Instructor:
David Owens
·
e-mail:
owensenglish@gmail.com
·
Phone:
(509) 527 - 4425
·
Office:
Main Building - AAA 111
·
Office Hours:
By Appointment
·
Homepage:
http://web.wwcc.edu/davidowens/engl-111-intro-to-literature/
·
ANGEL:
http://angel.wwcc.edu/default.asp
·
ANGEL
Help: http://www.waol.org/general_info/help_desk.aspx
Required Texts and Materials: (click on the
link for more detailed information)
Course
Objectives:
At
the end of the course, students should have made significant progress in
Assignments:
Weekly
Reading
Quizzes
100 points
Discussion
Board
Forums
500 points
Elluminate
Sessions
50 points
Literary
Analysis of Persepolis
50 points
Analytical
Interaction w/ a Class
Text
80 points
Creative
Response to a Class Text
100 points
__________________________________________________________
Total
880 points
Some
Notes:
I usually
check my campus e-mail a few times each week. It is not the best way to contact
me or submit late assignments.
During my
office hours, I can be reached at 524 - 5153. At other times of day, you can
leave a message at this number, but I usually only remember to check my
messages once a week, so it is ALWAYS better to e-mail me a quick
message at owensenglish@gmail.com
I hope that you will find many of our texts enjoyable, but I
know that you will find some of our texts challenging. I expect that you will approach
all readings in this class by trying to understand each text in its own context
as well as being able to productively articulate your own thoughts and feelings
about it. Even if you find something boring, confusing or even offensive at
first, I hope that your response will be to re-engage with it, ask questions
about it, re-read it, roll it around in your head, write about what you don't
understand or what bothers you on the discussion board. When all else fails,
read the text again. Even if you think you understand the text perfectly,
reading it (or parts of it) again will often yield different interpretations,
expanded understanding and deeper insight.
If
you want to read more about how I chose the texts for this class, you can read
my explanation HERE.
For
an overview of the reading schedule for this quarter, look HERE.
Copyright Notice: Many of the materials posted to this course site are
protected by copyright law. These materials are only for the use of students
enrolled in this course and only for the purposes of this course. They may not
be further retained or disseminated.
The
best responses will:
·
Contain at least 5 compound/complex
sentences per paragraph
·
Contribute materially to the
discussion generated by the prompt (but does not need to respond directly to
the prompt)
--- This means that your
contribution should be original, either by taking the prompt in a new direction
or by expanding on, or disagreeing with, another student's response
·
Reflect an accurate reading of the
text and make a specific reference to it
·
Be thoughtful rather than casual,
perfunctory, slap-dash or merely humorous
·
Be clear, effectively worded, polite
and academic
·
Attempt to use literary terms to ask questions or explain something
about the text
Often
propose another prompt or question to move the conversation forward
If you fall behind on the Discussion Board, I will allow you
to write ONE make-up essay about one of our texts that can be
worth up to 100 points (almost two weeks' worth of posts). Be warned, however,
that I have higher expectations for essays than I do of forum posts, so don't
count on getting the full 100 points unless you write an extremely original and
exciting essay.
Please note, however, if the pattern of missed forums
indicates that you have skipped one of our major texts entirely (a film, play,
or novel that we have spent an entire week or more on), then you will not be
able to earn higher than a B no matter how much extra credit you attempt.
Also note, plagiarism of any kind, from outside sources or from
other students, will not be tolerated and will very likely result in a failing
grade for the class.
If you are not able to participate in as many sessions as
you would like, you can earn 5 points by listening to recordings of each
session that I will post under course resources. This will also be important
because lecture materials from the sessions might show up in quizzes. Angel
will let me know when you have listened to a session, but I usually only update
grades once a week.
It is important to know that Elluminate
is a java application that pops up in a new window. In order to run it
successfully, you will need to make sure that your java software is updated and
that you can set your browser to allow some pop-ups if it tends to block or
filter them automatically. A link will appear in the Elluminate
Live! box in the center column of the course page on
the day of each Elluminate session, and you will be
able to log in half an hour before the session begins.
For
the most part, I try to be very specific about my expectations for class work.
If you feel confused about why you have a particular grade on any given
assignment, or at any point during the quarter, please feel free to e-mail me
about it. Here are some more specifics about how I grade the Discussion Boards:
·
I am looking for at least 5 solid
paragraphs per week (Thursday to Wednesday) from each student, spread
throughout the different forums. All of the sentences in your paragraph should
be compound or complex and vigorously explore the text (none being introductory
or filler - they are allowed, I just don't count them). A paragraph like this
will earn you ten points.
·
Notice that on most weeks there will
be fewer than five forums, so you will want to contribute multiple paragraphs
to at least one of the forums. For example, if you only contribute one
paragraph per forum, and there are only 4 forums, you have only earned 40
points for the week, so, to get your full points for the week, you will want to
write at least two paragraphs for two of the forums. Doing
even more than that will ensure that you get full credit - just in case some of
your sentences are not really about the text or are too short.
·
I also tend to favor full paragraphs
over short replies to other people's posts. It is fine that you reply, just
make your reply a fully developed paragraph or you may not earn full points for
it. So, for example, you may write 8 short replies consisting of 2 or 3
sentences a piece, but that would still only earn you the same 10 (or perhaps
15) points as if you had written a full paragraph response to one post.
·
Finally, I have asked that students post
to every forum. By not posting to a forum, you are essentially telling me that
you have not read the text, which is like being absent, and is definitely not
participating in the class. I will deduct 5 points for each forum you fail to
post to. This could really add up if you miss a whole week with 5 forums in it
(-25 points).
Hopefully, setting the bar this low will encourage people to
contribute because they are interested rather than because they are forced to.
I
would like to say that I will update your overall grade every week, but I don't
think I will be able to fulfill that promise. However, I should be able to
update your grades every other week. It will actually be fairly easy for
industrious students to earn the maximum points each week by attending extra Elluminate sessions and contributing well over the minimum
on the Discussion Boards, but I will not grant more than 100% at given any
point in the quarter. You may do extra work to make up for lapses during previous
weeks (up to a point), but I won't grant extra credit over 100% in advance so
that students feel like they can slack off at the end of the quarter.