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Guidelines for English 101 Instructors
Mission statement:
English 101 should prepare students for college level writing, which
means having mastered rhetorical, logical, and analytical skills,
as well as mechanical competence.
English 101 course goals/ objectives:
1) Students should have a thorough understanding
that all argumentative writing uses the three major rhetorical appeals:
ethos--the
appeal to the speaker's credibility and self-presentation
logos--the
appeal to logic and reason, consisting both of the clarity of
the message and how well it is supported with credible evidence
pathos--the
appeal to the audience's values, emotions, and concerns
2) Students should have a thorough understanding
of these general logical principles:
all
claims have to be supported with clear reasoning and valid evidence
all claims
inherently depend on larger assumptions, which also need to be
argued and supported
counterarguments
(opposing points of view) need to be anticipated and addressed
qualifying
words (such as probably, may, often, etc.) can be used to make
arguments more supportable
3) In English 101, the organizational principles
taught in English 100 (see course goals/ objectives for English
100) should be reinforced. In addition, however, English 101 students
should be taught to see organization in the context of rhetorical
choice, ie; that a single 5 paragraph theme format does not work
for every single paper.
4) As in English 100, peer assessment or evaluation
should be built into the syllabus, not only to help with the revision
of papers, but to help students become more critical and sophisticated
readers of their own writing.
5) As in English 100, students should do some kind
of reflection or self-assessment, either for each paper, or as a
reflective essay at the end of the course, or both.
6) In English 101, students should understand grammar
and style in the context of rhetorical choice--namely, that poor
grammar and/or spelling injures a writer's credibility, undercuts
his or her reasoning, and detracts from his or her appeal to the
audience. English 101 students should also understand how some choices
(e.g., slang, contractions, colloquialism, technical terms) that
might be appropriate in some rhetorical contexts, are not appropriate
in other rhetorical contexts.
7) The extent to which grammar is taught in class
in English 101 should depend on the needs of the class. Students
should be encouraged--if not required--to research their own individual
mechanical problems and learn how to identify and fix them with
the use of a handbook and/or dictionary.
8) English 101 should also allow students to investigate
writing style in a more sophisticated manner, not just in terms
of grammatical correctness. An English 101 student should come to
understand that writing can be grammatically correct and still not
work stylistically, because of poor diction, syntax, or a lack of
cohesion.
9) By the time they have finished English 101, students
should have an understanding of research techniques, although the
manner in which these techniques are incorporated into the syllabus
is at the instructor's discretion. Students should learn how to
find books, articles, and/or Internet resources on particular topics,
using modern library technology, and learn how to evaluate the credibility
of these sources. Students should also learn how to document their
use of sources correctly using MLA documentation, with the understanding
that there are other documentation systems (APA, Chicago Manual
of Style) that they may be required to use in some other academic
disciplines.
Types of assignments for English 101:
1) Students should do at least one paper that involves
a rhetorical analysis of something--whether it be a literary work,
essay, speech, movie, TV show, advertisement, whatever--but they
must be able to go beyond a simple summary of a "text,"
to write an analytical argument that uses an explication of that
"text" to support its claims.
2) Students should write at least one paper that
involves the use of researched evidence to support an argument.
Grading and course policy requirements for English
101 instructors:
1) Course policies should be clearly explained in
the syllabus--these policies should cover absences, late assignments,
grading criteria, how much each assignment is worth, etc. English
101 instructors should have some kind of attendance policy that
lowers students' grades for excessive absences and gives the instructor
justification for failing them if they miss more than two weeks
of class, with possible exceptions for documented illnesses, family
emergencies, etc.
2) For essay assignments, instructors need to give
students written assignment sheets, which clearly explain goals,
length requirements, expectations, etc.
3) As with English 100, the revision of at least
some papers should be built into the syllabus, although the policies
regarding these revisions are left to the instructor's discretion.
4) In English 101, instructors should evaluate and
assess student writing based on the same logical and rhetorical
principles that they are teaching. In other words, grading criteria
should be ranked by their relative importance, commensurate with
course goals.
English 101 Textbook
Choices
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