NMSU-A Mission Statement
The mission of the Alamogordo Branch of New Mexico State University, a comprehensive
community college, is to
• provide quality education that includes academic, technical,
vocational, developmental, and career-oriented skills;
• promote student competence, confidence, and success
by providing personal enrichment programs through continued response to the
cultural, intellectual, and economic needs of the community;
• maintain active ties and continuity with the main campus;
• afford equal opportunity for individuals who meet admission
criteria to receive educational services within the community without regard
to age, ancestry, color, disability, gender, national origin, religion, sexual
orientation, or veteran status.
In
Case of Emergency
If someone in your family needs to contact you in an emergency, the person
calling should know the class you are attending and use the following telephone
numbers:
Alamogordo Campus:
Daytime: 439-3700 (Admissions Office)
Evening: 439-3751 (Faculty Office Secretary)
Holloman AFB:
Daytime: 479-4318 (NMSU-A/HAFB Coordinator); 572-3971
(Base Education Office)
Evening: As of January 2004, no emergency contact is
available in the evening. Instructors may or may not allow students
to have cell phones turned on during class. Please discuss work situations,
potential family emergencies, and cell phone status with your instructor.
In Case of Holloman Air Force Base Closure
National or international events may cause Holloman Air Force Base to close,
keeping students from leaving the base to attend classes on campus, and keeping
instructors from entering the base to teach classes there. To alleviate
the problems a closure would cause,
• the instructor may collect student phone numbers and email addresses;
• the instructor may use email addresses to create a distribution list to
keep students up-to-date on assignments and activities;
• students should note the instructor’s email address and be adept at sending
word-processed assignments as attachments via computer;
• instructors and students may need to mutually agree on a make-up class
or classes, times, places, and modes of instruction (including email or chat
room discussions), in order to abide by state requirements of 750 minutes
of class time per credit hour.
Classroom Conduct
• You are not allowed to use tobacco products in classrooms at NMSU-A or
HAFB.
• You are not allowed to eat or drink in computer classrooms at NMSU-A,
or any classrooms at HAFB.
• Any student engaging in disruptive behavior will be required to leave
the class.
Plagiarism and Academic Dishonesty
In an effort to fulfill our mission to “maintain active ties and continuity
with the main campus at Las Cruces,” the following statement on plagiarism
and academic dishonesty is taken from Paideia IV: A Course Guide for
English 111 Composition and Rhetoric, edited by Rebecca Blackwell and
Gina Hochhalter, published for the NMSU-Las Cruces Department of English
by Outernet Publishing, 2002.
It is academically dishonest, and often illegal, to present someone else’s ideas or writing as your own. You cannot use even short phrases or parts of sentences obtained from other sources unless you properly document those sources. Documentation includes marking quotations, as well as providing notes, citations, and a reference list. If you receive assistance from a source other than your instructor, your colleagues in the class, or the Writing Center, then you must acknowledge that assistance. Identify the source and the nature of the assistance in an acknowledgment note at the end of the assignment. Failure to acknowledge constitutes academic misconduct.NMSU-A English Department Goal
In addition, it is academically dishonest to submit your own previously written work for a current assignment or to submit an assignment in more than one class without the prior permission of the instructors.
You will be held responsible for furnishing upon request all the sources and preliminary work (notes, rough drafts, etc.) that you use when preparing written assignments. If you cannot produce that material upon request, the assignment will be considered unsatisfactory and given a failing grade.
Plagiarism and academic misconduct of any kind may constitute grounds for failing the course and may result in further disciplinary action according to university policy. Consult the . . . [NMSU-A] Student Handbook regarding your responsibilities and rights concerning plagiarism and academic dishonesty. In addition, writing textbooks contain useful discussions of plagiarism.
As a student, you are responsible for protecting your own work. It is your responsibility to ensure that other students do not copy your work or submit your work as their own. Allowing your work to be used inappropriately makes you guilty of academic misconduct and subject to sanctions. (xi)
Catalog Description for ENGL 111G, Rhetoric and Composition
Skills and methods used in writing university-level essays.
Prerequisites
To qualify for admission into this class, you must have
In order to promote students’ academic success and to enable them to pursue personal and professional goals involving writing and research skills, the objectives of this course are to prepare students to
Outcomes Assessment: Objectives, Methods,
and Standards
The NMSU-A writing program assesses students’ writing products and processes separately from grade evaluation. We do this to measure how well our writing courses carry out our established objectives. Results of assessment projects will be used to revise the curriculum, both at the instructor level and at the program level. The ultimate goal of assessment is to satisfy the needs of the students and the university’s mission.
Typical assignments that may be collected for assessment projects include,
but are not limited to, the following:
• Writing samples taken at the beginning of the year
• Early semester essays
• Late semester essays
• annotated bibliographies
• portfolios demonstrating achievement
• portfolios demonstrating proof of process
• research papers
For some assignments, such as the research paper assignment, students will be asked to submit two copies: one with identifying information, and one without identifying information. Selected assignments will then be reviewed anonymously. For program assessment, instructors will not be identified. Individual instructors may be identified for their own purposes to assess their section-specific objectives. However, results of program-wide assessment projects will only be reported for the entire program, not for individual students, sections, or instructors.
Because of staff limitations, only a random sampling of student papers will be reviewed. If students do not want their work considered for random selection, they must notify the Humanities Coordinator in writing before the fifth week of the semester.
The random samplings will be reviewed according to generally accepted assessment practices in the field of rhetoric. Most commonly, this practice will involve primary trait analysis using a 4 or 6 point scale. But it may also involve the identification of the presence or absence of an attribute essential to meeting a course objective. Or, another method may be a holistic review of an essay assignment or portfolio.
Changes in grading matters may be made with the approval of all students
affected by the changes.
| Grade Worth | Assignments: All Assignments will have handouts and/or instructions. |
| 25 points | Essay #1 Recalling an Experience (Narrative, Expressive) 3-5 pages. BG Chapters 4, 5, selected readings in 23 |
| 25 points | Essay #2 Issues of Work (Argumentative), 3-5 pages. BG Chapters 6, 9, 10, selected readings in 24 & 26 |
| 25 points | Essay #3 Writing about Literature, 3-5 pages. BG Chapters 9, 11, 12, 13, 22. Outside reading: Conrad's Heart of Darkness |
| 25 points | Essay #4, 3-5 pages. Topic and readings to be determined. |
| 25 points | Various quizzes & exercises as assigned, almost daily |
| 25 points | First reading response journal submission. BG, Chapter 12. |
| 25 points | Second reading response journal submission. BG, Chapter 12 |
| 50 points | Exit Essay, 2-3 pages. BG Chapters 9, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 |
| 25 points | Annotated Bibliography, 2 pages. BG Chapters 11, 12, 21, 28, 29, 30 |
| 125 points | Research Paper, 6-10 pages. BG, All of Writer's Research Manual section |
| 125 points | Portfolio with substantially revised essays and polished journal entries. BG, Chapter 20, plus your own texts. |
| 500 Points Total |
Semester Grades: 500-450= A;
449-400= B; 399-350= C; 349-300= D; Below 300 = F
20 bonus points are possible for attendance. However, since bonus
points are possible for attendance, there are NO EXCUSED ABSENCES, except
for authorized University functions, as provided for in the Student Handbook.
Also, absences and tardies may eventually cost you points, and therefore
semester grades, thus:
| +1 point for each class, up to 20; excludes first day, conference days, final exam |
-10 points for each absence | -5 points for each tardy |
It may be possible for students to get credit for attending by entering
into our class discussions and class work via email: emailing journal
responses on readings, emailing drafts as attachments if students cannot
physically attend the class.
ENGLISH 111G, RHETORIC & COMPOSITION
| Instructor
Contact Information
Mr. Ron McNeel Phone and voice mail: 505.439.3742 email: mcneel@nmsua.nmsu.edu
|
Required
Texts and Materials
|
If changes to the schedule are necessary, I will do my best to announce them in advance. However, occasionally minor changes may occur at the beginning of a class session. Major changes to the syllabus will be made in writing and handed out as an addendum to the syllabus, and/or posted at the syllabus website.
Reading assignments are to be completed before the date on which
they are scheduled for discussion. If a lack of discussion and preparation
indicate that the selections have not been read, then I may give unannounced
quizzes over the day's readings.
| Session # and Dates | Assignments and Activities |
| 1. Wed., Jan. 14 | Introduction to the course: "The Rules We Play By." Books
and registration matters. Assignment of the journal. Overview of the field of rhetoric. Ungraded, sample essay writing |
| 2. Thurs., Jan. 15 | Discussion of Part One, Introduction and Chapters 1, 2, 3, & 16
in BG. (About 35 pages). Connections made between reading processes and writing processes. Return of writing samples to you. Introduction of Handbooks, BG and PSM. Assignment of Essay #1, Recalling an experience. |
Monday, Jan. 19 and Tuesday,
Jan. 20: Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday
Wednesday, Jan. 21: Deadline for Registration & Course Addition
Week 2
| Session # and Dates | Assignments and Activities |
| 3. Wed. Jan. 21 | Return of ungraded writing samples. Chapter 4 in BG: Recalling
an experience. Review of Chapter 16 in BG. In-class invention: generating ideas. Discussion of selected readings in Chapter 23. Chapter 12 in BG. |
| 4. Thurs., Jan. 22 | Chapter 5 in BG: Observing a Scene.
Chapters17 & 18, Planning and Drafting. Discussion of selected
readings in Chapter 23. |
Week 3
| Session # and Dates | Assignments and Activities |
| 5. Mon., Jan. 26 |
Chapters 19 & 20 in BG. Modeling
of Peer Review. |
| 6. Tues., Jan. 27 |
Peer Reviews of Essay 1. |
| 7. Wed., Jan. 28 |
Assignment of Essay 2, Issues in the Workplace. BG
Chapters 6 & 7. Review of Chapter 16. Selected Readings in Chapter
26 of BG. |
| 8. Thurs., Jan. 29 |
Essay 1 is due at the beginning of class. BG
Chapters 9 & 10. Review of Chapters 17 & 18. Selected readings
in Chapter 26 of BG. |
Week 4
| Session # and Dates | Assignments and Activities |
| 9. M, Feb. 2 |
Review of Chapters 19 & 20. Peer Reviews of Essay 2. Research
Paper Topic is due. |
| 10. Tu, Feb. 3 |
Assignment of Essay 3, Writing about literature. BG, Chapter
13. Introductory Lecture on Conrad's Heart of Darkness. Beginning of Research with Chapter 28 in BG. Assignment of Annotated Bibliography. |
| 11. W, Feb. 4 |
Continuation of Research with BG Chapter 29. Continuation of Assignment of Essay #3 with Chapters 11 & 12. |
| 12. Th, Feb. 5 |
Essay #2 is due at the beginning of class. Begin film: Apocalypse Now Redux. |
Week 5
| Session # and Dates | Assignments and Activities |
| 13. M, Feb. 9 |
Submission of First Reading Response Journal. Continuation
of Film. |
| 14.Tu, Feb. 10 |
Discussion of Film. Individual Conferences on Essays 1 &
2, and journals. |
| 15. W, Feb. 11 |
Discussion of issues in book and film. Chapter 7 in BG. Review
of Chapters 17 & 18 in BG. |
| 16.Th, Feb. 12 |
Continuation of Research with Chapter 30 in BG. Time for Research.
Possible library tour. |
Week 6
| Session # and Dates | Assignments and Activities |
| 17. M, Feb. 16 | Peer Reviews of Essay 3. Continuation of Research with Chapter
32. |
| 18. Tu, Feb. 17 |
Last discussion of issues generated in Heart of Darkness and
Apocalypse Now Redux. review of Chapters 7, 9, & 11. |
| 19, W, Feb. 18 |
Annotated Bibliographies arre Due. Assignment of Essay
#4. Discussion of Selected Readings from Chapters 25 & 26, and
possibly outside readings. |
| 20, Th, Feb. 19 |
Essay #3 is due. Research & Library time. |
Week 7
| Session # and Dates | Assignments and Activities |
| 21, M, Feb. 23 | Peer Reviews of Essay #4. Review of Chapters 19 and 20 in BG. |
| 22, Tu, Feb. 24 | Individual Conferences on Research Papers. You must bring a 5 page
draft to this conference or risk losing 25 of the possible 125 points
for this assignment. |
| 23. W, Feb. 25 | Journals are due. Individual Conferences on Research Papers. You must bring a 5 page draft to this conference or risk losing 25 of the possible 125 points for this assignment. |
| 24. Th, Feb. 26 | Essay #4 is due. Return of journals, annotated bibliographies |
Week 8
| Session # and Dates | Assignments and Activities | |
| 25. M, March 1 | Return of Essay #4, journals, annotated bibliographies. Portfolio
Preparation. |
|
| 26. Tu, March 2 | Last lecture and activies on research: BG Chapters 28-32. | |
| 27. W, March 3 | Chapter 15 in BG, Writing for Assessment. Workshop Session for Exit Essay. | |
| 28. Th, March 4 |
Research Papers are due. Sign up for individual conferences for the return of portfolios. Course wrap-up and evaluation. |
| Session # and Dates |
Assignments and Activities |
| 29. M, March 8 |
Exit Essay. Portfolios are Due. |
| 30 Tu, March 9 |
Individual Conferences on Portfolios |
1. The University administration and the U.S. Air Force insist that you do not smoke, eat, or drink in the classrooms--especially computer laboratories.
2. I insist that you attend class: excessive absences will adversely affect your final semester grade, as explained in attendance and grading policies above.
3. Chronic tardiness will also affect your final grade. If you do come in late, just take a seat quietly in the row of desks nearest the door. This row is to be set aside for this purpose. Please don't walk in front of me.
4. If you have a serious and legitimate reason for missing class, I will discuss the possibility of your making up your work, provided that you see me as soon as you return.
5. No matter the reason or excuse, all late papers will lose 10% of the possible points for the assignment. No assignments will be accepted after Session 25, Monday, March 1. Please consider emailing assignments as attachments to get them in on time.
6. Work that is missed and not made up, or make-up work that I will not accept, will receive a grade of zero.
7. If you plagiarize a paper or cheat on a test, you will be urged to drop the course. Also, you will receive a zero grade on the falsified assignment.
8. A plagiarized research paper is sufficient cause for failure in the course. I reserve the right to ask for all your pre-final draft materials, such as your note cards or photocopied notes and your rough drafts--paper or electronic--before agreeing to grade your research paper, or any essay.
9. IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A FOUR TO SIX PAGE DRAFT OF YOUR
RESEARCH PAPER AT YOUR SCHEDULED INDIVIDUAL CONFERENCE, THE RESEARCH PAPER
WILL BE DOCKED 25 POINTS.
If you have (or believe you have) a disability and would benefit from classroom accommodation(s), please contact the Office of Special Student Services located in the George Fettinger Student Services Building (phone: 439-3720). If you have a condition that may affect your ability to exit safely from the premises in an emergency or that may cause an emergency during class, you are encouraged to discuss any concerns with the instructor. |
NMSU-A's Holloman staff person Cindy Holder can also be of service:
479-4318