English 235 Technical Writing Tentative Syllabus Spring, 2009
Item 1275 Section C
5 Credits
Instructor: Rebecca Morris
Office: R230L
Office hours: 4 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Mon and Wed, and by appointment
E-mail: rmorris@bellevuecollege.edu
Phone: (425) 564-3064
Class meets Mon and Wed, 5:30 pm-7:40 pm in R204
Required texts: Technical Communication, 8th edition, by Mike Markel
Bedford/St. Martin’s
Want to work on Wall Street, or climb the corporate ladder
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Technical Writing is writing that takes place on the job. The course is intended for students who are within 30 credits of graduating. As a higher 200-level course, it is more difficult and more demanding than English 201. Students should have completed at least three quarters of work at BCC (or equivalent) and have strong college-level reading and writing skills.
The aim of the class is to show you how to communicate technical information clearly, completely and persuasively. Technical writing involves a no-nonsense approach to writing (a skill itself), uses a format to convey information (including memos, instructions, proposals, reports, and websites), and may use graphics to help convey information visually.
By the end of the course you should be able to: Understand the purpose and process of communication in business; communicate technical information in a complete, accurate, and honest form; write various types of documents, such as a memo, proposal and progress report; balance written and visual elements in technical documents; work as a member of a team; and use clear, focused, and grammatically correct language when both writing and speaking.
Assignments: You will be responsible for a project and the written components of it (a proposal; a progress report; a data report; and the final report and a PowerPoint presentation). It’s important that you find a topic you find relevant and interesting. The topic may relate directly or indirectly to your current job or future career or education plans.
Your research project must focus on a problem to solve, which involves researching, compiling data, comparing and contrasting, analysis and making a recommendation. You can see examples of papers from other terms by going to the library’s web page, clicking on Electronic Reserve, and then clicking on English 270 (what this class used to be called). I will also share examples of projects from my previous classes.
Grading: You will be graded on attendance, class participation, small group participation, the four written parts of your individual project, one midterm, and the oral presentation and PowerPoint presentation of your project. There is also at least one team project which is graded, and occasional projects that are ungraded.
I expect your papers to be grammatically perfect, and to be free of spelling and punctuation errors. If this is a weakness for you, you will need to go to BCC’s Writing Lab or find tutoring. You will be graded down for errors. You can have a terrific topic, and do a great job with the project, but if there are weaknesses in your writing, your grade will suffer. After all, you wouldn’t turn in a writing project at work that wasn’t perfect.
Attendance and participation: Attendance will be taken each class meeting. Absences will lower your grade. Do not assume anything – it is the student’s responsibility to communicate with the instructor about missed classes, late papers, or about other issues. If you have a medical or family emergency, please contact me and we will work something out. BCC policy is that ten absences are grounds for a lower grade. Please read the college’s policy on absences. With a twice-weekly class, each one counts as two classes.
Plagiarism: Both BCC and I take plagiarism very seriously. Do not risk your college career or professional career by using anyone else’s work.
Deadlines: It’s important to meet the deadline for papers.
Good things to know:
The Open Lab (N250) – has over 200 PCs and Macintosh computers available to all registered students. It is usually open seven days a week.
The Writing Lab (D204) is part of the
Please, turn off cell phones and iPods before class begins.
Because the college occasionally closes because of snow, or rain and wind storms, be sure and check to see that classes are being held. There are several ways to check the status of the college:
Look at the BCC website
Call (425) 401-6680
Check the website schoolreport.org
Sign up on the BCC website to receive e-mails or text messages from the college.
English 235 Tentative
Class Schedule
Spring, 2009
Week #1 (week of April 1)
W First day of classes. Course overview.
Week #2 (week of April 6)
M Please have read chapters 1 and 16. Discuss project subject with teacher
W Please have read
chapter 5.
Week #3 (week of April 13)
M Proposal due – bring two copies to class.
W Please have read chapters 14, 4 and 8. Work on letter writing group assignment.
Week #4 (week of April 20)
M Presentation of letter writing group project
W Please have read chapter 19 – group project on writing instructions
Week #5 (week of April 27)
M Presentation of writing instructions project. Please have read chapter 17
W Progress report due (in the form of a memo) – please bring two copies
Please have read chapters 12 and 13
Begin to review for midterm
Week #6 (week of May 4)
M Review for midterm.
W Midterm
Week #7 (week of May 11)
M Please have read chapter 15, 20 and 21
W Group
Project
Week #8 (week of May
18)
M Group Project
W Group Project
Week #9 (week of May 25)
M Holiday – no classes
W Group Project presentations
Week #10 (week of June 1)
M Please have read chapter (on resumes and job hunting)
W Data Report due. Please bring two copies.
Week #11 (week of June 8)
M Please have read chapter (on oral presentations)
W Presentation of final projects
Week #12 (week of June 15)
M Presentations of projects
W Presentations of projects (our final exam period)
STUDENT
PROCEDURES AND
EXPECTATIONS
Arts
and Humanities Division
Students in all Arts
and Humanities courses should be aware of the following:
1.
Attendance:
Attendance at all
scheduled class meetings is mandatory. This requirement is particularly
meant to apply to courses that are designated for classroom delivery, although
distance education courses may also have certain attendance requirements. This
requirement is intended 1) to prevent instructors from having to adjudicate
individual excuses, and 2) to recognize that excuses are ultimately irrelevant
both here at BCC and in the workplace.
While specific
attendance requirements are up to individual faculty members, the Arts and
Humanities Division recognizes that attending class and participating actively
are perhaps the most important way in which students can set themselves up for
success. Conversely, not attending class almost certainly leads to
failure.
Students in
performance courses (Drama, Music, etc.) are reminded that attendance builds
the professional relationship necessary between partners or in working groups.
In order for students to be eligible for a grade in a
course, they must not miss more than ten classes, or 20% of the total class
time scheduled, for any reason. When absences go beyond ten,
instructors may a) give a grade of "F" for the course, or b) lower
the final grade as much as they see fit. This does not imply that you may
be absent fewer than ten times or 20% without seeing an effect on your grade;
indeed, we wish to emphasize that any absence undermines your progress and will
result in your having to work harder to catch up. Ten absences or 20% is
merely the figure beyond which you cannot go without risking your eligibility
for a course grade. In cases of legitimate hardship, students may also
request that instructors grant a “HW” (hardship withdrawal), which is a
non-credit grade.
In summary, when you
are absent from a class more than ten times or 20% in any given quarter, you
may receive a failing grade. Whatever written policy an instructor has in
the syllabus will be upheld by the Arts and Humanities Division in any
grievance process.