ENC 1101L Expository and Argumentative Writing

Instructor: Lisa Hager

Section: 5043

Times: R 9

Classroom: MAT 5

Office: 503 Rolfs Hall

Office Hours: TBA and by appointment

Mailbox: 4301 Turlington

Email: lhager@english.ufl.edu

Course Objective:

ENC 1101L will serve as a supplement to the larger ENC 1101, a second helping as it were. We will further focus on improving your abilities to write in a variety of rhetorical positions. To this end, we will be reading many of the same readings for class early and doing additional writing assignments. In addition, we will be doing extra peer review and workshopping of formal essays.

Achievement of Course Objectives:

Classroom explanations and discussions will guide you through the reading and writing assignments. You will also receive help in one-on-one conferences and peer editing sessions. Because this class fulfils the Gordon Rule, you will be asked to write a minimum of 2000 words over the course of the semester. You will also need to do the following:

  1. Keep up with reading and writing assignments. The following books are available at UBS (University Textbook and Supply):
  1. Do all assignments before a class session begins (by class, you should have read the text selections listed on the syllabus for that day).
  2. Participate in class discussions and editing sessions. Bring texts to class and take notes.

 

Grades:

Reading Quizzes

25%

Class Participation (Attendance, Class Discussion, Workshop Participation)

25%

In-class Writing

50%

TOTAL

100%

 

 

 

 

 

Class Policies:

Attendance:

Because class attendance is critical to your understanding of class material, you are only allowed two unexcused absences over the course of the semester. After two unexcused absences, your final grade average will be dropped five points for every day missed. An absence due to illness or family crisis may be excused if properly documented to my satisfaction. In addition, if you participate in a university sponsored event (music, theater, field trip, or athletics), you must provide me with documentation from an appropriate authority. Whether or not an absence is excused, you are responsible for contacting a classmate or me to find out what material you missed and any work that was assigned. If work is due in class on the day of the absences, the work is due in my mailbox by 4pm that day.

One or two tardies (arriving late in class or departing class early) will be excused if the reasons are acceptable and if there is valid documentation. Otherwise, tardiness is not acceptable because it is disruptive, and, beyond any excused tardies, class participation grade and overall grade will be affected (2 tardies = 1 absence).

Class Participation:

In addition to attending class, you are also expected to contribute class discussions and participate in workshop sessions with your peers. Learning is not a solitary process, but one that necessarily involves others and I thus consider class participation a very important part of achieving this class’s goals.

In-Class Writing & Quizzes:

On a regular basis, you will complete in-class writing assignments that will deal with the material that has been assigned and discussed that week. You will also have reading quizzes throughout the semester on material that is being discussed for that class meeting. If you are reading the texts as we progress though the semester, you should do fine.

Gordon Rule:

All work must be completed for a grade since the work assigned fulfills the Gordon Rule, which stipulates that students are to write a minimum of 2000 words that receive feedback are graded, and give experience in various types of writing important in disciplines, workplace, and civic areas.

Plagiarism:

Unless the work assigned is specifically designed to be completed in groups, all work must be individual. Evidence of collusion (working with another student or tutor not connected with class) and plagiarism (use of another’s ideas, data, and/or statements without acknowledgement or with only minimal acknowledgement) will lead to the procedures set up by the university for academic dishonestly.

Classroom Dynamics:

Because class participation relies heavily in individuals feeling comfortable expressing their opinions, you must always show respect for the diversity of opinions expressed in this class. You must also demonstrate respect for gender, racial, class, and ethnic differences among your colleagues and instructor.

Challenging a Grade:

Any complaints about separate assignments should be addressed to me and not to the English Department. If you have any complaints on the final grade, you may see me at the beginning of the next term. If you find that you still have complaints after our meeting, you may express your complaints on a form in the English Department Office (4012 Turlington). The from and accompanying course material will be given to the Director of Writing Program Administration for further action. A review committee may decide to raise, lower, or keep the originally assigned grade. This decision is final. The material submitted will remain on file in the English Department Office.

Overview of Assignments:

These assignments are due in class on the dates indicated. There will be NO LATE assignments accepted. Also, there will be additional assignments and materials not indicated on this sheet (I will announce them in class), and this schedule as well as individual assignments are subject to change. All readings are in the Mercury Reader.

R, Aug 23 – Course introduction and syllabus review

R, Aug 31 – Thesis and paragraph structure

R, Sept 7 – Grammar panel workshopping

R, Sept 14 – Peer Review of Essay 1

R, Sept 21 – Discuss mechanical problems in essay 1 as a group

R, Sept 28 – Building a logical argument

R, Oct 5 – Workshop Essay 2

R, Oct 12 – Peer Review of Essay 2

R, Oct 19 – Workshop Essay 3

R, Oct 26 – Peer Review of Essay 3

R, Nov 2 – conferences

R, Nov 9 – Workshop Essay 4

R, Nov 16 – Peer Review of Essay 4

R, Nov 23 – NO SCHOOL

R, Nov 30 – conferences (no class)