Office: Horizon Hall 4163 Office Hours: Mondays Noon – 1:30 Tuesdays 9:00 – 10:15 Email dtaciuch |
Course Description
English 302 will help you understand how knowledge is created and transmitted in your field of study or discipline; understand key methods and conventions of scholarly research in your field of study or discipline; articulate and refine your own question for scholarly inquiry; situate your investigation in an ongoing context or conversation in your field; and design a final project that adds new perspectives to the conversation. Advanced composition will help you engage in academic and non-academic inquiry as you work on narrowing a research question and as you engage with your discipline or field of study.
English 302 participates in the Students as Scholars and the Mason Impact programs. The learning goals for these programs are integrated into English 302. See the Students as Scholars page for for more information.
Prerequisites
All students, regardless of their discipline, who register for ENGH 302 must
The College of Engineering and Computing (CEC) has specific requirements for which version of English 302 its students must take:
Mason Core
This course is part of the Mason Core (General Education) Program, which is designed to help develop “a Mason Graduate [who is] an engaged citizen, a well-rounded scholar, and someone who is prepared to act” (Mason Catalog). It fulfills the Mason Core Upper Division Written Communication requirement. For more information on the Mason Core, visit the Provost’s Mason Core page.
Textbook and materials
There is no required textbook for this class. We will use several online texts, including
GMU Writing Center Resources
GMU Library Tutorials
UNC Writing Center Handouts
Purdue OWL
Students as Scholars
Method of Instruction
Sections N19 & N20 are hybrid sections, with one face-to-face meeting each week and one asynchronous lesson on BlackBoard. Each Weekly Content folder contains two lessons: the first should be completed on your own; the second is for the face-to-face session (but please read the assigned material before class).
See Tech Policy for technology requirements
Course readings, assignments, and notes will be posted to the Weekly Content Folders in BlackBoard every Monday. Do not share or post these materials online, as this would be an Honor Code violation ("Providing, using, or attempting to benefit from unauthorized academic material and/or assistance: This includes but is not limited to the posting or enabling of posting of homework assignments and/or exams or solutions on websites").
All course assignments will be submitted via Blackboard. Assignments should be uploaded as Word, PDF, or OpenOffice formats (doc, docx, pdf, odf).
In addition, we will have weekly BlackBoard discussions or journal entries. The discussions and journals are generally due on Wednesdays, but I also expect everyone to post and comment on other students' posts throughout the week if comments are required.
You should check the BlackBoard site regularly. The course assignments will be explained on BlackBoard, as will any clarifications and changes to the assignments and course schedule.
Assignments
The Major Assignments are described on BlackBoard
The Minor Assignments are the Discussion posts, journals, in-class exercises, and peer review groups. These assignments will not be graded individually, but they make up 30% of the final grade.
Important dates
First day of classes | Jan 16 |
Last day to add classes– all individualized section forms due | Jan 23 |
Last day to drop with no tuition penalty | Jan 30 |
Unrestricted Withdrawal Period (100% tuition liability) | Feb 7 – 20 |
Midterm progress reporting | Feb 12 – March 15 |
Selective Withdrawal period | Feb 21 – March 25 |
Spring Break | March 4 –10 |
Last Day of classes | April 29 |
Reading Days Reading days provide students with additional study time for final examinations. Faculty may schedule optional study sessions, but regular classes or exams may not be held. |
April 30 and May 5 |
Exam Period | May 1 – 8 |