W 116 Basic English Composition - Fall 2011
Section 01E Call # 14118
Community Hour - Friday 12:00 noon – 1:00
p.m. in KT 239
Office: LA 139
Office hours: TR 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 noon; W 12:00 noon - 1:00 p.m.; and by appointment.
Virtual office hours: M-F 8:00 a.m. – 8:45 a.m.
Phone: (260) 481-6765
E-mail: andersi@ipfw.edu
Mailbox: LA 145
Textbooks and materials:
Langan, John. College
Writing Skills. 8th ed.
Company, 2011.
A binder to hold
notebook and handouts
Two 2-pocket folders
for turning in each paper and required drafts.
Writer’s Notebook.
Several color pens
(red, green, purple, pink, or orange) for annotation and quizzes.
Course Information
While this course is
not credited toward any IPFW degree, the grade does count toward the GPA. When
you complete W 116, the instructor will make a recommendation as to placement,
that is, whether you will continue instruction in W 129 or advance to W 131.
Objectives of the Course
This course is
designed to prepare you for W 131 and to develop the communications skills
(spoken and written) necessary for university work. The course will focus on
sentence skills, particularly grammar; on idioms (both in speaking and
writing); and on paragraph development and coherence.
Policy for attendance and submission of assignments
If you miss more than
4 (four) class sessions, you may fail the course. You are expected to attend
every class. If you must be absent you are responsible for obtaining class
handouts, notes, and assignments. Also, the assignments must be turned in on
the days they are due. If you are absent for an in-class writing assignment,
you must make it up in my office.
Course Requirements
All reading assignments are to be read before the class
meets. You may be asked to write a
response to or participate in a discussion of these readings.
You are required to
write two papers, a midterm, five quizzes, and a final for this class.
All out-of-class and in-class papers must be
completed and turned in to receive credit for this course.
Guidelines for Papers
All out-of-class papers must be
word processed, Times New Roman, 12-point font, double spaced, and labeled with
name, class, section, and date. All drafts and final projects must follow
guidelines on pp. 533-535 of your text. Please follow the visual representation
on pp. 449-456.
Keep all pre-writing, outlines, and drafts as I require that you turn them in with the final draft of the paper. Final papers without drafts and copied research will not be accepted.
All the changes you have made in a revised draft need to
be highlighted to facilitate evaluation.
Center for Academic Support and Advancement, www.ipfw.edu/casa
The place to go for concentrated study time!
The
Drop-in tutoring is
also available for math (schedule on Web site) and a few other subjects. If you
need help with study skills in general, drop by the SPOT to view our self-paced
tutorials or make a one-to-one appointment. Information about STEPS (Student
Technology Education Program S) classes can be found on the CASA Web site,
too. Also, check with your instructor
about whether Supplemental Instruction (group study) is available for this
class. Questions? Call 481-5419.
The WRITING CENTER: Save time and write better papers or
presentations for any class through free one-to-one or small group
consultations in The Writing Center, Helmke Library. Bring assignments,
questions, ideas, and a draft (if you have one). Consultants can help you get
started, write more clearly, revise, edit, and cite sources responsibly. Come
as you begin writing and as you revise. Drop-ins are welcome if time is
available, but appointments, made online through TutorTrac, receive preference.
For TutorTrac, online consulting, and resources to make your writing process
easier, go to www.ipfw.edu/casa/writing.
Questions? Call 481-5740.
Grades:
Paper
#1 15% (150
pts)
Paper
#2 15% (150
pts)
Midterm
Essay 10% (100 pts)
Final
Essay 10% (100
pts)
Quizzes 35% (350 pts)
Writing Center/Tutoring 5% (50 pts)
Attendance/Participation10%
(100 pts)
Grading Scale
97-100 A+ 76-79 C+ 0-59.9 F
93-96 A 73-75 C
90-92 A- 70-72 C-
86-89 B+ 66-69 D+
83-85 B 63-65 D
80-82 B- 60-62 D-
Computer Labs for students are in Helmke
Library, Kettler, Neff, and
W 115/116
Course Outcomes
Students who complete
W 115/116 should be able to demonstrate their competence in four areas:
Rhetorical knowledge, including the ability to focus on a purpose
and audience; to respond to different kinds of rhetorical situations, and to
write in several genres.
Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing, including the ability to
use writing and reading for inquiry, learning, thinking, and communicating; to manage a writing
assignment as a series of tasks,
including finding, and evaluating secondary
sources.
Writing Processes, including the use of multiple drafts to create
and complete a successful text; the development of flexible strategies for
generating, revising, editing, and proof-reading; and participation in
collaborative processes that require the ability to critique one’s own and
others’ works.
Knowledge of Conventions, including the ability to follow common
formats for different kinds of genres; to practice appropriate means of
documenting one’s work; to control such surface features as syntax, grammar,
punctuation, and spelling.