Skyline College
Professor: Rachel Bell |
Class Meetings: Tues/Thurs 12:35-1:40pm,
room 7307 |
Office Location: 7306 and Office Phone:
738-4349 |
Course Number 85832, 3.0 units |
Web Address: http://www.smccd.edu/accounts/bellr/
|
Office hours: Tues/Thurs 10-11am and 2:30-4:30pm |
E-mail:
bellr@smccd.edu and bellrachel@hotmail.com |
Course dates: 8/20/13 to 12/17/13 |
English
office & mailboxes: Room 8112-8114, 738-4202 |
Take
advantage of campus support services: |
“I don't do drugs.
I am drugs.” ― Salvador Dalí
“When you smoke the herb, it reveals you to yourself.” ― Bob
Marley
“I have absolutely
no pleasure in the stimulants in which I sometimes so madly indulge.
It has not been in the
pursuit of pleasure that I have periled life and reputation and reason. It has
been the
desperate attempt to escape from torturing memories, from a sense of
insupportable
loneliness and a dread of some strange impending doom.” ― Edgar Allan Poe
Course Prerequisites:
Writing Prereq: Completion of ENG 836 or ESOL 400 or ENGL 846 with a
grade C or higher or appropriate scores on approved college placement tests.
Reading Prereq: READ 836 or ENGL 846 with a grade of C or higher, or
eligibility for 400-level Reading courses on approved Reading placement test.
Course Description:
Course designed to help the student recognize and critically
evaluate important ideas in short and book length texts, and express facts and
thought logically
and gracefully in clear and correct prose. Students will
write critical expository essays dealing with a variety of ideas at a skill
level appropriate to a college
transfer level class. Transfer credit: UC; CSU (A2, 3).
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.
Student Learning Outcomes: By the end of the semester, students will be able to
do the following:
1. ESSAYS: Write
focused, organized, well-developed, and text-based essays appropriate to the
college
transfer level using
effective paragraphs, which support a clear thesis statement, and
demonstrate
competence in standard English grammar and usage.
2. CRITICAL ANALYSIS: Demonstrate critical reading, writing, and thinking
skills through analysis, synthesis,
and evaluation of important ideas.
3. SOURCES: Effectively evaluate and fluidly integrate relevant sources, using
appropriate research strategies
and tools, and documenting
them according to according to MLA guidelines.
“Drugs are a bet with your mind.”
― Jim Morrison
“Drugs are a waste
of time. They destroy your memory and your self-respect
and
everything that goes along with your self esteem.” ― Kurt Cobain
Required Textbooks and Materials: "We read
to know we're not alone" -- C.S. Lewis
(1) Dealing Death and Drugs by Beto O’Rourke
and Susie Byrd
(2)
Drugs: Should We Legalize, Decriminalize or Deregulate? Ed. Jeffrey A. Schaler
(3) Drug Lord: The Life
and Death of a Mexican Kingpin by Terrence E.
Poppa
(4) Course Reader (at Skyline's
Bookstore). You can use the electronic version in class if
you bring a laptop or
iPad: http://www.smccd.edu/accounts/bellr/Reader.htm
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 over the course of the
semester. Exceeding these absences will
adversely affect your participation 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. You cannot
use late tickets on in-class exams.
(3) 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.
(4) Disabled
Students—
In coordination with the Disability Resource Center office, reasonable
accommodation will be provided for eligible students with disabilities.
For more assistance, please contact the DRC Bldg 5, Room 5132 or call
650-738-4228.
(5) Plagiarism-- Paraphrasing or directly copying any text and using
it as your own without proper attribution, whether you’ve done it intentionally
or not, is plagiarism
and is unacceptable and will result in failure. We will carefully look at how to integrate
and properly document outside sources.
(6) Technology
Policy—These policies are made with this idea in mind…
You’re in college to gain knowledge from the classes you have signed up
for. This information is going to help
you be successful in many areas. Ideally
you will excel
in these classes, achieve your goals, and earn a degree that you will have for
life. To accomplish this you need to not
just be physically present but also mentally present
which means don’t text, surf the net, take calls in
the hallway or in any other way use technology to be “elsewhere” during class
time.
Laptops and iPads:
Can be used in the classroom and can
be a very effective learning tool.
However, if you are suspected of misusing the laptop and using it for
non-class related activities (checking email, posting on Facebook, instantly
messaging, completing homework for another class), you will be required to
email your class
notes to the instructor 10 minutes after the conclusion every class
session. If you are not able to produce
the requested notes, you will lose in-class laptop/iPad privileges.
Cell phones: You do not need cell phones for any reason
during class time. Before you enter the
classroom, turn your cell phones off.
This does not mean put them on
vibrate; it means to turn them off.
Nothing is more distracting than phones ringing during class. There is also no need to ever be texting
during class, and yes the instructor
can see you when you are texting under the desk. Going out in the hallway to answer a call or
make a call is also unacceptable during class time. Students guilty of any of
these activities will be marked absent for the day.
IPods or other listening devices: These are inappropriate in the
classroom. Before you enter the
classroom, turn off and put away any such device.
“The more you have
thought and written on a given theme, the more you can still write.
Thought
breeds thought. It grows under your
hands” -- Henry
David Thoreau
Papers: Five major papers will be written for this class:
(1) Due Dates-- Paper
#1 (2-4 pages, 500-1000 words) Draft
due 9/17, Revised 9/24
Research
Paper #2 (3-5 pages, 750-1250 words) Draft
due 10/22, Revised 10/29
Paper #3 Midterm 75-minute essay exam on
Thursday, November 7th
Collaborative Research Paper #4 (4-6
pages, 1000-1500 words) Draft 12/5,
Revised 12/12
Paper #5
Final essay exam—2 ½ hours on Tuesday, December 17th 11:40-1:40pm
(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 in class
workshop groups of three; 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 and will not
receive a grade.
(3) Workshopping--Each paper will be read, discussed, and commented upon by student
workshop groups. Students without a
completed paper on the day of the workshop will not be
allowed to participate in the workshop.
Students not participating in workshops will lose their peer
participation points for that activity, they will not receive the benefit of
commentary
on their writing, and if they do not turn a paper in on the workshop date, they
cannot turn in a revised paper a week later for a grade. You cannot pass the course if you fail to
turn in
one of the five (5) major papers for the course. Below are the workshop dates--students must
upload a copy of their paper for their group members and comment on the writing
of their
group members on the day specified:
Paper #1
Workshop: 9/17 Paper #2 Workshop: 10/22
Paper #4 Workshop: 12/5
(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.
If you email me any assignments as attachments, they must be in .DOC or .RTF
format or else I will not be able to open your document and your work will not
be counted as on time.
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—Midterm 10% Score for Paper 3 ______ x .10 =
_____
Paper 4 20% Score
for Paper 4 ______ x .20 = _____
Paper 5—Final 20% Score
for Paper 5 ______ x .20 = _____
Presentation 10% Presentation
score ______ x .10 =
_____
Quizzes 5% Average
Quiz score ______ x .05 =
_____
Homework 5% Average
of homework ______ x .05 =
_____
* Participation 10% Participation ______ x .10 =
_____
TOTAL:
(convert total to %) ________
* Participation
includes being prepared each day, meeting
with me at least once during the course of the
semester, Scoring as follows: 100-90=A, 89-80=B
adding to daily discussion, and
giving your classmates 79-70=C, 69-60=D, 59-0=F
thoughtful responses to their writing in workshops.
For an online grade calculator, go
to: http://www.smccd.edu/accounts/bellr/ReaderGradingMenu.htm