Office Phone: (718) 260-5392
Office: Namm 519 Office Hours: Email: XXXXXXX@citytech.cuny.edu Meeting Time: (if applicable) Online Location: List your OpenLab or Blackboard Office Hours: Day/Time and online location COURSE WEBSITE: ADDRESS AND LINKContents
Course Description:
A course in effective essay writing and basic research techniques including use of the library. Demanding readings assigned for classroom discussion and as a basis for essay writing.Prerequisite:
CUNY proficiency in reading and writingCourse Meetings:
Note to instructors: you should have information here about whether your course will be fully asynchronous or if it will have a synchronous component. If your course is designated “online,” it must be fully asynchronous. If it is designated “hybrid,” you may have a synchronous component. However, you should note that some students may have issues with technology (or other scheduling issues) that make synchronous meetings difficult in light of the pandemic. For this reason, we encourage you not to make synchronous meetings the CORE of your class, but an addition to your class: a place to discuss issues and ask questions and to build community. We also ask that you record synchronous meetings and make them available for students who cannot attend and that you do not penalize students who cannot attend these meetings.
Learning Outcomes:
It is expected that at a minimum, students in ENG 1101 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.Self-Care Statement:
There isn’t a handbook for the situation we are in right now as a state and a nation, and the resultant uncertainty can be stressful. We need to recognize the toll this situation might be taking on us and be compassionate with ourselves and with others. This semester, our priority will be to foster intellectual nourishment, social connection, and personal accommodation. And we will remain flexible, and if we have to, we will adjust to the situation (adapted from Prof. Brandon Bayne’s syllabus, UNC)Course Website:
This course will take place online (instructors: please see note above about synchronous/ asynchronous instruction and clarify for students what the situation will be in your class here. Also, if you are using Open Lab, please include instructions for signing up in an email and on Blackboard. Students may check your course Blackboard site). It is extremely important that you familiarize yourself with our website and find out where everything is. This is where you will find your assignments and post your homework as well as finished units. This is how we’ll keep in touch, so please check in daily! You are responsible for being up-to-date and knowing what is on our course site. Please contact me if you are having trouble!Readings / Text:
All course readings can be found on the course website.Grading:
Your grade will be split into two parts: The Final Portfolio, which will include revisions of all your major essays, and Homework/ Participation, which will include all class discussions, homework assignments and basically everything else you post online. The Final Portfolio will comprise 60% of your final grade and Homework/ Participation will comprise 40% of your final grade.Final Portfolio:
Your Final Portfolio will be worth 60% of your final grade, with the grade breakdown as follows:- Unit One: 10%
- Unit Two: 20%
- Unit Three: 20%
- Reflection: 10%
- Total: 60%
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