original ideas and relate them to the ideas of others by employing the conventions of ethical attribution and citation.

Accessibility

Your success in this class is important to me. We all need different accommodations because we all come to this class with different experiences and needs. If there are aspects of this course that prevent you from learning or exclude you, please let me know as soon as possible. You can do this without disclosing the reason for the accommodation you’re requesting. Together we’ll develop strategies to meet both your needs and the requirements of the course. Additionally, if you need official accommodations, you can contact the Center for Student Accessibility. Here is the college’s official accessibility statement:

City Tech’s Accessibility Statement:

City Tech is committed to supporting the educational goals of enrolled students with disabilities in the areas of enrollment, academic advisement, tutoring, assistive technologies, and testing accommodations. If you have or think you may have a disability, you may be eligible for reasonable accommodations or academic adjustments as provided under applicable federal, state and city laws. You may also request services for temporary conditions or medical issues under certain circumstances. If you have questions about your eligibility or would like to seek accommodation services or academic adjustments, you can leave a voicemail at 718-260-5143, send an email to:  Accessibility@citytech.cuny.edu, or visit the Center’s website at  http://www.citytech.cuny.edu/accessibility/ for more information.

Academic Integrity:

Our goal this semester is for you to develop your writing according to the ENG 1101-1121 Learning Outcomes. I expect you will do this with integrity, and will meet with me when you need support to do so. The college has an official statement about academic integrity here:

City Tech’s Academic Integrity Policy:

Students and all others who work with information, ideas, texts, images, music, inventions, and other intellectual property owe their audience and sources accuracy and honesty in using, crediting, and citing sources. As a community of intellectual and professional workers, the College recognizes its responsibility for providing instruction in information literacy and academic integrity, offering models of good practice, and responding vigilantly and appropriately to infractions of academic integrity. Accordingly, academic dishonesty is prohibited in The City University of New York and at New York City College of Technology and is punishable by penalties, including failing grades, suspension, and expulsion. The complete text of the College policy on Academic Integrity may be found in the catalog.

Diversity and Inclusive Education:

It is my goal that this course forms a community based on our mutual respect for each other and our backgrounds and identities. Further, I aim to represent our diversity through course texts and assignments. If you have suggestions, please let me know. If you are made to feel uncomfortable, please let me know so I can work with you on a solution. I strongly adhere to the college’s Diversity and Inclusive Education Statement:

City Tech’s Diversity and Inclusive Education Statement:

This course welcomes students from all backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. In accordance with the City Tech and CUNY missions, this course intends to provide an atmosphere of inclusion, respect, and the mutual appreciation of differences so that together we can create an environment in which all students can flourish. It is the instructor’s goal to provide materials and activities that are welcoming and accommodating of diversity in all of its forms, including race, gender identity and presentation, ethnicity, national origin, religion, cultural identity, socioeconomic background, sexuality and sexual orientation, ability, neurodivergence, age, and etc. Your instructor is committed to equity and actively seeks ways to challenge institutional racism, sexism, ableism and other forms of prejudice. Your input is encouraged and appreciated. If a dynamic that you observe or experience in the course concerns you, you may respectfully inform your instructor without fear of how your concerns will affect your grade.  Let your instructor know how to improve the effectiveness of the course for you personally, or for other students or student groups. We acknowledge that NYCCT is located on the traditional homelands of the Canarsie and Lenape peoples. 

Support Resources:

College Writing Center:

Online writing tutoring is available through the Writing Center at City Tech! I encourage you to utilize their services. Keep in mind you’ll need to make an appointment ahead of time. It’s unlikely they’ll be able to squeeze you in at the last minute, especially during busy times, so plan ahead!

Advising:

The transition to college is challenging for everyone. It is helpful to periodically reflect on how you are doing in your classes, and how your anticipated area of study (major) is progressing, as well as to plan next steps. Once advisement begins, you will be assigned a faculty advisor. During this period, if you have not been emailed and/or you do not see your advisor/appointment on CUNY First, go to your major’s homepage; there, you will find advisement details that will include contact information, as well as dates and times.

Schedule

Refer to the Course Schedule for an overview of the semester’s schedule.

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