...................................Skyline College

......................................English 100 Honors: College Composition
...............................................................Spring 2002

Course Meetings: T Th 11:35-12:25pm
Room 8222, Units 3.0
Schedule #30296 - Engl 100AH

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"A mind stretched to a new idea never returns to its original dimension."
-- Oliver Wendell Holmes

"Language is the mother, not the handmaiden, of thought; words will tell you things you never thought or felt before." -- W.H. Auden


Course Prerequisites: Writing Prereq: Completion of ENG 800 or 400 with a grade C or higher or appropriate scores on approved college placement tests. Reading Prereq: READ 802 with credit or a grade of C or higher, or ENGL 400 (taken at Skyline) with a grade of C or higher, or eligibility for 400-level Reading courses on approved Reading placement test, or other means measures as necessary.

Course Classification: Applicable to AA. Meets A2 & A3 for CSU GE and Area 1, Group A for IGETC.

Course Objectives: The purpose of this course is to help students develop their ability to write thoughtfully and effectively. The premise of this course is that writing is an integral part of the thinking process and that successful essay writing depends on a mixture of creative thinking and an awareness of writing styles and forms. The objective of this course is to guide students toward becoming critical readers, writers, and thinkers through recognizing the effective writing strategies of other writers, through becoming aware of their own processes of writing, and through learning to discern logical relationships between words, ideas, and arguments. All students in this section will be required to do Honors-level work.

Required Materials:
..........Homophobia: How We All Pay the Price by Warren J. Blumenfeld
..........8 Ball Chicks: A Year in the Violent World of Girl Gangs by Gini Sikes
..........3 full length texts to be selected by the students (to be purchased at local bookstores or online)
..........Course Reader (available at Skyline's Bookstore)

Course Policies:
(1) Attendance-- Your active participation is necessary for you and your classmates to realize the objectives of this course. Therefore your attendance is crucial. A maximum of 4 (four) absences is permitted; each absence after the fourth will significantly lower your grade.

(2) Late Assignments-No late work will be accepted. All due dates are given well in advance; therefore I feel that it is unfair to the students who complete their work on time to accept the work from those who do not. However, because "life happens," each student will be allowed two "late tickets" during the semester; twice students may choose to turn an assignment in the following class period after the due date. Late assignments beyond this will not be accepted.

(3) Plagiarism-- Paraphrasing or directly copying any text and using it as your own without proper attribution, done intentionally or not, is plagiarism and is unacceptable and can result in failure.

(4) Class participation--- Remember that participation counts--both for your grade and in your life. It is essential that you become consciously involved in class by participating in discussions and contributing thoughtful comments, questions, and answers.

Papers: Six major papers will be written for this class. The requirements are as follows:

(1) Due Dates--Paper #1 (2-4 pages, 500-1000 words)........Draft due 2/12, Revised 2/19
...........................Paper #2 (3-5 pages, 750-1250 words)........Draft due 3/5, Revised 3/12
...........................Paper #3 Midterm essay exam on Thursday March 21st 11:10-12:25pm
......Collaborative Paper #4 (4-6 pages, 1000-1500 words)......Draft due 4/23, Revised 4/30
...........................Paper #5 (5-7 pages, 1250-1750 words)......Draft due 5/14, Revised 5/23
...........................Paper #6 Final essay exam-2 ½ hours on Thursday, May 23rd 11:10am-1:40pm

(2) Revision-- E.B. White said, "The best writing is rewriting." Because revising or "re-seeing" a piece of writing is such an important aspect of the writing process, each of the papers has two due dates. Each student will receive feedback and suggestions on each of his/her papers through class workshop/discussion groups; then each student will be asked to revise each paper based on peer feedback. Please note: if the first due date for a paper is missed, the paper cannot be turned in at all.

(3) Workshopping-- This class will serve as a sort of a writing community in which each student can draw, as well as contribute, valuable ideas, insight, and advise on writing and presenting arguments. Each paper will be read, discussed, and commented upon by student workshop groups. Workshop days are very important, and therefore a missed workshop day will count as two (2) absences and a late paper will not be accepted. Students without a completed paper (meeting page and format requirements) will not be allowed to participate in the workshop. Below are the workshop dates--students must bring a copy of their paper for themselves as well as for the other members of their group:

........................... Workshop for Paper #1: Tues 2/12...........................Workshop for Paper #4: Tues 4/23
............................Workshop for Paper #2: Tues 3/5.............................Workshop for Paper #5: Tues 5/14

(4) Format-Papers must meet the required minimum length or run the risk of not being accepted. All papers must be typed, double-spaced, have 1" margins, and have a font of 12.

" 'These girls are likeable, when you take them out of their neighborhoods, their drugs. But put them in a pack and they're evil.' Jimenez sat down on the edge of her desk, folded her arms. 'It is true females will never achieve the strength of the guys. Once in jail, they'll talk the talk and walk the walk, empowered by the fact that there's no men here to call the shots. But you listen to the complaints of the women in jail, their primary bitch is their love life. They have boyfriends on the outs.' She nodded toward an area on the wall decorated with photos that inmates' boyfriends sent of themselves, bare-chested, pumped and tattooed. 'In female prisons what matters most are matters of the heart. With the males, it's power and money. The gang world is just like the corporate world" (69). -Gini Sikes 8 Ball Chicks


Course Grade:..............................................................Record Your Own Grades:
Paper 1...................................................10%........................Score for Paper 1 ______ x .10 = ______
Paper 2...................................................10%........................Score for Paper 2 ______ x .10 = _____
Paper 3-In Class 3/21.............................10%........................Score for Paper 3 ______ x .10 = _____
Paper 4....................................................15%.......................Score for Paper 4 _____ x .15 = ______
Paper 5....................................................15%.......................Score for Paper 5 ______ x .15 = ______
Paper 6-In Class 5/23..............................10%.......................Score for Paper 6 ______ x .10 = ______
Quizzes & Homework................................5%......................Avg. Quiz/HM score ______ x .05 = _____
Participation (in class and in workshops).....5%.......................Participation.............______ x .05 = _____
* Class Team Roles Grade...................20%....................* Avg. of Team Scores _____ x .20 = ______

* The roles students will be graded on are the following:..............*TOTAL:....(convert total to %) ________
(1) Presenters (2) Recorders (3) Generators (4) Researchers...* Deduct 1% for each absence over allowed 4.
Because the role of presenter requires more work, this grade...........Scoring as follows: A=100-90, B=89-80,
will be counted as double. Students will rotate roles for............................C=79-70, D=69-60, F=59-0
each unit; the topic and readings will be selected by the students.


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