Professor: Term: Course Name Reference # Class day/time
Marielise Garcia (Professor G.)
SPRING 2015
ENC 1102
834051
MWF
8:00a.m.8:50 a.m. Room: R45200
OFFICE HOURS: MWF 9:00 am to 9:30 am.
College Information Miami Dade College, Kendall Campus Course Information Course Number/ Title: ENC1102 English Composition II
Term: Spring 20151 Department Information Department English and Communications
Office location/hours: Room 2217 Telephone: (305) 2372284 Web Page http://www.mdc.edu/kendall/english/ Course Description This is the second required general core course in collegelevel writing. Observing the conventions of standard edited American English, students will
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Martins, ISBN:
9781475650505
Course Requirements Schedule of assignments WEEK
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
STUDENT ASSESSMENTS
WEEK 1
Diagnostic Writing Sample
Diagnostic Writing Sample
1/61/9
Read:
Ch. 1: Reading Fiction
Writing Journal Responses WEEK 2
Read:
1/121/16
Chapter 3: Plot
Journal Response #1 due 1/14 :
"Story of an Hour" (Chopin 1516)
Journal Responses #2 due 1/16
"A Rose for Emily" (Faulkner
8288)
WEEK 3
Read:
1/191/23
Chapter 4: Character
Chapter 5: Setting
Journal Responses #3 due 1/21 :
"How to Date a Browngirl,
Blackgirl, Whitegirl, Halfie" (Diaz
119122)
Journal Response #4 due 1/23:
"Soldier 's Home" (Hemingway
165171)
WEEK 4
Read:
Journal Response #5 due 1/28:
"A&P" (Updike 201205)
1/261/30
Chapter 6: Point of View
Chapter 7: Symbolism
Journal Response #6 due 1/30:
"Battle Royal" (Ellison 225235)
WEEK 5
Read:
Journal Response #7 due 2/4
“Romero’s Shirt” (Gilb 258262)
2/22/6
Chapter 8: Theme
Journal Response #8 due 2/6: “To
Build a Fire” (London 517528
WEEK 6
Read:
2/92/13
Chapter 19: Reading Poetry
Journal Response #9 due 2/9:
"Those Winter Sundays” (Hayden
547)
Bullock, Richard, and Goggin, Maureen D, and Weinberg, Francine, editors. The Norton Field Guide to writing with readings and handbook. W.W. Norton & Company, 2016.
A freshman college level English Composition course aims to improve students' abilities with writing, critical thinking, mechanics and usage, punctuation, grammar, and vocabulary. By studying English 101 at Luzerne County Community College, I will work diligently to improve in all of these aspects. My main focus is to develop skills specifically to create clear and concise thesis statements, strong and persuasive essays with cajolement, and to develop different perspectives on narratives and other essays. These writing skills may also improve my critical thinking and reading skills.
The art of writing is a complex and difficult process. Proper writing requires careful planning, revision, and proofreading. Throughout the past semester, the quality of my writing has evolved significantly. At first, I struggled with the separation of different types of paragraphs, and I found writing them laborious. Constant practice, however, has eliminated many of my original difficulties, and helped to inspire confidence in my skills. As a collegiate writer, my strength lies in my clear understanding of the fundamentals of writing, while my primary weakness is proofreading my own work.
The primary aim of English 1101 is to prepare the student to effectively communicate, and identify or create new knowledge in various spheres of life. English 1101 assisted me to have control over the writing conventions through extensive writing practice or reading, guided by evaluations and feedbacks from my course instructor. The course contains several topics namely; effective writing processes, rhetorical organizations methods, academic writing formats and styles, critical reading skills, researching, and citing the researched sources.
For each of the questions below you should look at both the Center for Writing Excellence and the University of Phoenix Writing and Style Guidelines.
So, you’ve got Bywater’s English 1010 class and you don’t know what to write about? Don’t worry, you are not alone. Although Professor Bywater’s class may seem intimidating, it truly is one of the most rewarding classes you will take at DSU, and it will help you throughout your college career when it comes to writing papers. Professor Bywater’s class comes with an amazing textbook titled Rules of Thumb and a checklist, or Writing Guide 101, and this checklist will save your life and your paper. Using transition sentences between paragraphs, understanding pronouns, and using the correct point of view are the most important points in Professor Bywater’s checklist, and I will show you the correct usage and implementation of all three. Read and retain the following information and you will succeed in English 1010 and gain the skills you need to succeed in college making your life, and your papers, easier.
On the evening of Thursday July 23, 2015 I conducted an interview of Alex Benavides- a senior mechanical engineering major at Oklahoma State University. Benavides describes his experiences in his english courses as enjoyable, and notes that it helped him become a better writer. Benavides also states, that from personal experience during summer internships, that there are ineffective writers in positions where clean, flowing, and proper writing is a necessity. Proper grammar is essential in professional writing situations, according to Benavides, and is also often the first area critiqued by professors and teaching assistants. “You only get out what you put in when you write”, says Benavides, “be serious and grind, it makes the difference”.
Most elements of writing (development, organization, and style) fit task, purpose, and audience. Some identifiable mismatches.
Chin, Beverly Ann (2000). The role of grammar in improving student’s writing. Retrieved from http://www.uwplatt.edu/~ciesield/graminwriting.htm
My personal writing style is invention. When I generate information about a particular subject, I like to leave the reader wanting more. Most often, I write from the vantage point of expressive aim; indeed, I write about personal issues that affect all people on a daily basis. I usually map my rhetorical situation according to the subject matter; interestingly enough, from the perspectives of knowledge by observation and participation. My core audience ranges from high school and college
However, please refer to the below documents names and links, from the USW Student Development and Study Skills Service, Styles of Writing section as a sample;
Adequate writing should appear formal; professional even. When applying for a job or post secondary schooling, a college student should present themselves through adequate writing. Despite the many great attributes one has to offer, inadequate writing can quickly counteract these qualities, making or breaking one’s opportunity for employment at a job or acceptance at a university. Adequate writing symbolizes a student’s knowledge pertaining to the job or school they are applying for, forming great reason to be offered
Over the course of the semester, we have studied a variety of styles of writing, from the perspective paper to the
Over the course of this past semester, my ability to write has improved tremendously. Prior to undertaking this course, my expertise in writing was not as fine-tuned as it should have been. I had never previously been enrolled in a class specifically tailored to writing-- which was quite clear. Upon reading my past works, it becomes apparent that my writing style consisted of fluff, small words, and inconsistently structured sentences. These problems have, for the most part, been remedied with the coursework I have tackled in College Writing. Rather than long, drawn out papers that take an eternity to reach the primary point, my recent work is much nicer in terms of composition and grammar. I credit these improvements to the three primary
This course has expanded my knowledge and view of reading and writing vastly. Following each paper, reading, and class discussion I learned more about myself as a student, and the world as a whole. I have found the books Rules for Writers and Ways of Reading thoroughly helpful throughout the course. This class entails a variety of aspects of the problem-posing concept of education; it truly involves the students and teaches them to think, read, and write individualistically, analytically, and clearly.