COURSE DESCRIPTION

ENGLISH 302-B19

Advanced Composition

CRN 78004

 Instructor: Joyce Johnston

Weds., 7:20-10:00 PM     Innovation 327

Fall 2009

Office: Robinson A 455

OFFICE HOURS: Wednesday 6:00-7:00 PM in Innovation Hall 327 or by appointment

(H and Fax) 703.368.1704 (W) 703.368.1160

E-MAIL: jjohnsto@gmu.edu




This page provides ready access to course policies and procedures as well as expectations placed on students in English 302 by the university, the English Department, and the instructor for this course.  Click on the links below for detailed information on each topic. 


WHAT IS ENGLISH 302B?

This course is designed to build on the general writing skills and techniques you have acquired in 101 and other university courses, and to prepare you for completing advanced level writing, analysis and research tailored to your major discipline and possible future workplace.  We will, therefore, practice the various genres of writing you are likely to encounter. Throughout the semester, you will also learn to recognize the way(s) that knowledge is constructed in business disciplines, adapt your writing to common purposes and audience needs, conduct and synthesize research, use computer technologies as part of your research and writing process, and produce writng that employs the organizational techniques and genres typical in each discipline.  

Building on the strong basis in textual analysis gained from your 200-level English courses, this section will emphasize types of writing that will serve the more than 3,550 undergraduate students enrolled in GMU's School of Management and pursuing majors in accounting, finance, management, marketing, or information systems and operations management. Students should endeavor to develop a flexible, literate writing style appropriate to a mature mind both in and out of these areas. Development of an individual, yet field-appropriate vocabulary and tone are primary, as is development of audience awareness. Familiarity with research techniques and sources--whether cyber, human or paper--is also essential.

Since English 302 is an upper-division course, please familiarize yourself with the English Department's description of and requirements for the course to be sure that you meet the criteria.

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    UNIVERSITY OBJECTIVES FOR ENGLISH 302

As explained in "General Education at George Mason University," English 302 is an integral part of the general education curriculum at George Mason. The mission of the General Education Program is to educate, liberate, and broaden the mind, and to instill lifelong love of learning. In conjunction with each students' major program of study and other electives, minors, or certificates, this program seeks to produce graduates with intellectual vision, creative abilities, and moral sensibility, as well as the skills to assure a well-rounded and useable education. The General Education Program seeks four specific goals: 1. General education courses should first ensure that all undergraduates develop skills in information gathering, written and oral communication, and analytical and quantitative reasoning. 2. General education courses should expose students to the development of knowledge by emphasizing major domains of thought and methods of inquiry. 3. General education courses should enable students to attain a breadth of knowledge that supports their specializations and contributes to their education in both personal and professional ways. 4. General education courses should encourage students to make important connections across boundaries (for example: among disciplines; between the university and the external world; between the United States and other countries).

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ENGLISH DEPARTMENT OBJECTIVES FOR ENGLISH 302

Students who successfully complete ENGL302 will be able to adapt their reading and writing to meet the expectations of their academic discipline and future workplace. They will be able to demonstrate the ability to

By the end of this course students will be able to

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PREREQUISITES TO ENTER ENGLISH 302

All students, regardless of discipline, who register for ENGL302 must meet the following prerequisites:
  • A minimum of 45 credit hours
  • Credit or requirement waiver for ENGL100 or ENGL101
  • In degree programs that require 6 hours of literature, at least 3 must be taken prior to ENGL 302; 3 credits may be taken concurrently with ENGL302
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TEXTBOOKS AND MATERIALS FOR THIS COURSE

Optional materials include:

NOTE: Online readings on the syllabus are no less required than paper texts are in other classes, while others may be e-mailed to you.

There will be FOUR graded quizzes, all taken online. They will cover concers in business research and business writing. 

  1. The first will stress online etiquette; the others include  
  2. parallel structure, used in bullet point formats and resumes 
  3. plagiarism and intellectual property (This quiz is a prerequsite for acceptance of the required research project in this class.
  4. use of quotation marks due to their importance in formatting both critical analyses and researched writing .
After the due dates for the quizzes, students will be expected to use these elements accurately and appropriately, with grade penalties if this goal is not achieved.  Otherwise, grammar will be taught in this class only occasionally, on an as-needed basis. Please consult the instructor if a particular grammar question plagues you or see the English Department's helpful links to grammar and composition web sites.

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METHODS OF INSTRUCTION

Many activities for this section will be interactive and will involve a significant amount of online student discussion and writing.  Students may be asked to work inidividually as well as collaboratively as they investigate issues, practice writing strategies and techniques, learn research and critical reading approaches, and review their own and their peers' writing.  Students who log in to the class folder regularly and stay engaged in class activities, who keep up with all the assignments, who check e-mail for additional information and who block off sufficient time each week for thoughtful drafting and revising usually succeed in this class.

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COURSE REQUIREMENTS AND GRADING PERCENTAGES

There are five major essay assignments for this course:  the Publication and Authority paper, the Artistic Analysis, the Public Spaces paper, the Concert or Theatre review and the Research Project.  Each assignment has an instruction file linked to from the syllabus for the course. Each file contains goals, skills developed by the assignment, procedures to complete the assignment, and grading criteria. There are also help files supplementing each assignment, designed to provide support in locating materials and/or developing  needed critical analysis and research skills. 

In addition, there are four online quizzes: the Netiquette quiz, the Quotations quiz, the Parallel Structure quiz and the Plagiarism quiz.  Each contains tutorial material and is self-grading.  Finally, a Research Proposal is required before submitting the Research Project.  It has an associated instruction file similar to those for the essays listed above. 

All assignments are listed below, in order of their percentage values out of 100%.

PERCENTAGE ASSIGNMENT DUE DATE
5% Netiquette Quiz 9/9
5% Plagiarism Quiz 10/16
5% Quotations Quiz 10/7
5% Parallel Structure Quiz 11/18
5% Research Proposal 10/21
5% Reading or Event #1 9/30
5% Reading or Event #2 11/4
10% Article Analysis 10/14
10% Professional Association Memos 9/23
10% Class Participation    12/9
15% Group Oral Presentation on Ethics in the Disciplines 12/2
20% Research Project 11/11

PLEASE NOTE: since the English Department requires a research component in all sections of English 302, anyone not completing the Research Project will FAIL THE CLASS.

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COURSE COMPLETION AND GRADING POLICIES

UNIVERSITY POLICY ON CLASS MEMBERSHIP: Students are responsible for verifying their enrollment in this class. Schedule adjustments should be made by the deadlines published in the Schedule of Classes.  For Fall 2009, the Last Day to Add or to Drop without tuition penalty is Sept. 15; the absolutely Last Day to Drop is Oct. 2.  Both are marked on our syllabus.  After the last day to drop a class, withdrawing from this class requires the approval of the Dean and is only allowed for nonacademic reasons.  Undergraduate students may choose to exercise a selective withdrawal.  The selective withdrawal option may be used no more than three times in a student's undergraduate career at George Mason and must be completed within the selective withdrawal period. For Fall 2009, the period lasts from Oct. 5-Oct. 30, 2009.  See the Schedule of Classes for selective withdrawal procedures.

COMPLETION POLICY:  
All final essays must involve one or more earlier drafts submitted to the writing group within our CE6 class folder, located at http://courses.gmu.edu.  You must complete all essay assignments plus the Plagiarism Test to earn a "C" or higher; to pass at all requires completion of the Research Project, as noted above.

ENGLISH 302 GRADING POLICY:  It is University policy that in all General Education English classes (English 100, 101, 201 and 302), students must achieve a grade of C (75) or higher to receive credit for the course. Students with averages of C- or lower will receive an NC (No Credit) for the course.  It is also the policy of the College of Humanities and Social Scineces that once final grades have been recorded, instructors should never accept any additional work from a student to change a grade. 

COURSE GRADING POLICY:   In grading essays, I use the following general criteria:

Each assignment, as well as the final course grade, is based upon a total of 100 points. Grading ranges are:

A+  =  98-100.  A = 92-97.  A- =  90-91.  B+ =  88-89.  B =  82-87.  B- =  80-81.  C+ = 78-79.  C = 72-77.  C- = 70-71.  D+ = 68-69.  D = 62-67.  D- = 60-61.  Any grade below D- receives no credit for the assignment.

LATE WORK POLICY: All work is due on the date specified in the syllabus. Unless by prior arrangement with the instructor, late work will be penalized one letter grade for each week or portion thereof and two letter grades thereafter. This penalty cannot be removed from work resubmitted or revised.

In addition, late work may be delayed in being graded and returned to you; delay is usually one week but may be more. Please keep this in mind if planning to resubmit a paper, especially near the end of the semester. No work will be accepted after the date indicated on the syllabus as the last day to submit rewritten assignments.

REVISION POLICY: At the end of the term, the student may select ONE essay to revise for a new grade.  This is an OPTIONAL acitivity.  The revision must demonstrate attention to the instructor's comments and the grading rubric.  It must show substantial change to the focus, support, approach and/or organization of the essay in addition to comprehensive error correction, or it will be returned with no grade change. Revision should use the graded file as the base document, leaving all marks by the professor undisturbed while clearly indicating changes made by the student. To submit, e-mail the file to the professor by the due date.

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FORMATTING ASSIGNMENTS FOR SUBMISSION

Each assignment has related instructions in a link to that assignment in the online version of the Syllabus. The format for each assignment is presented in the file of instructions. Please refer to the Syllabus itself, either in our class Blackboard folder or at http://mason.gmu.edu/~jjohnsto/syllb19f09.html

Assignments submitted electronically MUST be in Word (.doc or .docx) format. Because they cannot be written on, PDF files prevent ths instructor from grading the assignment. GMU's e-mail will not read Mime, NotePador WordPerfect documents, and regards zipped documents as possible viruses. Therefore, any material sent in any of these formats cannot be accepted and may not even arrive. If using a Mac or Open Office or equivalent, it is the student's responsibility to make sure that his/her assignments can be read in Word 2007.

Finally, any REVISED assignments or correspondence should be directed to the instructor's GMU e-mail: jjohnsto@gmu.edu. A Google or other search will reveal other e-mail addresses, but all GMU-related correspondence is handled through that address and only that address.

Mail sent to other addresses will receive no response.

NOTE: Be careful when responding to mail sent to the class list. The Registrar's Office provides the capability to e-mail the whole class from its online registration site, but requires the sender to use whatever mail program is resident on the machine (s)he is using rather than GMU's mail program, which is web-based. If trying to reach the instructor, DO NOT reply to the mail address used for class mailings, but to the GMU address above.

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ATTENDANCE AND CLASS PARTICIPATION

During our class meetings, considerable group work will be done, and group work counts toward your participation grade.  Since we meet on Wednesday evenings only, double check your schedule for September through mid-December and consider any conflicts you might foresee which would prevent your attending full class essions on those dates--family events, work obligations, travel.  If you anticipate several conflicts over the course of the semester, , you should consider registering for a section on a day/time which aligns more with your schedule.

Be aware that writing is a time-intensive activity.  It is thus very difficult to make up any significant amount of lost time.  Anyone who must unavoidably miss class activities is advised to notify the instructor as promptly as possible to avoid falling behind.  Students are also encouraged to sign up for notification of university closings due to inclement weather or other emergencies by visiting the website http://alert.gmu.edu
. Notice of other emergency procedures on campus can be found at http://www.gmu.edu/service/cert

Activities in each class meeting will be recorded and valued at 4 points per class, up to 56 points total.  (Note: Some "slack" is built into this calculation, so you can miss up to one week of classes and still be eligible to earn 100% for this grade.)  More-interactive classes such as peer workshop days will be valued more highly; students who are regular, energetic, thoughtful participants earn additional credit up to 9 points.  Students who miss a class are responsible for turning in any required work, but will not be able to "make up" the missed participation in order to earn that day's point(s).  Participation in your final group project on ethics will be valued at 35 points, based on self-evaluation, feedback from other group members, wiki postings and teacher observations.

                                                                           14 class periods x 4 points per class  =   56 points

                                                                                                                group project  =   35 points

                                                                      quality of writing workshop participation  =     9_points

                                                                                                                         TOTAL  = 100 points

 If you are frequently late, you may lose class-participation points.  However, in an emergency I would rather have you come late than not at all; if you get stuck in traffic but you can get here 20 minutes late, please try to come.

 You should also be actively present.  This implies brain awareness as well as the basic courtesies of formal social gatherings.  Students who are sleeping, reading the newspaper, carrying on private conversations, answering or texting on cell phones, or working on assignments for other classes (etc.) are not wholly, actively present and thus may lose class participation points for that day.  If you are seriously unprepared for class or group work—having absolutely no draft for a draft workshop, for example—you may lose class participation points for that day.  Any serious breach of good classroom conduct may cause you to lose all participation points.

You are strongly advised to stay alert, involved and on schedule.


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ENGLISH DEPARTMENT POLICY

 ON PLAGIARISM AND ACADEMIC HONESTY


George Mason University has an Honor Code which requires all members of this community to maintain the highest standards of academic honesty and integrity.  Cheating, plagiarism, lying and stealing are all prohibited.  All violations of the Honor Code will be reported to the Honor Committee.  See http://honorcode.gmu.edu for more detailed information.

 In a research and writing course, it is especially important that students respect the intellectual property of others. In academic writing, integrity of results falls under acute scrutiny from fellow professionals. All students are therefore expected to scrupulously observe all GMU policies as well as individual instructors' guidelines. Please read and observe the English Department's
Statement on Plagiarism below.
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. Plagiarism is the equivalent of intellectual robbery and cannot be tolerated in an academic setting.
Student writers are often confused as to what should be cited. Some think that only direct quotations need to be credited. While direct quotations do need citations, so do paraphrases and summaries of opinions or factual information formerly unknown to the writers or which the writers did not discover themselves. Exceptions to this include factual information which can be obtained from a variety of sources, the writers' own insights or findings from their own field research, (what has been called common knowledge). What constitutes common knowledge can sometimes be precarious; what is common knowledge for one audience may be so for another. In such situations, it is helpful to keep the reader in mind and to think of citations as being "reader friendly." In other words, writers provide a citation for any piece of information that they think their readers might want to investigate further. Not only is this attitude considerate of readers, it will almost certainly ensure that writers will not be guilty of plagiarism.  Consult the George Mason Honor Code for more information.

Learning—especially writing--relies upon mutual communication and trust, both student to student and student to instructor. It is especially dependent upon students' intellectual honesty and commitment to do their own work without inappropriate assistance. If, however, that trust appears it to have breached, it is with greatest reluctance that the instructor will submit student work for analysis by SafeAssign, the plagiarism detection tool that is a part of Blackboard. SafeAssign uses phrase matching software to determine whether information in a student's writing has been attributed to its source(s). If results show consistent lack of attribution, appropriate academic penalties will be applied.

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STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES

Students with documented disabilities are legally entitled to certain accomodations in the classroom.   If you are a student with a disability and you need academic accommodations, please see me and contact the Office of Disability Services at 703.993.2474. All academic accommodations must be arranged through that office.  I will be happy to work with students and the DRC to arrange fair access and support.

 
In accordance with English Department policy, each student will submit a minimum of 3500 words in the course of the semester, which will serve as the basis for the course grade. Any student with a documented disability which could impact the completion of this requirement should give the instructor a faculty contact sheet at the beginning of the course so that appropriate arrangements can be made in a timely fashion. Students in need of documentation are urged to contact the Office of Disability Services. It is located in SUB I, Room 222.  Documentation is required to obtain course adaptations to ensure that students receive appropriate support and assistance for success in the class.

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THE UNIVERSITY WRITING CENTER

Since you will be writing several papers in this course, you may want to visit the University Writing Center, located in Robinson A114, the Johnson Center, and Room 076 in Enterprise Hall, for assistance. The Writing Center is one of the best resources you will find on campus. It has an outstanding website that offers a wealth of online resources for student writers.  You can schedule a 45‑minute appointment with a trained tutor to help with any phase of the writing process.  You can even obtain assistance with papers by visiting the university writing center,  but please plan ahead and allow yourself at least 2‑3 days to receive a response. Make an appointment on the Center's website, or by calling 703-993-1200, or stop by and schedule a session.

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Return to the Syllabus for Section B19, Fall 2009

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