Dr. Dean Taciuch
George Mason University

Fall 2013


English 302: S12 & S13
Course Syllabus

Course Description

English 302 is an Advanced Composition course; this section will focus on the writing and research needs of students in the Social Sciences. Although we will make use of technical formats (such as professional journal articles and literature reviews), the focus will be on conducting secondary research, organizing the results of the research, and presenting your interpretations of your findings to appropriate audiences, including interested non-experts.

Course Goals

By the end of this course students will be able to


Prerequisites

Students must have completed or transferred in the equivalent of English 100/101, 45 credit hours, and any required general-education literature course designated by their college or major. Students should take a version of English 302 that connects to their major field. Students in the School of Engineering and students in the School of Management are very strongly recommended to take English 302N or English 302B, respectively. If you are enrolled in a different version, you should contact your adviser immediately to see what actions to take.

General Education

This course is part of the GMU General Education Program, which is designed to help students prepare for advanced work in their major field and for a lifetime of learning. For more information on the mission of the General Education Program, consult the University Catalog or visit http://provost.gmu.edu/gened/

Textbook and materials

Available from the campus bookstore:
Bergmann, Linda S. Academic Research and Writing. Longman. 2010. Paper.
ISBN-10: 0321091841 ISBN-13: 978-0321091840
List price: $49.80. If you are charged more at the bookstore, let me know

Online:
GMU Writing Center Resources
<http://writingcenter.gmu.edu>

Diana Hacker Documentation Guide
<http://bcs.bedfordstmartins.com/resdoc5e>

Students as Scholars
<http://oscar.gmu.edu>


Methods of Instruction

Sections S12 and S13 are hybrid courses: each section meets face-to-face once per week, with the second course meeting made up of online work.

Section S12
meets on Mondays from 1:30 - 2:45 in Innovation 326. Section S13 meets on Wednesdays from 1:30 - 2:45 in Innovation 326.

All course assignments will be submitted via Blackboard:
section S12 assignments will generally be due on Fridays
;
section S13 assignments will be due on Sundays

(I will set the submission deadline to midnight).

In addition, the BlackBoard discussions should be posted each week before that week's face-to-face class. I expect everyone to post and comment on other students' posts each week (you can, of course, add comments after the week's face-to-face session).

A hybrid section requires special attention to submission deadlines, discussion posts, and course announcements. You should check the BlackBoard site at least once per weekday (and once over the weekend as well). The course assignments will be most fully explained on BlackBoard, as will any clarifications and changes to the assignments and course schedule. Announcements will of course be made in the face-to-face sessions as well, but success in a hybrid course requires attention in both the face-to face and online environments.

Students as Scholars

This section of English 302 is participating in GMU's "Students as Scholars" program. Across campus, students now have increased opportunities to work with faculty on original scholarship, research, and creative activities, through their individual departments and the OSCAR office.


Assignments in English 302 will help prepare you to be contributors to knowledge in your field, not just memorizers of facts. You will

English 302-SaS Student Learning Outcomes (SLO)

  1. Discovery: Understand how students can engage in the practice of scholarship at
    GMU

  2. Discovery: Understand research methods used in a discipline

  3. Discovery: Understand how knowledge is transmitted within a discipline, across
    disciplines, and to the public

  4. Inquiry: Articulate and refine a question

  5. Inquiry: Follow ethical principles

  6. Inquiry: Situate the scholarly inquiry [and inquiry process] within a broader
    context

  7. Inquiry: Apply appropriate scholarly conventions during scholarly
    inquiry/reporting

Students as Scholars Assignments

All of the course assignments will build on and develop some of the Students-as-Scholars objectives, but these three have been designed specifically for the SaS program:

Week Assignment SLO
Week 3 Discussion Post on Wikipedia Sources 2, 3, 6
Week 6 Library Research Assignment 2, 3, 7
Week 8 Audience Exercise 3, 6, 7
Week10 Wikipedia Edit Assignment 3, 5

At the end of the course, the Office of Institutional Assessment and the Composition Program will collect random samples of student Metacognitive Writing Assignments(Reflection) and Final Research Projects in order to assess the effectiveness of the Students as Scholars Program. This assessment has no bearing on your grade in the course.

Assignments

Weekly Responses (5%)
Plagiarism Policy Essay (10%)
Research Proposal (5%)
Library Research Assignment (5%)
Summary (10%)
Annotated Bibliography (10%)
Wikipedia Edit (5%)
Literature Review (15%)
Personal Research Report (10%)
Peer Review (5%)
Research Paper and Reflection (20%)

Course Policies

Grading: In grading essays, I use the following general criteria:

A "C" level grade (70-79%) denotes average college-level writing and achievement. The essay is a competent response to the assignment: it meets, to some degree, all the assignment requirements, and demonstrates that the author has put significant time and effort into communicating his/her ideas to his/her targeted audience. It has a thesis, presents some support, and moves from point to point in an orderly fashion; sentence-level errors do not significantly prevent comprehension. Essays that do not meet these criteria will not earn a "C."

A "B" level grade (80-89%) highlights a strong example of college writing and thinking. In addition to meeting the "C" level requirements, such an essay goes further in some way(s): it demonstrates some insight into the "gray areas" of the topic, provides original or very thorough support that is tightly woven into the overall argument, reads smoothly at both the sentence and paragraph levels, and/or exhibits a personal "voice" or style. It has few sentence-level errors.

An "A" level grade (90-100%) marks an essay that engages the reader in a provocative conversation. Even more than in a "B" essay, its author anticipates and responds to possible reader questions, uses a wide range of supporting evidence, engages the reader in a provocative conversation, provides unexpected insights, and/or uses language with care and facility.

"D" and "F" level essays do not meet the basic expectations of the assignment.
I calculate final grades by converting the letter grades to a 100 point scale using the following values:

A+ 98-100
A 94-97 A- 90-92
B+ 87-89 B 84-86 B- 80-83
C+ 77-79 C 74-76 C- 70-73
D 60-69 F 0-59  

A note on final grading: You must earn the grade of "C" or better in this course to receive credit for it and to fulfill this portion of the English composition requirement in General Education. A grade of "C-" or below will not be sufficient to receive credit for this course.

Late Assignments: Unless you make prior arrangements with me, late assignments will lose 5% (1/3 of a letter grade) per day. The grade penalty cannot be made up by revision. No late assignments will be accepted after Nov 26.

Revisions: The essays may be revised for a higher grade, but they must be substantially revised. You cannot lose a grade by revising, but a higher grade is not guaranteed. I have found that "B" papers (or higher) are often more difficult to revise, since serious revision requires thoroughly changing the essay's structure, and "B" papers usually have a fairly good structure. "C" papers (or lower) often respond more dramatically to revision, since the major changes they require are often more straightforward. I recommend revising "C" papers or lower only. If you plan to revise a "B" paper, please see me beforehand so we can discuss a revision strategy.

All revisions must be submitted within 2 weeks of receiving a grade on the assignment. No revisions or late assignments will be accepted after Nov 26.

Plagiarism: Plagiarism means using the exact words, opinions, or factual information from another source without giving that source credit. Writers give credit through the use of accepted documentation styles, such as parenthetical citation, footnotes, or end notes; a simple listing of books, articles, and websites is not sufficient.

This class will include direct instruction in strategies for handling sources as part of our curriculum. However, students in composition classes must also take responsibility for understanding and practicing the basic principles listed below.

Writers must also include a Works Cited or References list at the end of their essay, providing full bibliographic information for every source cited in their essay.

Instructors in the Composition Program support the George Mason Honor Code, which requires them to report any suspected instances of plagiarism to the Honor Council. All judgments about plagiarism are made after careful review by the Honor Council, which may issue penalties ranging from grade-deductions to course failure to expulsion from GMU.

Attendance: I will not take attendance, but it is not possible to do well in this course without regular attendance. Class and online discussions are necessary for the papers, exercises, and the research project. Topics will develop from the class and online discussions.

Students with disabilities: If you are a student with a disability and you need academic accommodations, please see me and contact the Office of Disability Services (ODS) at 703-993-2474. All academic accommodations must be arranged through the ODS.

GMU Nondiscrimination Policy: George Mason University is committed to providing equal opportunity and an educational and work environment free from any discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, disability, veteran status, sexual orientation, or age. GMU shall adhere to all applicable state and federal equal opportunity/affirmative action statutes and regulations.

GMU Email: Students must activate their Mason email account and check it regularly. For privacy reasons, all class-related emails will be sent only to students' official GMU email addresses.

Important dates

First day of classes August 26
Labor Day: University Closed Sept 2
Last day to add classes
Last day to drop with no tuition penalty
Sept 3
Last day to drop with a 33% tuition penalty Sept 18
Final Drop Deadline (67% tuition penalty) Sept 27
Selective Withdrawal Period (undergraduate students only) Sept 30 — Oct 25
Columbus Day Recess: Monday classes meet Tuesday; Tuesday Classes do not meet) Oct 14
Thanksgiving Recess Nov 27 — Dec 1
Last day of classes Dec 7
Reading Days Dec 9 — 10
Exam Period Dec 10 — Dec 18

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