ENGLISH 101 INSTRUCTOR:
Pat Andrus MAIL: pandrus@bcc.ctc.edu PHONE: (425) 564-2359
COURSE DESCRIPTION:
Welcome to English #101 online. In this
class you will have opportunity to be exposed to and chew on a number of essays
in our anthology Essays from Contemporary Culture, further explore ideas through developing and completing
your own essays using the writing processes all writers employ, and provide
constructive and supportive feedback to essays our other class members compose.
Since good reading and good writing are intimately linked, be prepared to READ
at least two to four essays a week and participate in discussion with the whole
class. In addition to our main text, you will be reading and taking weekly quizzes from our second text A
Writer’s Companion, where you can find a
refreshing approach to writing essays, and invaluable support for the writing
you do in this class and in your future life.
What will you then typically do from
week to week? Here's a listing of most English 101 activities you'll do during
the course:
Really read three or four
assigned essays each week (Nandrea's essay as part of week 2 is a
demanding/exciting essay "Having No Hand in the Matter", so put extra
time to that essay)
Read and complete 10 questions
each week in a chapter from A Writer’s Companion. (You will take a quiz each week on this.)
Join other students in a
large group discussion for shared responses to readings where you will be
graded on your posted responses and comments
Begin, revise, and then
post with your writing groups three major essays
during the course of the quarter.
Provide constructive
comments for other members' essays in your writing group for which you will be
graded
Submit your revised/final
copy of each essay to your instructor
GRADING:
Introductory Narrative Paper and
posting of bio = 5% Essay #1 = 10% Essay #2 = 15 % Essay #3 = 20%
Participation (quality and level) on
text reading responses = 15% Meeting deadlines for posting your essay for
workshop review = 10% Workshop feedback (including deadline) for other group
essays 10% Assignments from A Writer’s Companion
= 10%
Self Evaluation for the course = 5%
*GRADES FOR ANY WORK
COMPLETED AFTER ITS DEADLINE WILL BE LOWERED CONSIDERABLY, PARTICULARLY
INVOLVING DEADLINES OF ESSAYS POSTED WITH YOUR GROUP MEMBERS OR FINAL DRAFT
ESSAYS DUE TO ME.
*IN ORDER TO GET CREDIT FOR THE COURSE,
ALL WORK MUST BE COMPLETED BY THE LAST DAY OF OUR CLASS ONLINE.
TEXT BOOKS:
ESSAYS FROM CONTEMPORARY CULTURE by
Katherine Ackley (5th ed!) A WRITER’S
COMPANION by Richard Marius (4th ed!)
COMPUTER SKILLS AND THIS CLASS:
Are you expected to be on
the competitive edge with Bill Gates? Of course not, but....you do need to know
how to navigate around the web, be able to use both Explorer and Navigator
browsers (or Mae equivalent), mail your work with attachments (and open up
others), be comfortable with a word processing system, AND HAVE ACCESS TO AND
USE WORD, NOT WORD PAD, upload (and down load) programs and files with ease,
have all the hardware and software necessary, and so forth. What's important in
all this is that you know when YOU or your computer is lacking in something, or
when the server Blackboard is at fault. Finally, you must always have a back-up plan for completing your
work, in case your server is down, your computer broke, etc. And for distance
education questions, contact the folks in Distance Education (via
landerso@bcc.ctc.edu).
ETHICS WITH ONLINE WORK:
Do you think this is a
subject everyone thinks about but no one talks about? Well here is the scoop
for this course. Do your own work. If you use ideas from one of our essays, be
sure you let the reader know. If you "borrow" an essay from another,
either a relative, a friend, or someone online and submit it as your own, you
will receive an F for that assignment. If it happens again, you will receive an
F for your final grade. You should find the work YOU DO in this course to be
enriching and rewarding. You may even discover a beginning of a novel or
collection of essays in your writings by the end of the quarter.
ONLINE ETIQUETTE:
1. Be
honest but courteous in your
postings, responses, comments.
2. Rude or disrespectful comments directed either to other
members of the class or to the instructor are not
acceptable.
3. If you feel a student has attacked you or treated you
without respect, do not respond.
Instead, contact your instructor and she will handle the matter.
4. Consider this class like a community where we learn from
each other in a supportive and academic environment.
5. Please refer to the Arts & Humanities Policies for all subject policies. Web address is http://www.bcc.ctc.edu/artshum When you get to this point, click on student information. Under that, click on Student Procedures and Expectations.