WEEKLY REQUIRED WORK

These are time sensitive. You do not receive credit if you write them after the deadline each week.

First, there's a blog entry (about 250 words) which will have you respond to a hopefully thought-provoking question. Each week, you must do the blog entry with enough time left in the week to be able to enter into dialogue online with your classmates. Write, reply, write more, reply more, and then write and reply more.

Second, there's a reading. There’s no blog entry associated with this. Just read.

Third, there's a written response to the reading. Your reading and writing on the blog must be completed by the SATURDAY (by midnight) of the week in which the reading falls. This entry should be a long paragraph. YOU DO NOT NEED TO RESPOND TO OTHER STUDENTS' PART THREE EACH WEEK.

Monday, March 23, 2015

WEEK ONE BLOG ENTRY (a reminder, in this section, you need to write your 250 word blog entry AND respond to two classmates)

Introduce yourself to the class. 

You might consider some of the following questions: where are you from? What is your major? 
Why are you taking an online course? 
What is your favorite book? 
What is your favorite food? 
What is the farthest you have traveled from home? 
What did you do over Winter Break? 


Respond to any of these questions or anything else to tell us about yourself.

THEN, AFTER OTHERS HAVE RESPONDED, COME BACK TO THE BLOG AND RESPOND TO THEIR POSTS.

Remember, you may not wait until Saturday to do these posts. If you do that, you will not receive credit. The reason for that is that the blog is supposed to get you to write, read, write, in a community with others in our class. If you wait until Saturday, you are basically just writing to yourself. No one will really read what you write or respond to it--so write during the week.

WEEK ONE READING (this is the second task you need to complete each week--you do not need to write on this second part; just read the reading each week)



READING 1
THE FOLLOWING IS FROM Orwell's essay, “Politics and the English Language” 

A scrupulous writer, in every sentence that he writes, will ask himself at least four questions, thus:

  1. What am I trying to say?
  2. What words will express it?
  3. What image or idiom will make it clearer?
  4. Is this image fresh enough to have an effect?
And he will probably ask himself two more:
  1. Could I put it more shortly?
  2. Have I said anything that is avoidably ugly?
One can often be in doubt about the effect of a word or a phrase, and one needs rules that one can rely on when instinct fails. I think the following rules will cover most cases:
  1. Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print.
  2. Never use a long word where a short one will do.
  3. If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out.
  4. Never use the passive where you can use the active.
  5. Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word, or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent.
  6. Break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous.


READING 2
Twain's Rules of Writing

(FROM MARK TWAIN'S SCATHING ESSAY ON THE LITERARY OFFENSES OF JAMES FENIMORE COOPER)
    1. A tale shall accomplish something and arrive somewhere.
2. The episodes of a tale shall be necessary parts of the tale, and shall help develop it.
3. The personages in a tale shall be alive, except in the case of corpses, and that always the reader shall be able to tell the corpses from the others.
4. The personages in a tale, both dead and alive, shall exhibit a sufficient excuse for being there.
5. When the personages of a tale deal in conversation, the talk shall sound like human talk, and be talk such as human beings would be likely to talk in the given circumstances, and have a discoverable meaning, also a discoverable purpose, and a show of relevancy, and remain in the neighborhood of the subject in hand, and be interesting to the reader, and help out the tale, and stop when the people cannot think of anything more to say.
6. When the author describes the character of a personage in his tale, the conduct and conversation of that personage shall justify said description.
7. When a personage talks like an illustrated, gilt-edged, tree-calf, hand-tooled, seven-dollar Friendship's Offering in the beginning of a paragraph, he shall not talk like a Negro minstrel at the end of it.
8. Crass stupidities shall not be played upon the reader by either the author or the people in the tale.
9. The personages of a tale shall confine themselves to possibilities and let miracles alone; or, if they venture a miracle, the author must so plausably set it forth as to make it look possible and reasonable.
10. The author shall make the reader feel a deep interest in the personages of his tale and their fate; and that he shall make the reader love the good people in the tale and hate the bad ones.
11. The characters in tale be so clearly defined that the reader can tell beforehand what each will do in a given emergency.
An author should
12. _Say_ what he is proposing to say, not merely come near it.
13. Use the right word, not its second cousin.
14. Eschew surplusage.
15. Not omit necessary details.
16. Avoid slovenliness of form.
17. Use good grammar.
18. Employ a simple, straightforward style.


Reading 3:
 ELMORE LEONARD'S RULES FOR WRITING:
Never open a book with weather.
 Avoid prologues.
Never use a verb other than "said" to carry dialogue.
 Never use an adverb to modify the verb "said”…he admonished gravely.
 Keep your exclamation points under control. You are allowed no more than two or three per 100,000 words of prose. 
Never use the words "suddenly" or "all hell broke loose."
Use regional dialect, patois, sparingly.
 Avoid detailed descriptions of characters.
Don't go into great detail describing places and things.
Try to leave out the part that readers tend to skip.


WEEK ONE WRITING ABOUT WHAT YOU READ (by the way, this is the third task you have each week)

(a reminder, you do not have to reply to your classmates in this section. This response to the reading should be about a paragraph.)

What do you think of these writing rules? Does one stand out to you? Why? What are your most important rules of writing?

HOW TO GET STARTED IN ENGLISH 305:

This was also emailed to you, but just in case, here it is:

Well, this information will help you get started in English 305. The first thing you should do is to go to the blog for the course: Here it is: http://english305SPRING2015.blogspot.com


We do not use Blackboard for this course.

You will need to access the blog every week. It is sometimes problematic accessing the blog from an ipad, but almost every other method is fine. You should go to the blog to sign in with your yahoo or google or other account. This should not be difficult for you since you chose to take an online course, but if you have trouble, let me know. Once you are signed in, you can click on the comment box to write your entries. Be sure you are signed in before you comment or you may lose your work.

Each week you will accomplish three tasks on this blog.
You will
1. write a short blog entry and respond to your classmates' entries;

2. read a short selection, and

3. respond to what you have read in a slightly longer writing.

Each week, you must complete these three tasks by Saturday night at midnight. No responses will be counted after that. Also, to get full credit for this writing, you need to respond to what other classmates have written. Do not leave that part until Saturday night. This blog is supposed to form a class dialogue, so if you find yourselves quickly responding just to get it done, think again! Do this writing and reading throughout the week so that you get full credit and so that your classmates get the full weight of your fabulous ideas.
We have a few essays, but the weekly reading and writing and interacting that you do on the blog is the most important factor to keep up on each week.

We also have two books: Tortilla Curtain and The Tipping Point.  Buy those now.

So, for the first week, go to the blog and read the class information, the graded assignments, and other information that is there. Make sure you sign in and get started.

Welcome to English 305. Happy writing!
Dr. Schmoll

COURSE SYLLABUS

Hello all,
Now that most of you have stated to blog, I wanted to post the course policies, assignments due dates, and other helpful information. As always, email any questions that arise out of your reading of this document. But I would also remind you, you will receive updates for every assignment as they occur. If you are one of those people who has to have absolutely every detail spelled out beforehand, then I say to you, ommmmm, relax! This course has worked well for many students and for many years because we sort of slowly plug away at your writing issue in this weekly blog writing and then on occasion have the opportunity to write about some great reading.


IMPORTANT DUE DATES: THE DATES INDICATE THE DATE IT IS DUE TO TURNITIN:

BLOG AND WRITING ABOUT WHAT YOU READ:  (10%) WEEKLY 
RESTAURANT REVIEW: 20%   DUE APRIL 10TH
IN CLASS ESSAY:   20%   APRIL 18TH FROM 9-NOON AT CSUB
TORTILLA CURTAIN ESSAY: 20%   DUE MAY 2ND
TIPPING POINT FINAL DRAFT: 30%  DUE JUNE 9TH

SOME COURSEWORK EXPLAINED:

BLOG: (5%) Each week there will be a question on the blog. You will write at least 250 words(a long and brilliant paragraph) in response to that question. You must also respond to your classmates’ writing at least twice(with at least a one sentence response) each week. The best thing to do is to write your response to the blog prompt, respond to someone else’s blog entry, and then wait a few hours or a day before coming back to see what others have said about your blog entry. Then, respond to that. The more you write, the better. Each week, I will chime in at least once(and usually more) with my own response. Bu remember, this is NON GRADED WRITING. Studies have made it very clear that the more you write in non-judged ways, the better your writing becomes. So simply write!
 WRITING ABOUT WHAT YOU READ: (5%) After you read each week’s selection, you will respond to a question about the reading. These should also be about 250 words. You do not need to respond to other’s work in this area. However, you may find someone else’s work so interesting that you want to respond.

RESTAURANT REVIEW: (20%) THIS IS OUR FIRST ASSIGNMENT. Go to any restaurant in town. As you eat, take notes on the ambiance, the food, and the service. You may choose any restaurant (from Taco Bell to CafĂ© Med), but you should use this writing assignment to explore your descriptive capabilities. Use sound, touch, taste, smell, and the look of the food and surroundings. The review should be approximately three pages(typed, double-spaced) in length. You may use the first-person in this review. Again, I will email you this assignment separately, but you might start thinking now about which restaurant you want to try.

TORTILLA CURTAIN "ESSAY": (20%)

I put "essay" in quotes because this is not an essay, per se. It is, rather, a synthesis exercise. After you read the assignment below you may say, what kind of an odd assignment is this? And I would respond, yes, quite odd! Through this assignment you will begin to consider the meaning of the book, one sentence at a time.

As you read TC Boyle, number on a page from 1-10. Write out the ten sentences from the book that catch your eye or make you think. After each sentence, give a brief description of what the sentence means to you or why you included it. At the end of those ten sentences comes the more difficult but rewarding part. You are going to write a synthesis. A synthesis is a type of writing where you take various unrelated writings and find some insight drawn from them. It is writing that creates connections between thoughts. You are not comparing the thoughts, but you are using these ten sentences to say one thing. When you examine the ten sentences together, what new insight do you gain that may have been undeveloped just by looking at one or two sentences.

That will be labeled “Synthesis” and will be at the bottom of the numbered ten sentences.

As I said, this is a little weird, but it usually produces good writing. You are simply numbering and writing about ten sentences and then writing about how they are connected.
Since it is a bit odd, I wanted to give you one good example of the synthesis part. The length is right now. I would have maybe included one more sentence as example. But as you can see, the author has located clearly what the one area is that ties his ten sentences together.
I am placing the following model of the synthesis portion. This does not show the student's sentences, but it does give you an idea of what a good synthesis portion should look like.
EXAMPLE
Synthesis:
The similar connection between most of the chosen passages would be the racist or hate aspect. The focus on race or between being Mexican or not is a huge factor throughout the book. It seems as though all the characters want to be or think that they are better than the person next to them. “Fucking Beaners. Rip it up man. Destroy it.” (page 64). This is an example of a quote from the book that shows the anger or animosity towards different races. Most of the quotes are also driven with anger or hate. I found that harsh words were spoken when characters were most upset or seemed to be in some type of turmoil. The unique choice of words Boyle uses for these passages is also a connection between the quotes. It seems as though Boyle chooses words that build some type of emotion or fire within the reader, as if he was aiming to provoke emotion within the reader. At the very least these quotes cause the reader to pause and think or feel the anger or pain the characters are feeling at the time. Another link between these quotes would be their context they are almost all referring to someone other than themselves, or trying to pass the blame a different way. Overall this book and these quotes are thought provoking as well as emotion filled passages that allow a person to feel what the characters are feeling.


TIPPING POINT FINAL DRAFT: (30%) For this assignment, you will email me the final draft copy of your essay. THIS IS FINAL ESSAY OF THE COURSE, SO DO NOT RUSH OUT AND START IT NOW!
The essay should be attached as a Microsoft Word document and should be 4-5 pages in length, double spaced.
There are two essay topics to choose from.
Write a 3-4 page double spaced essay on one of the following topics:
1. How might one or more of the ideas in the book The Tipping Point apply to your chosen profession?
2. Locate a trend [social, political, cultural, other] that seems to exhibit a "tipping point" phenomenon. Provide a brief explanation of why you think this phenomenon meets Gladwell's three criteria for tipping point phenomenon: a) contagiousness b) little causes having big effects c) not gradual but dramatic change.

ROUGH DRAFT OF TIPPING POINT ESSAY MUST BE EMAILED TO YOUR REVISERS AND TO ME BY A DATE ANNOUNCED LATER.
REVISERS, YOU MUST EMAIL YOUR COMMENTS ON THE PAPER BACK TO THE AUTHOR AND TO ME BY A DIFFERENT DATE ANNOUNCED LATER.


IN CLASS ESSAY: (20%)
We will take this in class essay during our face to face meeting at CSUB. This is our one mandatory meeting. Since this course satisfies the GWAR, you must pass one in class essay to be eligible to pass the course. That essay will be given during our face to face meeting. If you do not pass this assignment, you can come to my office to take a “demand” essay.  
OTHER COURSE POLICIES:
Passing Grade Requirement: Students must earn a grade of C or higher in this course to satisfy the Graduation Writing Assessment Requirement (GWAR). In addition, this course can fulfill the GWAR only if a student has completed 90 or more quarter units of college work before taking it.

To be eligible for a C in English 305, students must earn a C or higher on at least one in-class writing assignment and a C average on all other course assignments. Since this is an online class, in-class writing assignments may be given at the first meeting or the last.


English 305 Waiting List/Drop Policy Statement 
Students enrolled in English 305 must attend the first Saturday orientation session. Students who miss this session will be dropped so that other students may add the course. There is no make-up orientation session.

Students who wish to add the course once the class is full can contact the instructor before the quarter begins and ask to be put on a waiting list. These students must attend the first Saturday session to remain eligible for a seat, and these students can only be added if a spot in the class becomes available.

Course Description:

An online/hybrid course in effective expository writing. Emphasis on writing as a process. This course counts toward the Teacher Preparation programs in English, Liberal Studies, and Child Development but does not count toward the major or minor. Fulfills the GWAR.

Course Learning Outcomes

Students in GWAR courses should advance their mastery of the following learning outcomes:
Goal 1:  Reading Skills
Objective 1:   Analyze a rhetorical situation (purpose, audience, tone) and how a writer’s rhetorical choices (e.g. bias, rhetorical modes, syntax, diction) inform a text.
Objective 2:   Analyze a text’s structure and conventional parts (introduction, thesis, main ideas, body paragraphs, conclusion), and how the parts work together.
Objective 3:   Analyze a text’s logic and reasoning.
Objective 4:   Effectively critique the effectiveness of a writer’s rhetorical choices, organization, and logic.
Goal 2:  Writing Skills
   Objective 1:   Effectively adapt the writing process to various rhetorical situations, anticipating the needs of purpose and audience.

   Objective 2:   Analyze more complex and/or abstract writing prompts, and stay on task.

   Objective 3:   Create effective thesis statements, and use a variety of appropriate and compelling rhetorical strategies to support the thesis.

   Objective 4:   Effectively structure essays, evaluating how the parts work together to create meaning.
   Objective 5:   Avoid logical fallacies, and use precise logical reasoning to develop essays.
   Objective 6:   Use correct and college-level, discourse-appropriate syntax, diction, grammar, and mechanics.
Goal 3:  Research Skills
   Objective 1:   Effectively use summary, paraphrase, and direct quotes to smoothly synthesize sources into own writing.
   Objective 2:   Master a documentation style, and avoid plagiarism.    

   Objective 3:   Use research methods to find reputable sources.
Writing Requirements
Assignments will gradually increase in difficulty, and each assignment will include both a rough draft and a final essay. Writing assignments may be distributed as follows:
● at least one in-class assignment, during the first or last meeting
● writing to inform
● writing to amuse or move the reader emotionally
● writing to persuade
● writing to analyze literature and/or art
Participation
Students will be required to participate in peer revision and discussion on a blog set up exclusively for this class.
WEEKLY GOALS
WEEK ONE
This week I hope you will be able to effectively adapt the writing process to various rhetorical situations, anticipating the needs of purpose and audience. (Goal 2, Objective 1)
WEEK TWO
This week I hope you will be able to analyze a rhetorical situation (purpose, audience, tone) and how a writer’s rhetorical choices (e.g. bias, rhetorical modes, syntax, diction) inform a text. (Goal 1, Objective 1)
WEEK THREE

This week I hope you will be able to effectively structure essays, evaluating how the parts work together to create meaning. (Goal 2, Objective 4)
WEEK FOUR
This week I hope you will be able to avoid logical fallacies, and use precise logical reasoning to develop essays. (Goal 2, Objective 5)
WEEK FIVE
This week I hope you will be able to use correct and college-level, discourse-appropriate syntax, diction, grammar, and mechanics. (Goal 2, Objective 6)
WEEK SIX
This week I hope you will be able to analyze a text’s structure and conventional parts (introduction, thesis, main ideas, body paragraphs, conclusion), and how the parts work together. (Goal 1, Objective 2)
WEEK SEVEN
This week I hope you will be able to analyze a text’s logic and reasoning. (Goal 1, Objective 3)
WEEK EIGHT
This week I hope you will be able to effectively use summary, paraphrase, and direct quotes to smoothly synthesize sources into own writing. (Goal 3, Objective 1)
WEEK NINE
This week I hope you will be able to master a documentation style, and avoid plagiarism. (Goal 3, Objective 2) and Use research methods to find reputable sources. (Goal 3, Objective 3)
WEEK TEN
This week I hope you will be able to create effective thesis statements, and use a variety of appropriate and compelling rhetorical strategies to support the thesis. (Goal 2, Objective 3)