ENGL 302
Advanced Composition: Business

Section B04: M/W 7:30 AM - 8:45 AM
Innovation Hall 319
Spring 2007

Instructor: Dr. Jessica Matthews

Office: Robinson A435
Email: jmatthe2@gmu.edu
PH: 703-993-1171
                                                           
Office Hours: M/W: 2:00 - 4:00 PM
or by appointment
 
Required Materials & Email Client   Course Description  
Prerequisites, Course Objectives, Technology Objectives, & Method of Instruction
Course Requirements    Conferences   
Essay Submission Guidelines     Class Participation
Grading Policy   Attendance Policy   Policy on Plagiarism & Turnitin.com
The Writing Center   Classroom Etiquette   Dates to Remember

ENGL 302 Section B04 is a WebCT course.  Login directions and important course materials can be found at http://webct.gmu.edu.

REQUIRED MATERIALS and EMAIL CLIENT

TEXTBOOKS

Johnson, June. Global Issues, Local Arguments: Readings for Writing. New York: Pearson, 2007.*
*You must purchase this book in the Mason bookstore. This edition grants you access to an interactive website designed to help improve your writing skills.

Harris, Robert A. Using Sources Effectively. 2nd ed. Glendale, CA: Pyrczak, 2005.

Lunsford, Andrea A. Easy Writer: A Pocket Reference. 3rd ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2006.

Additional required readings available on our WebCT course site

PODCAST: Subscribe to Grammar Girl's Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing podcasts at http://grammar.qdnow.com/. You can also subscribe to Grammar Girl through the Apple Music Store. If you have not already downloaded the iTunes software, go to http://www.apple.com/itunes/download/ to get the free software (available for the PC and Mac). NOTE: You do not need to own an iPod or other MP3 player to listen to podcasts. In fact, you can read the transcripts for these podcasts if you have no way of listening to them. Just visit the Grammar Girl website at QD Now:
http://grammar.qdnow.com.

Email Client

Students must activate their George Mason email account and check it regularly. Email is the easiest way to communicate with me, and I frequently use it to communicate with you. But there are rules about using this medium, and I expect you to follow them.  First,
if you regularly use Hotmail or GMail, make sure you forward your Mason Mail to your account. Do not, however, send me messages from Hotmail, GMail, or any email client other than Mason Mail. GMU policy dictates that Mason Mail is the only way in which I can communicate with you via email, therefore I will only respond to email sent from a GMU email address. Second, when you send messages to me, please comply with the email protocols that we will go over in class. I will not respond to messages that do not follow these guidelines.

COURSE DESCRIPTION

ENGL 302 Advanced Composition in Business prepares students who have successfully completed a general-level college writing course to do advanced level analysis and writing in their business major. The course emphasizes invention, revision, collaboration, and research in order to help students develop writing, reading, and critical thinking skills important to their academic success and future careers. One of the key components of this course is to introduce you to how business professionals and academics construct knowledge in their field. To help you understand how knowledge gets constructed in the field of business, you will read and discuss a range of texts and complete regular reading and writing exercises. Assignments include two extended essays, one annotated bibliography, two in-class essays, one test, and a variety of in-class quizzes and exercises.

This course focuses on the rhetorical skills you will need to communicate effectively in a business environment. People who succeed in this environment excel at performing the following tasks:

•    Finding, evaluating, and synthesizing vast amounts of information
•    Constructing persuasive arguments in clearly written, error-free prose
•    Using various types of communication technologies, such as email and online discussion
      lists, to effectively and efficiently convey their ideas


Most of the readings and assignments encourage you to think specifically about the issue of globalization, an economic, social, and environmental trend that is transforming the way people live and how they do business. My hope is that you will learn how scholars and professional writers define the term, characterize its effects, and promote their own ideas about how people, companies, and nations can best survive in a global marketplace.

PREREQUISITES

ENGL 302B is specifically designed for students in the School of Management. However, all students, regardless of discipline, who register for English 302 must meet the following prerequisites:

· a minimum of 45 credit hours
· credit for English 100 or English 101
· in degree programs that require 6 hours of literature, at least 3 must be taken prior to
  302; 3 credits may be taken concurrently with English 302

COURSE OBJECTIVES

The English Department's Composition Program has identified the following learning and writing goals as the objectives of ENGL 302:

Student Learning Goals
Discipline-based Goals: Students who successfully complete ENGL302 will be able to adapt their reading and writing to meet the expectations of their academic discipline and future workplace. They will be able to demonstrate the ability to
  • apply critical reading strategies that are appropriate to advanced reading in their academic discipline and in their possible future workplace
  • recognize how knowledge is constructed in their academic discipline and possible future workplaces attending to issues such as kinds of claims or questions posed by advanced or professional writers and evidence considered sufficient to support arguments
  • analyze the rhetorical situations—audience, purpose, and context—of texts produced in their academic disciplines and in possible future workplaces
  • produce writing—including arguments or proposals—that is appropriate for a range of rhetorical situations within their academic disciplines and possible future workplaces, with particular attention to textual features such as common genres, organizational strategies, style, tone, and diction, and expected citation formats
Advanced Writing Goals
Students who successfully complete ENGL302 will demonstrate that they have continued to develop their research and writing strategies to an advanced level; they will be able to
  • use writing as a tool for exploration and reflection in addressing advanced problems, as well as for exposition and persuasion
  • successfully employ strategies for writing as a recursive process of inventing, investigating, shaping, drafting, revising, and editing to meet a range of advanced academic and professional expectations—including, when given appropriate time for drafting and editing, the ability to produce documents in Standard Edited American English that are generally free from error
  • collaborate with others as they write, through peer review, group projects, and/or consulting with outside experts (writing center tutors, librarians, subject-matter experts, workplace informants, etc.)
  • identify, evaluate, and use research sources (print and electronic), to include advanced online library searching of databases pertinent to their disciplines and the critical use of web sites
  • employ a range of appropriate technologies to support their researching, reading, writing, and thinking, with particular attention to the ways that advanced students and professionals locate, analyze, organize, and share information
TECHNOLOGY OBJECTIVES

The influence of technology, especially digital technology, has not only made the global workplace possible, it has also profoundly changed how we express ourselves and communicate with others. Our course will use digital tools to help us communicate with each other and conduct research.

This course will include exercises designed to help students learn the following technology skills:
  • Learn how to use technology tools to communicate and collaborate effectively
  • Learn how to use and create structured electronic documents
  • Learn how to use technology tools effectively to gather, evaluate, and use all kinds of information, including text, images, and sound and to manipulate them in various digital forms
  • Learn how to integrate technology tools to produce complex, creative projects, especially those that involve the development of new knowledge and its presentation in a digital environment
  • Learn how to create and use database to manage information
  • Learn how to use electronic tools for research and evaluation
  • Learn the major legal, ethical, and privacy issues in information technology
METHOD OF INSTRUCTION

Learning to write is a little like learning to play a musical instrument: you won’t learn unless you practice—a lot.
Because our class meets in a computer lab, you will get plenty of opportunities to practice your writing in class.

You also learn by receiving responses to your writing from people who read your work.  Throughout the course, there will be several opportunities for you to respond to the writing of your peers, and I, too, will give you feedback on your papers.

Finally, you learn to be a better writer by reading examples of good writing. Each week we will read the work of writers who tackle complex ideas and express them in persuasive, well-defended arguments.

These methods of instruction depend upon your participation, so it is important that you come to class and share your opinions about the work of your peers and the works included in the assigned readings.

Remember our class is also a community, and I hope that together we can create an environment that will encourage everyone to make comments and to respectfully consider the opinions of other students.


COURSE REQUIREMENTS



ASSIGNMENTS

WEIGHT

REVISION OPTIONS

ESSAY #1: The Impact of Globalization on Your Chosen Profession


15%

Revision permitted

In-Class Essays (2)



20%

N/A


Annotated Bibliography for Essay #2


15%

Revision permitted

ESSAY #2: Socially Responsible Investing
 


20%

No revision option

Quizzes, In-Class Exercises, Discussion List Posts

15%

No make-up quizzes permitted; 20 pt deduction for late exercises and posts


Sources & Documentation Test


15%

N/A


CONFERENCES

I will be canceling class at least once in order to schedule individual conferences to talk about your writing and progress through the course.  THESE CONFERENCES ARE REQUIRED.  We will meet for about 15-20 minutes to talk about your current work and any concerns you may have.  Please fill out the Conference Prep sheet (forthcoming) in preparation for your conference.  (We will go over this as the date approaches).


ESSAY SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

All essays, both drafts and final versions, must be composed in Microsoft Word.
The presentation is of your work is important and does affect your grade.  Check the style guide for the documentation style that you choose and format your paper according to the style's guidelines. There are examples of properly formatted MLA and APA papers in out text, Easy Writer.

Submit the final version of your essay electronically as a Word document. Send it to me as an attachment to an email. Use my Mason Mail address: jmatthe2@gmu.edu. Make certain that your subject line includes your name, section number, and title of the assignment.

Please use the following subject line in your email message when submitting your papers to me:

        LastName ENGL 302 B04 Essay #1

Please save your document using the following format for the filename:

        LastName302B04Essay1.doc
        Please note that I cannot open .wps files


In order for work to be submitted on time, I must receive your email with the attachment by 5:00 PM on the date the paper is due. Failing to attach the assignment is no excuse, and the late penalty will hold regardless. I grade papers electronically and return them to you via email.


CLASS PARTICIPATION

Class participation comprises 15% of your final grade, and I measure this effort through a combination of quizzes, in-class exercises, and discussion list posts. Since experience has taught me that you will "fall off the reading wagon" without some incentive to stay on it, there will be a short quiz, in-class exercise, or discussion list post for each assigned reading. You will take quizzes on WebCT and respond to topics via the "Discussion" tool on WebCT. The quizzes cannot be made up. I administer quizzes at the beginning of class, and discussion topics have a specified "shelf life."  If you arrive late to class, you may not take the quiz nor can you make it up later. Be on time. If you must leave before the class is over, you will not get credit for the quiz.

NOTE: I am aware that you have a life outside of school and may not always be able to attend class! Therefore I will drop the three lowest quiz scores before computing the final grade. Use these three quiz drops when you need to miss class. I do not provide additional quiz drops for illness, medical appointments, car emergencies, etc., except on rare occasions where I feel the situation warrants the exception.

DUAL SUBMISSION: The “dual submission” option permits students to submit a paper written for ENGL 302 to meet the requirements in another course during the same semester.  Students interested in the “dual submission” research paper option must obtain a copy of the research requirements from the other class and submit a letter to me requesting permission to proceed with the dual submission. You can find the instructions for dual submission and a link to the request form at http://www.gmu.edu/departments/english/composition/faculty/302dual.html.

THIS OPTION REQUIRES APPROVAL BEFORE YOU BEGIN THE PAPER.  WITHOUT PRIOR APPROVAL, I CONSIDER DUAL SUBMISSION AN ACT OF ACADEMIC DISHONESTY.


GRADING POLICY

You must complete all the requirements for the course in order to receive a passing grade.

· GRADE SCALE: 94-100=A; 90-93=A-; 87-89=B+; 84-86=B; 80-83=B-; 77-79=C+; 76-74=C: 73-70=C-; 69-67=D; 66-64=-D; 63-60=D-; 59 or below=F.

PLEASE NOTE: In order to get credit for ENGL 302, you must pass the course with a C.  If you receive a grade of C- or lower, you will need to repeat the course.

POLICY ON LATE ASSIGNMENTS & SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
 
· LATE ASSIGNMENTS: Late papers will be accepted but will receive a penalty of one-half of a letter grade (5 points) per calendar day late, excluding weekends and holidays.

I DO NOT ACCEPT LATE REVISIONS.


POLICY ON ATTENDANCE

The George Mason University Catalog states:

Students are expected to attend the class periods of the courses for which they register. In-class participation is important to the individual student and to the class as a whole. Because class participation may be a factor in grading, instructors may use absence, tardiness, or early departure as de facto evidence of non-participation. Students who miss an exam with an acceptable excuse may be penalized according to the individual instructor’s grading policy, as state in the course syllabus. To read the university policy, go to  http://www.gmu.edu/catalog/apolicies/index.html#Anchor37.

Accommodations for Students with Disabilities

If you have a documented disability, please contact me as soon as possible. Please bring your faculty contact sheet with you (available from the Disability Resource Center) so that I can provide you with the appropriate accommodations.
 

PLAGIARISM

Claiming someone else's words or ideas as your own is a serious academic offense. Plagiarism is also having someone else provide so much "help" or "guidance" that the paper is no longer yours. We will spend time in this course learning about what does or does not constitute plagiarism. Below is the English Department's statement on plagiarism:

English Department Statement on Plagiarism

Plagiarism means using the exact words, opinions, or factual information from another source without giving that source credit. Writers give credit through the use of accepted documentation styles, such as parenthetical citation, footnotes, or endnotes; a simple listing of books, articles, and websites is not sufficient. Plagiarism is the equivalent of intellectual robbery and cannot be tolerated in an academic setting.

Student writers are often confused as to what should be cited. Some think that only direct quotations need to be credited. While direct quotations do need citations, so do paraphrases and summaries of opinions or factual information formerly unknown to the writers or which the writers did not discover themselves. Exceptions to this include factual information, which can be obtained from a variety of sources, the writers' own insights or findings from their own field research, (what has been called common knowledge). What constitutes common knowledge can sometimes be precarious; what is common knowledge for one audience may be so for another. In such situations, it is helpful to keep the reader in mind and to think of citations as being "reader friendly." In other words, writers provide a citation for any piece of information that they think their readers might want to investigate further. Not only is this attitude considerate of readers, it will almost certainly ensure that writers will not be guilty of plagiarism.

I so submit confirmed instances of plagiarism directly to the Honor Committee for arbitration. If the Honor Committee finds you committed plagiarism, the penalties can be very harsh and long lasting. Don’t give in to temptation and plagiarize.

The George Mason Honor Code offers more detail on plagiarism and its consequences. You can find it online at http://www.gmu.edu/catalog/apolicies/#Anchor13.

IMPORTANT: This course subscribes to Turnitin.com, a plagiarism detection software. You will be able to use this software to check your essays for possible plagiarism before submitting your essay for a grade. My goal is to use this software to help you understand how to use secondary sources rather than to use it as punitive tool.  We will spend a great deal of time in class before you submit your first essay learning how to incorporate the words and ideas of others into your own writing without committing plagiarism.

THE WRITING CENTER

Since you will be writing several papers in this course, you may want to visit the University Writing Center http://writingcenter.gmu.edu, located in Robinson A114, for assistance. The Writing Center is one of the best resources you will find on campus. They have an outstanding website that offers a wealth of online resources for student writers. Additionally, the tutors can provide help for all phases of the writing process, and if you tend toward procrastination, a scheduled appointment at the Writing Center is one way to discipline yourself. You can even obtain assistance with papers by visiting the online writing center at http://writingcenter.gmu.edu/owl/index.html, but please plan ahead and allow yourself at least two days to receive a response. You can schedule an appointment at the Writing Center at any time by going to https://therichco.com/wconline/gmu/schedule.


CLASSROOM ETIQUETTE
  • Please listen attentively to people who speak in class. Do not talk while they are talking.
  • Our class meets in a computer classroom, so please do not bring food & drinks into the room.
  • Occasional tardiness is no crime, but chronic lateness will hurt your grade.
  • Please turn off and put away all electronic devices, including digital music players and cell phones.
  • Obviously, no text messaging or cell phone checking in class. No exceptions. If you start reading your text messages in class, I will deny you credit for the quiz.
  • Do not do your homework for another class or design your next semester's schedule in my class. Come to class prepared and ready to participate.
  • If you fall asleep, I will wake you up. We all get tired, but if you need sleep that badly, then you probably need to be in bed.

Finally, please treat your fellow classmates with respect. This is a class where cultural differences will often arise as topics of discussion. You are welcome to express your opinion, but stick to the issue. No profanity or insults will be tolerated.
 
DATES TO REMEMBER

6 February
Last day to add
6 February
Last day to drop with no tuition liability
23 February
Last day to drop
24 February to
23 March

Elective Withdrawal Period
11 - 18 March
Spring Break
5 May
Last day of class (our last class is 2 May)
7 - 8 May
Reading Days
8 - 16 May
Final Exam (there is no final in this course)


   
   
ENGL 302 B04
Spring 2007
Schedule of Classes


Please note: All assignments (both papers and readings) are due on the date listed.

This schedule is subject to change, but I will give you advance notice. I will announce these changes in class and then post them to the course WebCT site.  If you miss class, please contact a fellow class member for the update. Due dates for assignments, exam reviews, and tests are in red, the conference dates are in green, and in-class exercises/activities are in dark blue, and Grammar Girl podcasts are in purple.



Week 1


Monday
January 22
Class cancelled due to inclement weather
Wednesday
January 24
Introduction to the Course

Syllabus Quiz

Diagnostic Grammar, Usage, & Punctuation Test
Please read over the syllabus carefully. If you have not yet activated
your GMU Email account, please do so as soon as possible.

You will receive a quiz score of "100" for taking the diagnostic test and a quiz score of "100" for taking the syllabus quiz. If you do not take them, you will receive a quiz score of "0."

Week 2

Monday
January 29
Communicating by Email

"Following conventions for email, discussion lists, and Web
logs (blogs)," Easy Writer, pgs. 37-41

Dennis G. Jerz's "E-mail: Ten Tips for Writing It Effectively"
Email protocol guidelines available online
at http://jerz.setonhill.edu/writing/e-text/e-mail.htm


From The New York Times: "What Corporate America
Cannot Build: A Sentence," Digital Documents

From The Chronicle of Higher Education: "Etiquette for
the Bar," Digital Documents

In-Class EX: Email Protocol






Wednesday
January 31
Defining and Writing about Globalization

Global Issues, Local Arguments, CH 1 Introduction: pgs. 1-12

Thomas Friedman, excerpt from The Lexus and the Olive Tree.
Article available in Digital Documents

Easy Writer: A Writer's Choices, pgs. 12-20
Introduce Essay #1

In preparation for the diagnostic in-class writing test, please view the hour-long documentary, "The Other Side of Outsourcing," by Thomas Friedman.
This documentary is available on YouTube at
http://www.youtube.com/watch.php?v=jQaHrcwKsoc


Week 3

Monday
February 5
Writing about Outsourcing and Offshoring

Global Issues, Local Arguments, CH 3 Trading Jobs:
Introduction,
pgs. 69-76;
Daniel Drezner,
pgs. 83-94; Allegretto & Stettner, pgs. 95-105
Raynor, pgs. 107-109

Easy Writer: Analyzing and Constructing Arguments, pgs. 20-31;
Writing in Any Discipline, pgs. 31-34

Wednesday
February 7
Class cancelled due to inclement weather


Week 4

Monday
February 12
Finding and Evaluating Sources

Using Sources Effectively. CH 3 & 4, Pgs. 31-66

Grammar Girl Podcast: Punctuation: Commas, Comma Chameleon,
Episode 6
, & Colons, “Rollin’ Rollin’ Colon”, Episode 27

In-Class Exercise: Library Research for Advanced Composition
NOTE: We will meet in our regularly scheduled classroom in IN 319
Wednesday
February 14
Class cancelled due to inclement weather


Week 5

Monday
February 19
DUE: Complete draft of Essay #1

Grammar Girl Podcast: General: Writing a Lead, “Wrestling
With That First Sentence,” Episode 2

Avoiding Plagiarism

Using Sources Effectively. CH 1 & 2, Pgs. 1-29

Introduce Turnitin.com


In-Class Exercise: Peer Review

Your draft must be formatted in MS Word. Bring your Word file to class with
you on a floppy disc, jump drive, CD, or as an attachment to an email. Students
who do not have a complete draft cannot participate in peer review and
will receive a quiz score of "0."



In-Class Exercise: Using Turnitin.com

Please bring a paper you have written for one of your courses to
upload to Turnitin.com. It should be saved as a MS Word document.

Wednesday - Friday
February 21 - 23
Conferences: Class will not meet on Wednesday. You must,
however,
schedule a conference with me on Feb 21st, 22nd,
or 23rd. Conferences will be held in my office in Robinson A435.
Schedule a 15-20 minute conference with me to go over the draft of Essay #1.
I will post the conference schedule to our WebCT homepage. Conferences
are required.

Week 6

Monday
February 26
Integrating and Effectively Using Sources

Using Sources Effectively. CH 5 & 6; Pgs. 67-99

Grammar Girl Podcast: Abbreviations: Abbreviations,
Acronyms…, “It’s FUBAR, Call the FBI ASAP!,” Episode 19


Wednesday
February 28
DUE: Essay #1


Diagnostic In-Class Writing Test on
Thomas L. Friedman's documentary,
The Other Side of Outsourcing

Upload your essay to the Digital Drop Box on WebCT by 5:00 PM in order to avoid a late penalty.

In preparation for next Wednesday's diagnostic test, please view the hour-long documentary, "The Other Side of Outsourcing," by Thomas Friedman.
This documentary will be on reserve in the Johnson Center Library.
It is also available on YouTube at
http://www.youtube.com/watch.php?v=jQaHrcwKsoc


Week 7

Monday
March 5
Writing About Consumerism, Free Trade, and Sweatshops

Global Issues, Local Arguments, CH 2 Consumerism:
Introduction, pgs. 13-23;

Gillespie, pgs. 24-33; Will, pgs. 37-39; Finn, pgs. 45-48


In class we will watch excerpts from the documentary, Mardi Gras: Made in China.
This film will be on reserve in the Johnson Center Library.

Introduce Annotated Bibliography and Essay #2

REVIEW FOR USING SOURCES TEST
Wednesday
March 7
TEST: Using Sources Effectively

Week 8

Monday
March 12
Spring Break: Classes will not meet

Friday
March 16
Spring Break: Classes will not meet


Week 9

Monday
March 19
Writing About Wal-Mart
Consumerism, Free Trade, and Sweatshops

Global Issues, Local Arguments
, CH 2: Nordinger, pgs. 52-59;
Harrop, pgs. 59-61; Ehrenreich, pgs. 61-63
In class we will watch excerpts from "Is Wal-Mart Good for America," available on Frontline at
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/walmart/view/.
This program is best viewed with a broadband Internet connection.

There are additional articles about the impact of Wal-Mart on the
American worker at
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/teach/walmart/resources.html


Wednesday
March 21
Writing About Immigration

Global Issues, Local Arguments
, CH  4 Crossing Borders:
Introduction, pgs. 125-133;
Bhagwati, pgs. 133-139; Annan, pgs. 139-147

Easy Writer: Language, pgs. 138-150

Grammar Girl Podcast: Fragments, “Introducing Sir
Fragalot”, Episode 30

Grammar Girl Podcast: Generic Pronouns, “He Makes Me
Crazy,” Episode 29
In-Class Activity: Strategies for Timed Writing Exams

Week 10

Monday
March 26
Writing About Immigration

Global Issues, Local Arguments, CH  4: Navarette, pgs. 148-150;
From Guide for the Mexican Immigrant, pgs. 150-153;
Huntington, pgs. 164-169;
MALDEF and LULAC, pgs. 169-175

In class we will watch excerpts from the documentary, A Day Without a
Mexican
. This film will be on reserve in the Johnson Center Library.




Wednesday
March 28
Test: In-Class Writing #1


Week 11

Monday
April 2
Writing About Cultural Rights

Global Issues, Local Arguments, CH 5 Cultural Rights:
Introduction, pgs. 191-200
Packer, pgs. 200-203; Compaine, pgs. 225-233

Grammar Girl Podcast Word Choice: Who v. That, “The Power of ‘Who,’” Episode 24, & Which v. That,
"Which’s Brew," Episode 8

Wednesday
April 4
DUE: Annotated Bibliography

Writing About Cultural Rights

Global Issues, Local Arguments, CH 5 Cultural Rights:
Legrain, pgs. 209-215; Jenkins, pgs. 234-236
Upload your bibliography to the Digital Drop Box on WebCT by 5:00 PM in order to avoid a late penalty.

Week 12

Monday
April 9
Writing About Cultural Rights

Global Issues, Local Arguments, CH 5 Cultural Rights:
Barber, pgs. 215-221; Harris, pgs. 237-239;
Pitroda, pgs. 240-243; Schlosser, pgs. 248-251

Grammar Girl Podcast:  "Avoiding Wordiness"


Wednesday
April 11
Writing About Environmental Resources: Water

Global Issues, Local Arguments, CH 7 Environmental Resources &
Rights: Introduction, pgs. 333-345; Ortega, pgs. 345-350;
Segerfeldt, pgs. 350-352; Brown, pgs. 370-373.

Grammar Girl Podcast Word Choice: Affect Vs. Effect,
“Grammar Affects Me,” Episode 20


Week 13

Monday
April 16
Writing About Environmental Resources: Global Warming

Global Issues, Local Arguments
, CH 7 Environmental Resources &
Rights: Michaels, pgs. 385-387;
Lomborg, pgs. 389-391;
Simms, pgs. 381-385; Gelbspan, pgs. 391-396.





Wednesday
April 18
DUE: Complete Draft of Essay #2

How to Edit a Paper

Grammar Girl Podcast: General: Proofreading Tips,
“100 Proof”, Episode 21
In-Class Exercise: Peer ReviewYour draft must be formatted in MS Word.
Bring your Word file to class with you on a floppy disc, jump drive, CD, or as an attachment to an email. Students who do not have a complete draft cannot
participate in peer review and will receive a quiz score of "0."


In-Class Exercise: Edit Your Own Paper

In your final paper you will need to demonstrate that you can write prose
that contains few surface errors. To help you achieve this goal, 
I will provide
you with a series of techniques you can use to edit your paper for grammar, punctuation, and diction errors.

Week 14

Monday
April 23
Writing About Human Rights

Global Issues, Local Arguments, CH 6 Human Rights:
Introduction, pgs. 271-280; Feingold, pgs. 280-286;
Butcher, pgs. 307-309; Miller, pgs. 314-316
In class we will watch excerpts from Sex Slaves, a Frontline production,
which will be on reserve at the Johnson Center Library.


There are additional resources about the sex slave industry at the
documentary's website at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/slaves/.

Wednesday
April 25
Thomas L. Friedman, CH 8 "The Quiet Crisis," from
The World is Flat: A Brief History of the
Twenty-First Century,
Revised and Updated, pgs. 323-359. Will be available in Digital
Documents.



Week 15

Monday
April 30
DUE: Essay #2

Upload your essay to the Digital Drop Box on WebCT by 5:00 PM in order to avoid a late penalty.

In-Class Debate: Winning Team Members get to add 50 points
to any one quiz.



Wednesday
May 2
In-Class Writing Test #2

No late exams given.